A stranger called husband
a's
d be sl
subscription, trying on gowns I didn't pick, wearing diamond rings that cost more than my entire life's net worth c
t
ever hea
a walk-in. A walk-through. This thing could have its own zip code. And I'm wrapped in nothing but con
k like they belong in a palace, untouched and sparkling like they've been blessed by angels. The pajamas are arranged in rows by fabric type. Silk
ves li
this man
drama set in the French Riviera. Then I find socks. God bless whoever added socks, because this house? Thi
wine and whispering secrets. But no. Just silence. Heavy, thick silence, interrupted only by the soft hum of dista
y have I si
um. Everything is too clean. Too polished. There's not a single sign of life-no creased
'm holdin
, by the way. Like, what's behind them? Secret kids? Dead ex-wives?
door opens. A
ci
maybe not even alive. I
f those dramatic paintings rich people hang over their fireplaces. He's not mov
kwardly by
r brooding or soul-harvesting
land on me, sharp and unreadable, like he's trying to
asks. No greeting. No small
tioned my sister would be moved. I just wanted to know when. Li
ning," he rep
h
ay. Thanks
he drops a line so casually,
er try to
catches. "
urns back to the window like he di
ere's no divorce. No feelings. We survive the ye
out love? I'm not out here sketching our future baby names, sir.
ly. "No love. Got it. Super e
esn't
ike that. But because something about this whole thing-the marriage, the house, the ma
tly ajar. It's different from the oth
ss around it. Like it's h
is, but that door doesn't feel like the rest of
permission. Just to push it op
deep inside, a small
before my eyes. This is always the moment. Th
ep back. Th
walk
firmly-then lock it. Double check. Slide a cha
the duvet like i
The contract. The mystery door. The fact that I'm technically
You're doing this for your sis
the
, something in this hou
chi
it
can fe