The Breakfast Papers That Turned My New Marriage Inside Out Overnight-Teptep

The kitchen still smelled of wedding cake the morning Eleanor Harrington brought a notary to breakfast.

Buttercream clung to the air in a sweet, stale layer.

Cold coffee sat on the counter, untouched, beside flowers that had looked expensive the night before and tired by morning.

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I was barefoot on the tiles in Carter’s oversized dress shirt, with my new ring catching the pale daylight every time I moved.

It flashed against the marble island as though it belonged to a happier version of the day.

The thank-you cards were stacked beside the sink.

My hospital bag leaned against the back door, still half packed from the shift I had come home from before the final rehearsal dinner.

A tea mug had gone cold near the kettle.

A lipstick mark sat on a paper coffee cup.

All those little things looked ordinary, which somehow made what happened next feel more brutal.

A marriage is meant to begin with a quiet morning.

Ours began with a folder.

Eleanor came through the kitchen doorway as if the house and everyone inside it had already agreed to her terms.

She had a black leather portfolio tucked under one arm.

Behind her stood a notary with a neat coat, a cautious face, and the uncomfortable posture of a man who had realised too late that he was not walking into a simple signing.

Eleanor did not say good morning.

She did not mention the wedding.

She did not ask whether we had eaten.

She placed the portfolio on the island and said, “Sign.”

One word.

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