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Signatures

Penulis: Luna Hart
last update Terakhir Diperbarui: 2026-02-11 06:00:40

CHAPTER 5 — Signatures

The law office sat on a quiet floor above the city, far from spectacle. Elara noticed that immediately—the absence of anything that suggested ceremony. No flowers. No framed photographs of smiling couples. No softening touches meant to make a legal decision feel emotional.

This was not a place where marriages were celebrated.

It was a place where they were executed.

The elevator doors opened with a muted chime. Rowan stepped out first, already moving with the unhurried certainty of someone who had been here before. Elara followed, her heels clicking softly against polished stone.

The receptionist stood as they approached. “Mr. Blackmere. We’re ready for you.”

Rowan nodded once. “Thank you.”

No introductions. No pleasantries.

Elara caught the smallest detail—how the woman’s known smile didn’t reach her eyes when she looked at Rowan. Respect, yes. Warmth, no.

They were led down a corridor lined with glass-walled offices. Inside them, people spoke in low tones, heads bent over documents that likely reshaped lives without ever appearing in headlines.

At the end of the hall waited a conference room.

Inside, the table was long and bare. At one end sat Dr. Ellis Moore, already reviewing a folder, glasses perched low on his nose. He looked up as they entered.

“Good morning,” he said, voice neutral but courteous. “Elara. Rowan.”

Elara inclined her head. “Good morning.”

Rowan took the seat closest to the head of the table. Elara sat beside him—not touching, not angled toward him. Close enough to signal alignment. Far enough to preserve space.

The door closed softly behind them.

Finality often arrived quietly, Elara thought.

Dr. Moore slid the folder toward the center of the table. “You’ve both reviewed the contract.”

“Yes,” Rowan said.

“Yes,” Elara echoed.

Dr. Moore adjusted his glasses. “Then today is simply confirmation.”

Simply.

Elara’s gaze moved to the folder. It was thicker than she remembered—not because the terms had changed, but because the language had been formalized, tightened, reinforced. Every clause had been cross-referenced, fortified against interpretation.

This document did not allow for misunderstanding.

Dr. Moore opened it and turned the pages methodically, not reading aloud, but pausing at marked sections. “No amendments have been made since your last review,” he said. “The terms remain exactly as discussed.”

Elara listened, not because she needed reminding, but because listening was part of the act. She tracked each pause, each shift of emphasis.

“Separate assets,” Dr. Moore continued. “Independent finances. Mutual confidentiality. Public presentation as husband and wife without private obligations beyond what is stipulated.”

Rowan’s hand rested on the table, still.

“Elara retains full autonomy over her professional pursuits,” Dr. Moore said, glancing briefly at her. “Provided there is no conflict of interest.”

She nodded once.

“The marriage is legally binding,” he continued. “With dissolution subject to pre-agreed conditions.”

Elara’s fingers curled slightly against the edge of the table—not in hesitation, but in awareness. She had already accepted this. Still, hearing it framed so cleanly sharpened its edges.

Dr. Moore turned another page. “Duration is indefinite.”

No expiration date.

No promise either.

Rowan did not move.

Elara did not react.

Dr. Moore closed the folder and folded his hands. “If there are no further questions, we can proceed.”

The room felt very still.

Elara did not look at Rowan.

She had already made her choice.

“I’m ready,” she said.

Rowan glanced at her then—not searching, not questioning. Simply acknowledging.

“So am I.”

Dr. Moore nodded and reached for the pens—two identical instruments placed side by side, black and unremarkable.

Elara took one.

It felt heavier than it looked.

The signature page was clean. Names printed precisely beneath blank lines. No flourish. No space for sentiment.

Rowan signed first.

His hand moved with practiced ease. No pause. No adjustment. He capped the pen and set it down without looking at what he’d written.

Elara watched—not the signature, but the lack of ceremony surrounding it. As though this act carried no more weight than approving a quarterly report.

Then the document was turned toward her.

She positioned the paper, aligning it carefully. Her name waited where it had before.

She signed.

The ink flowed smoothly, uninterrupted. She didn’t rush. She didn’t linger.

When she finished, she placed the pen beside Rowan’s.

Dr. Moore gathered the pages, checked the signatures, then slid the documents back into the folder with precise efficiency.

“It’s done,” he said.

Just like that.

No applause. No acknowledgement of significance beyond the legal.

Elara felt something settle—not in her chest, but lower, steadier. Like a door closing somewhere behind her.

Dr. Moore stood. “The civil registration will follow shortly. You’ll receive confirmation by the end of the day.”

“Thank you,” Elara said.

Rowan nodded once.

They left the office together.

The hallway looked the same as before. The people inside the glass rooms continued their quiet conversations, unaware that anything had changed.

Outside, the city moved on.

Traffic. Footsteps. Voices.

Elara stood on the sidewalk and felt the subtle shift of it—that invisible line crossed.

She was no longer entering something.

She was inside it.

Rowan checked his watch. “The registry is ten minutes away.”

“Understood.”

They walked toward the car.

The driver opened the door.

Elara paused for a fraction of a second before getting in—not out of doubt, but out of recognition. There were moments in life that didn’t announce themselves as important until later. This was one of them.

She stepped inside.

The drive was short.

The registry building was small, unassuming. Pale stone, modest signage. A place meant for function, not memory.

Inside, the process was efficient.

Two witnesses—pre-arranged, neutral, distant. Names exchanged. Papers stamped.

No vows.

No speeches.

No lingering looks.

The official spoke the necessary words with professional neutrality. “By the authority vested in me—”

Elara barely registered them.

Rowan’s presence beside her was steady, contained.

When it was done, they were handed a document and quietly congratulated.

“Congratulations,” the official said, already turning to the next file.

They stepped back outside.

Sunlight filtered through the thin clouds. The city sounded the same.

Elara stood there for a moment, document in hand.

She was married.

Without a wedding.

Rowan adjusted his jacket. “I’ll have copies delivered to you.”

“Thank you.”

They stood side by side, not touching.

There was nothing else to say.

The driver opened the door again.

Rowan gestured. “After you.”

She stepped in.

As the car pulled away, Elara looked out the window and let the reality settle—not dramatically, not painfully.

Just fully.

She was officially his wife.

Not because of love.

Not because of fate.

But because she had chosen this—with clarity, with control, with her eyes open.

And the city did not pause to acknowledge it.

Neither did she.

They drove on, separate even now, bound by ink and law and silence.

And nothing about it felt symbolic.

Which, Elara thought, was exactly the point.

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