LOGINAmara Adebayo stepped out of the cab onto the cobblestones outside Edward Harrington’s townhouse, the drizzle of London rain soaking her coat sleeves just slightly, enough to make her aware of each thread clinging to her skin. The house itself was imposing, but not ostentatious. Georgian brick, black iron railings, polished steps leading to a perfectly proportioned doorway. It was the kind of building that suggested history, wealth, control—but also careful curation. Nothing unnecessary, noth
The bookstore café was quieter than usual that afternoon. Rain had started again outside, a soft steady drizzle that tapped lightly against the large windows and kept most people indoors. The warm smell of coffee and paper hung comfortably in the air, and the low murmur of conversations blended with the faint sound of pages turning. Amara sat at a small corner table with a cup of tea and an open notebook in front of her. She wasn’t writing. She had been staring at the same page for nearly five minutes. Across the room, Edward stood near the counter speaking to the barista about something. From the distance, his calm posture and precise gestures made the conversation look far more serious than it probably was. Amara watched him for a moment. It still surprised her sometimes how easily he fit into spaces like this. Tall, composed, quietly c
The bus stop was almost empty. A faint yellow streetlamp cast a small pool of light over the pavement, illuminating the metal bench and the timetable that flapped slightly in the cold night wind. The rest of the street faded into quiet darkness, interrupted only occasionally by the distant sound of cars passing on a larger road somewhere beyond the block. Amara pulled her coat tighter around herself. “I didn’t realize buses ran this late.” “They run later than you’d think,” Edward replied. They had been walking for nearly twenty minutes after leaving the small Nigerian restaurant in South London where Amara had insisted they go earlier that evening. It had started as a simple dinner—Amara claiming she needed to prove that her cooking at home had not been an exaggeration. Edward had agreed immediately. Now it was well past eleven.
The smell reached Edward before he even opened the front door. It wasn’t unpleasant—far from it. It was rich, warm, layered with spices he couldn’t immediately identify. Something earthy and smoky mixed with a deep savory aroma that filled the hallway the moment he stepped inside. Edward paused with his keys still in his hand. He closed the door slowly behind him and inhaled again. The scent was unfamiliar, but compelling. It was coming from the kitchen. He loosened his tie and walked down the hallway, curious. The closer he got, the stronger the smell became—pepper, onions, something roasted, something simmering. The air itself felt warmer than usual. Edward stepped into the doorway and stopped. Amara stood at the stove. The kitchen looked nothing like its usual orderly state. Several ingredients were spread
The rules had been written clearly. Edward remembered the evening they had drafted them with unusual precision. It had happened at the dining table only two days before the wedding—documents spread neatly between them, pens placed carefully beside a printed agreement that looked more like a corporate contract than the foundation of a marriage. No shared bedroom. No physical intimacy. Public affection only when necessary. Clear financial separation. Absolute honesty during immigration interviews. Minimal emotional involvement. It had all seemed sensible at the time. Efficient. Safe. Now, weeks later, Edward realized something uncomfortable. The rules had not been broken. But they had begun to… soften. And the strange part was that neither of them had announced the change. It happened in quiet moments. Small adjustments. Almost invisible shifts. Like furniture slowly being moved in a room until the entire shape of the space felt different. Edward noticed the first cha
The café was louder than Amara expected.It was one of those narrow London places that tried very hard to appear casual while secretly being extremely popular. The tables were close together, the air smelled strongly of coffee and toasted bread, and the line at the counter curled halfway toward the door.Amara stood just inside the entrance, scanning the room.“I thought you said this place was quiet,” she murmured.Beside her, Edward glanced around.“It usually is.”“This,” she said, gesturing subtly at the crowd, “is not quiet.”Edward adjusted the sleeve of his coat.“It’s possible I underestimated the popularity of Saturday mornings.”Amara folded her arms.“You underestimate many things.”Edward looked down at her.“Such as?”“Burnt toast,” she said.His mouth twitched faintly.That morning’s kitchen disaster had apparently entered their permanent conversational record.“I rescued the egg,” he replied calmly.“Yes,” she said. “You’ve mentioned that twice.”Three times, technicall
The rain had stopped sometime after midnight. By morning, London carried that soft, washed-clean stillness that followed a night of steady rain. The pavement outside the apartment building gleamed faintly beneath the pale sunlight, and the air drifting through the cracked kitchen window felt cooler than usual. Amara stood at the stove staring at the small frying pan as though it had personally offended her. A thin cloud of smoke curled toward the ceiling. She sighed. “This is ridiculous.” Behind her, Edward sat at the dining table with a mug of coffee, watching the situation unfold with a level of quiet interest that he had not bothered to hide. Amara turned slightly and glared at him. “You’re enjoying this.” Edward lifted one eyebrow. “I haven’t said anything.” “You don’t need to.” The toast popped out of
The Harrington estate did not look like a house. It looked like inheritance. Amara Adebayo stood beside Edward Harrington at the foot of a sweeping gravel drive that curved like a calculated flourish toward a Georgian manor house the color of pale stone a
The kitchen smelled faintly of polished wood and faint citrus—the remnants of yesterday’s cleaning ritual. Amara Adebayo moved carefully across the floor, avoiding the small scuff of a polished corner that might betray her presence. The morning sunlight slanted through the blinds, highlighting th
The cab smelled faintly of leather and the lingering tang of petrol. Amara Adebayo sat rigidly in the back seat, hands clasped tightly in her lap, staring at her reflection in the rearview mirror. The reflection startled her—not because she looked unprepared, but because she didn’t recognize the
The morning sun spilled across the cobbled streets of Westminster, wet from an early drizzle that left the air sharp and electric. Amara Adebayo stood under the overhang of the registry office, clutching her coat tight around her shoulders. The cab had dropped them at the corner street, leaving the







