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Chapter 5 — Gold Leaf and Gritted Teeth

作者: Gbohunmi
last update publish date: 2026-06-19 16:46:06

The invitation arrived on a Friday.

A cream envelope on the kitchen counter, handwritten in calligraphy that probably cost more per letter than most people spent on lunch. I opened it while Adrian stood across the island making his usual early morning coffee, neither of us having yet acknowledged the other’s presence the way people who lived together normally did  with good mornings and small talk and all the ordinary architecture of shared life. We had not built that architecture. We existed in the same space like two pieces of furniture that had been placed in a room together without any particular thought for how they complemented each other.

The card inside read: The Bellington Foundation Annual Gala. Black tie. Saturday, 8 p.m.

One week away. Of course.

“You already knew about this,” I said. It wasn’t a question.

Adrian looked up from his coffee. “It’s on the calendar I shared with you.”

“I haven’t gone through the calendar yet.”

“I know.” He said it without judgment, which somehow made it worse. “It’s the Foundation’s biggest event of the year. We’ll need to attend together.”

I set the invitation down on the counter with more care than I felt. Another performance. Another room full of strangers in expensive clothes watching us from behind polite smiles, measuring the gap between what we appeared to be and what we actually were. I had thought the boardroom on Thursday was the peak of the public scrutiny. I had underestimated how many stages this marriage was expected to perform on.

“Fine,” I said. “I’ll be ready.”

He watched me for a moment in that quietly assessing way he had, as if he were reading something just beneath the surface of my composure. I had learned in the past week that Adrian Bellington was exceptionally good at reading people. It was one of the things about him I found most unsettling  because it meant that the walls I kept carefully in place were probably less opaque to him than I intended them to be.

“There’s a stylist coming at two,” he said.

“I have my own clothes.”

“I know you do.” He set his mug down. “The stylist is for the event jewellery. It’s on loan from the Foundation’s partners. You don’t have to wear any of it if you don’t want to.”

A pause. Another small, unexpected consideration from a man I had filed away as my enemy. I picked up the invitation again and looked at it.

“What does the Foundation do?” I asked.

He looked almost surprised that I’d asked. “Education. Scholarships, primarily. First-generation university students from low-income backgrounds.”

Something shifted in my chest that I didn’t want to examine too closely. My father had been the first in his family to attend university. He had talked about it often  the weight of being the one who made it through, the responsibility that came with it, the grief when the opportunity was taken from him by a man who had never had to fight for anything in his life.

I looked at Adrian. He was watching me carefully.

“Your father’s Foundation,” I said.

“My mother’s, originally,” he said. “My father attached his name to it later. As he did with most things.” There was something underneath those words controlled, contained, but there. A history between Adrian and his father that I didn’t yet have the full shape of. “I’ve been running it for the past three years. Independently of him.”

I nodded slowly. Filed it. Said nothing more.

The reception was held in the family’s private ballroom  gold leaf ceilings, champagne towers, violins playing music so sweet it made my teeth ache. 

I didn’t belong here. I knew that the moment I walked through the doors on Saturday evening. Not because I wasn’t dressed for it the gown was deep emerald, fitted and elegant, the borrowed jewellery understated and perfect  but because belonging is a feeling, not a fact, and no amount of silk or diamonds could manufacture it. I had spent a week reading about these people. I had memorised their names and their histories and their relationships to the company and to each other. But knowledge and belonging are different things entirely.

Adrian stood beside me, his hand resting on my lower back like he owned me. The heat of his touch made my skin crawl. 

Or at least, that was what I told myself. The truth was slightly more complicated and considerably more irritating. The truth was that his hand on my back felt steadying in a room that felt like a test, and I resented that steadiness more than I resented its absence.

“You looked beautiful today,” he said without looking at me. 

I kept my voice low, angled slightly away so that the nearest cluster of guests couldn’t read my lips. “Don’t pretend, Adrian. We both know this isn’t real.”

He turned his head then, meeting my gaze. For a moment, I saw a flicker of something in his storm-grey eyes  guilt, maybe. Or regret. But it disappeared too quickly. “We made a deal,” he said quietly. “No one forced you to say yes.”

“I said yes because I didn’t have a choice.” I stepped away, scanning the crowd for a familiar face.

I found one I hadn’t expected.

Margaret Fenn, from the board, was moving through the crowd with the practiced ease of a woman who had attended a thousand events exactly like this one. But it was the woman beside her that stopped me. Late fifties, silver hair swept elegantly upward, a string of pearls at her throat. A face I recognized from photographs  old ones, from before everything.

Vera Adeyemi. My father’s former colleague. The woman who had testified against him.

My breath stayed steady. My face stayed composed. Twenty-five years of my mother’s lessons held me together in the moment, even as something cold and clarifying moved through my entire body.

She hadn’t seen me yet.

“Selina.” Adrian’s voice was quiet, close to my ear. His hand had returned to my back  lighter now, not possessive, something closer to cautious. As if he had noticed the direction of my gaze and understood what it meant. “Not tonight.”

I turned to look at him slowly. “I wasn’t going to do anything.”

“I know.” His eyes held mine. “I’m saying not tonight because tonight there are two hundred witnesses and twelve board members and four journalists, and whatever conversation you eventually have with Vera Adeyemi deserves to happen somewhere that isn’t here.”

The fact that he knew who she was. The fact that he had put together, in seconds, the significance of her presence and what it might mean to me  that was the thing that stopped me. Not the warning itself. The knowledge behind it.

“You know what she did,” I said.

It wasn’t quite a question.

“I know a great deal about what happened to your father,” he said. The words were careful and heavy at the same time, carrying weight they hadn’t fully put down yet. “More than you might expect.”

I stared at him. The ballroom moved and glittered around us, violins threading through conversation and laughter, champagne catching the light of the chandeliers above. And in the middle of all that gilded noise, something cracked open between us  not wide, not irreparably, but enough. Enough to let in a sliver of something that wasn’t distrust.

“We’ll talk about it,” he said quietly. “But not here. Not tonight.”

I looked back across the room. Vera Adeyemi had moved toward the champagne towers, her back now to us, entirely unaware. Margaret Fenn was saying something that made her laugh  a sound that carried, light and entirely unbothered by history.

One day, I would make the Bellingtons pay for what they did to my family. 

The thought was old and familiar, worn smooth by years of repetition. But standing here now, in this ballroom, with Adrian Bellington’s hand quiet and careful against my back and his voice still in my ear  I know a great deal about what happened to your father  I felt, for the first time, the edges of that thought beginning to fray.

Not because I had forgiven anyone. Not because the anger had softened.

But because the picture I had carried for years  clear, simple, clean  was beginning to complicate itself in ways I hadn’t planned for and couldn’t yet control.

I accepted a glass of champagne from a passing tray. Kept my face composed. Played the role.

But my mind was already somewhere else entirely  turning over Adrian’s words, searching them for the shape of what he knew, and wondering, with a feeling I didn’t have a name for yet, whether the truth about my father’s ruin was larger and stranger and more tangled than I had ever allowed myself to imagine.

The violins played on.

The gold leaf gleamed above us.

And the war I had come here to fight quietly rearranged itself into something I no longer fully recognized.

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