He Brought Legal Papers To Breakfast, But His Bride Was Ready-kimochi

The morning after my wedding, the house was too bright for what Nathan Bennett had planned.

Sunlight came through the dining-room windows in flat gold stripes, catching the rims of the coffee cups and the wilting reception flowers someone had placed on the sideboard.

The flowers smelled faintly sweet and tired.

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The coffee smelled burned.

I was still wearing my ivory silk robe from the night before, and my grandmother Elena’s diamond earrings were still in my ears.

I had slept maybe three hours.

Nathan had slept plenty.

That was the first thing I noticed when he walked in.

Not the notary behind him.

Not the thick legal folder in his hand.

Nathan looked rested.

He looked like a man who believed the hard part was over because I had already said “I do.”

His mother, Diane, came in right behind him with the polished little smile she wore when she wanted someone to think cruelty was good manners.

Richard followed her, calm and pleased, already acting like he owned a chair in my house.

The notary was last.

He looked uncomfortable before he even sat down.

That should have told Nathan something.

It did not.

Nathan leaned down and kissed my forehead.

Then he set the folder beside my coffee cup.

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