LOGINA Wife's First Day
Lora’s POV
The marriage certificate felt like it was burning a hole in my purse as we left the registrar’s office.
It had taken less than thirty minutes. Signatures, stamps, the bored clerk barely looking at us. And just like that, I was married.
Mrs. Lora Jade Grayson.
The name sounded wrong, like I was wearing someone else’s skin. My fingers went to the plain platinum band on my ring finger—expensive, cold, empty.
Drake walked next to me, steady and controlled. No smiles, no softness. Just business.
We reached a black car, way too fancy for me to even think about. His hand slipped into mine. Comforting, claiming. I felt a jolt go through me. I told myself it meant nothing. It had to mean nothing.
“We’re stopping at Meridian Mall,” he said like he was giving orders, not asking. “The contract will be ready for review before we go to the estate.”
I slid into the leather seat, the smell of new leather and faint perfume hitting me. Drake shut the door and went to the driver’s seat. The engine purred, and I realized my old life was gone.
I wanted to ask about the contract. Bring up the baby. About all the questions twisting in my head. But I didn’t. Saying anything now would make me feel exposed, weak. I had lived my whole life defending myself, I wasn’t about to start now.
So I stayed quiet, staring out the window, bracing myself.
The mall was huge, shiny, intimidating. I’d only ever walked past it. Drake parked in a “Reserved” spot.
Before I could even open the door, he appeared, lifting me off my feet like I weighed nothing.
“Let me go!” I gasped, clutching his jacket.
“My wife doesn’t walk around like a normal person,” he said firmly. “You carry the Grayson name now. Act like it.”
Wife. That word felt heavy. Strange. Scary.
He carried me to the elevator. His arms were strong, warm, too close. This was the man who had made a life inside me, and now he cradled me like I was something precious.
The doors opened. Ten men in matching suits lined the atrium, forming a passageway. They stood at attention, heads slightly bowed as Drake passed through, a silent show of respect and authority.
Bodyguards. My stomach twisted. Who was this man?
Drake leaned close to my ears, whispering: “The show starts now. Play your part. Got it?”
I shivered but pressed against him. “My back hurts…” I whispered. “Can you put me down?”
He eased me gently, studying me. “Are you okay? Do you want to leave?”
I tilted my head, trying to be clever. “I’ll be fine…only if you kiss me first.”
Surprise flashed in his eyes. Then his hand went to my neck, tilting my head, his lips on mine. This kiss wasn’t reckless or blurry, it was controlled, deliberate, hot. Heat surged through me, unwanted but impossible to ignore.
He pulled back, jaw tight, eyes unreadable. Fine. Let him feel uneasy for a change.
A woman in a manager’s suit appeared. Drake gave one simple order: “Bring everything. Dresses, shoes, jewelry. Only the best. My wife should have no less.”
The manager ran off, shouting at employees like a drill sergeant.
Drake led me to a lounge with velvet couches and champagne on glass tables. Everything here was gorgeous, expensive, intimidating. Employees rushed by with piles of clothing and sparkling accessories.
“This one,” Drake said, pointing to a pearl-colored gown, probably worth more than my rent for a year. “Try it on.”
The dressing room was bigger than my whole apartment, with mirrors on three sides. I slipped out of my clothes and looked at myself. My body was the same—slender, ribs visible, stomach flat—but soon that would change.
Not now, I told myself. Focus.
The dress fit perfectly, flowing over my body like it was made for me. Elegant, graceful, powerful—none of this felt like me, but maybe that was the point.
I stepped out. Drake’s eyes traveled over me slowly, lingering on my waist. He knew. Something had shifted. His face wasn’t softer, but it wasn’t icy either.
I tried to act confident. “So?” I spun, letting the dress flare. “Am I up to Mr. Grayson’s standards?”
“You look stunning,” he said, calm but firm.
I leaned closer, brushing my fingers along his tie. “I’m yours tonight. Don’t forget.”
Ridiculous, I thought. Me, a nobody playing wife in a world I didn’t belong to.
Drake’s lips curved slightly. “Watch out, wife. I might take you up on that.”
God, the word “wife” made something flutter inside me that I had no right to feel.
Outside, a truck arrived to haul away the bags and boxes of expensive items. The ride back was quiet, but the air felt heavier. Something was different.
“We’re going to see my father,” Drake said as we left the garage. “Just be yourself. Don’t overdo it.”
I swallowed hard. Be myself. But who am I now?
I adjusted the dress in the passenger seat and a wave of nausea hit me. My stomach twisted, heavy and strange. At first, I thought it was the rush, the perfume, the spinning elevator. But it didn’t go away. My hand went to my stomach almost automatically. Not now, I whispered. Too many things to handle….Drake, the contract, my mother.
