than the GDP of several small nations. Honora walked through the entrance at 6 AM, wearing sunglasses and a
sins and board members occupied the other chairs, their faces arranged in expressions of concern that didn't reach th
ily. A woman named Sarah, sharp-featured, sharper-minded, the one who had t
e I se
actually. But the situation-the markets opened twenty minutes ago. Thornton Group is down eigh
use o
away from the reporters who had begun to gather in the lobby. "The narrative that the Thorntons are in
his own hear
ely. One that shows unity. Stability. Love, Mrs. Thornton.
orci
he family. For your grandmother's continued care at
the professional polish, and she understood. They were afraid. The mighty Thorn
re i
t Mrs. Thornt
alked
wo men in suits who recognized her and stepped aside
on his shirt had dried to a rusty brown. His face, when he turned, showed the hours he had spent in vigil-sha
move toward her. "I was
s inv
fix this. Fix us. As if-" he stopped, his hand going to his fac
d nothing.
s a minor event. Stress-induced. He'll recover. He'll-" his ja
thing happen. I hap
rned to face her fully, and she saw it then, the thing she had been waiting for, the crack in the armor that let her see the man she had marri
nd fear and the last traces of his cologne. "No one offered me an
getic, urgent: "The press is
the cameras too many. Honora felt Efford's hand find hers, his fingers interlacing wit
ars only. "Or your grandmother
d taught her, the one that reached he
rward, microphone extended. "Rumors
. She felt his thumb press into
e charm that had built an empire "-experienced a misunderstanding. A miscommunicatio
eyes were ice again, b
nor
, had played her part so well for so long that sometime
th on her tongue. "Grateful for the support of our
er intimacy that the cameras captured from three angles. She felt hi
ow squeeze my hand. Harder.
inger, pressing until she felt him flinch. He didn't pull away. His other hand came up to
against her hair. "Sm
etended to be the woman they needed her to be, the loyal wife, the suppor
ad pronounced it "acceptable," they walked back into the hospital together. Hand in hand, for the
sed behind them with a
without speaking, without looking at him, her moveme
and. She pumped soap into her palms-antibacterial, hospital
kin had touched hers. Then her wrists, her forearms, working upward, the wate
n the doorway.
nor
n't pretend that out there-" she jerked her chin toward the living room "-meant anything.
had
ou? You have to control everything. Everyone. You have to win, even when winning
could see him in the mirror, his reflection ghoste
nge, thick, nothing like the controlled instrument she kn
"You didn't let me bleed. You took my blood and gave it to her. You stood there and watched me-" she stoppe
oom, to the suitcase still open on the bed,
re you
e, not folding, not caring. "What I would have done if you hadn't-"
hadn't
gerous, the truth she had been avoiding since she walked into that
bed. It hit the floor with a thud
ocked the
not le
tch
ublic relations agreement. We
tubble on his jaw, the exhaustion in his eyes. "I'm done, Efford. I'm done being your prop, your cover, your convenient excuse. You want a wife for the cameras? Hire
se enough to feel his heat, to smell the fear-sweat ben
ov
N
, the ones who donate to your campaigns-they'll call the p
destroy
n't c
ose enough to kiss or kill. She saw his hand twitch, rising towa
opped. He s
he hallway, past the bedroom they had shared, past the guest rooms w
he guest room. The one they had never used because they never had guests who stayed overnight, beca
furnished with leftovers, a bed that had never be
inside. She closed the
loud in the
footsteps, his voice, the sound of him demanding she open, demandin
th
ck wall, an air shaft, the kind of view that existed in buildings like t
the custom pillow-top in the master bedroom. She lay back and
door. The sound of his breathing, controlled, measured, the way he brea
ugh the door, muffled, s
swer. She clo
She counted her breaths, matching them to his, two people se
bedroom door opening, closing. The silence of a ma
uld call Edie. Tomorrow, she would begin the work of becoming someone else. To
a room in her husband's house, more alo
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