Drake’s POVThe last email of the day remained open on my laptop long after I had finished reading it.At least, I assumed I had finished reading it. The truth was that I had been staring at the same paragraph for several minutes without absorbing a single word.Outside the office windows, late afternoon sunlight spilled across the estate grounds. The gardens stretched beneath the fading gold light while staff moved quietly between the different wings of the mansion.My attention drifted toward the gardens again. And found her. Lora sat beneath one of the large trees near the western path, a book resting open in her lap.She wasn't reading. Every few minutes she turned a page, but her gaze remained fixed somewhere beyond the fountain ahead of her.She was thinking. She did that often.She disappeared into her own thoughts so completely that the rest of the world seemed to fade around her.The strange thing was that I had started recognizing the difference between when she was genuin
Lora's POVThe smell of coffee reached me before I reached the dining room.Normally, that would have been enough to improve my mood. Unfortunately, the baby had developed opinions. And this morning, coffee was apparently offensive.I slowed halfway down the staircase and pressed a hand briefly against my stomach."You're making my life difficult already." The baby remained unapologetically silent.By the time I reached the dining room, everyone was already seated. William occupied his usual chair at the head of the table. His recovery had restored some of the strength illness had stolen, though Dr. Mark still insisted he avoid unnecessary stress.Vivian sat beside him. Chloe scrolled through her phone while pretending to listen to a conversation she clearly had no interest in.And Drake. My gaze found him before I could stop it. He looked up at the exact same moment and something warm settled unexpectedly inside my chest. The kind of feeling that had become increasingly difficult to
Lora's POVA week passed but it wasn’t the kind that arrived quietly and disappeared without leaving a mark.This one settled into my life slowly, rearranging things in ways I did not notice immediately.William was recovering well enough. Dr. Mark had thrown himself back into work. My mother had spent the better part of the last seven days pretending she was not thinking about him while somehow managing to bring him up in every other conversation.And me? I had spent an embarrassing amount of time replaying a single sentence.Now the mansion feels strange whenever you're not there.The worst part was that Drake had said it so casually. As if he had simply been commenting on the weather. As if those words had not followed me around for days afterward.I stood in front of the bathroom mirror adjusting my earrings when my phone vibrated on the counter.A message. Have you eaten?A laugh escaped me before I could stop it. Three simple words. Yet somehow I already knew who the sender was
Lora's POVThe tea had gone cold long before either of us noticed.It sat forgotten on the coffee table between us while the evening sunlight stretched slowly across the apartment floor. For the first time in what felt like forever, there was no emergency waiting around the corner. No doctor rushing into a room. No surgery. No terrifying phone calls.There was just silence, the comfortable kind of silence. The kind I had missed without realizing it.My mother sat beside me on the couch, occasionally wiping her eyes whenever she thought I wasn't looking.The emotional storm from earlier had passed, but traces of it still lingered around us but neither of us seemed ready to leave the conversation completely.I pulled my legs beneath me and rested my head against the back of the couch.Then Marianna suddenly asked, "Tell me about Drake."I turned toward her. "What?"She smiled faintly. "Your husband."The word still sounded strange coming from her.My husband. Not a contract husband, or
Lora's POVMy heart stopped for a few seconds not because I didn't know the answer but because I had spent months avoiding it.Of all the conversations I thought I would have with my mother today, this was somehow the one that frightened me most.Marianna watched me quietly from across the couch waiting patiently. The same way she had waited through every difficult conversation we had ever shared."Who is Drake?"The question lingered between us. The question sounded simple and direct but it wasn’t easy to answer still. I looked away first and that alone was enough to make her suspicious."Lora."I rubbed my palms together slowly trying to figure out where to begin. The truth felt too complicated now.Eventually, I exhaled. Then said the only answer that mattered."He's my husband."Complete silence filled the room. My mother blinked once. Then twice, before she stared at me. "I beg your pardon?"A nervous laugh escaped me. Not because anything was funny, there was no version of thi
Lora's POVThe moment I stepped into my mother's apartment, I almost turned around and left. I had no idea how to begin. The drive from the mansion had given me too much time to think and somehow not enough time at all. Every version of the conversation played differently inside my head. In some, she cried. In others, she refused to believe me. In a few, she simply stared at me because the truth was too large to fit inside a single afternoon.None of those possibilities prepared me for seeing her standing in the kitchen arranging flowers into a glass vase like it was any other day."You're early." A smile touched her face as she looked up. Then it disappeared, immediately. Mothers noticed things, especially mothers like mine.The flowers remained forgotten in her hands. "What happened?"I opened my mouth but nothing came out.Marianna's expression changed completely. Fear arrived first, very fast. "Lora.""I'm okay." The words came out too quickly.The fear didn't leave her face.







