He married me with a smile the cameras could trust.
I married him with a secret sitting cold beneath my ribs.
By the time we reached the church steps, Peter Strickland’s wedding ring was already flashing under the photographers’ lights, bright and clean and useless.

Mine felt heavier than it should have done.
Guests crowded beneath the stone archway, wrapped in wool coats and expensive perfume, pretending not to stare while absolutely staring.
To them, it was the sort of wedding people read about and called inevitable after the fact.
A billionaire groom with a company in trouble.
A German heiress with a father powerful enough to save it.
A marriage that joined two empires without anyone having to say the word rescue.
They saw white silk, black cars, white roses, cameras, diamonds and two families standing politely close to one another.
They did not see the vestry door.
They did not hear Peter’s voice through the wood ten minutes before the ceremony.
They did not hear him tell his friends I was strange.
Dull.
Unattractive.
They did not hear him laugh when one of them asked how long he would have to keep up the performance.
“Five years,” he had said. “That is what the agreement requires.”
I had stood very still on the other side of the door, my gloved hand resting against the wall, the bouquet suddenly ridiculous in my grip.
A bride should not learn her husband’s opinion of her just before the organ begins.
But families like ours do not stop ceremonies for hurt feelings.
We sign papers.
We nod to lawyers.
We keep walking.
So when my father came to fetch me, I took his arm.
When the doors opened, I walked down the aisle.
When Peter turned and looked at me, something like surprise crossed his face.
Perhaps he had expected me to cry.
Perhaps he had expected me not to know.
Perhaps men like Peter Strickland were so used to rooms arranging themselves around their comfort that he had forgotten doors had two sides.
The vows were spoken.
The register was signed.
The ring went on.
When the priest smiled and the guests rose in applause, Peter leaned close enough for the cameras to catch tenderness.
“We should look happy,” he murmured.
I smiled.
“We don’t.”
His face barely changed, but I felt the pause in him.
It was small.
It was enough.
The reception was held at the Strickland Hotel, a glass tower dressed for celebration, every surface polished until it reflected wealth back at itself.
White roses filled the room.
Champagne moved from tray to tray.
Women with perfect hair kissed the air beside my cheeks and told me I looked beautiful.
Men who cared nothing for marriage shook Peter’s hand as if he had just secured a shipping route instead of a wife.
In a sense, he had.
My father’s company needed access.
His company needed stability.
My hand in Peter’s had solved several problems for people who were not me.
Peter tried to speak to me after the receiving line.
I turned to a guest.
He tried again before the photographs.
I asked for water.
He approached me near the table plan.
I let one of his directors draw me into a conversation about markets, weather and the terrible difficulty of finding good staff.
Politeness is useful when sharpened properly.
By dinner, Peter had learned that I could refuse him without raising my voice.
That seemed to trouble him more than anger would have done.
After the speeches, he came to my chair and held out his hand.
“Dance with me,” he said.
The band had just begun to tune.
The room turned its attention towards us with the delicate hunger of people hoping to witness affection.
“The contract didn’t require dancing,” I said.
“It required appearances.”
I looked at his hand.
It was steady.
Everything about Peter was steady: his voice, his posture, the careful way he occupied space as if he had never been afraid of being asked to leave it.
I placed my hand in his because the room expected a bride to obey romance when it was offered publicly.
He led me to the centre of the ballroom.
The music began.
He danced well, of course.
Men like him were taught early how to move in rooms where people watched.
They learned to negotiate before they learned to apologise.
They learned to smile before they learned what their words cost.
“You heard everything,” he said.
“Yes.”
His fingers tightened slightly at my waist.
“I was wrong.”
I kept my eyes on his tie pin, a small silver thing that probably cost more than some people’s rent.
“About which part?”
His mouth compressed.
“Adelaide.”
“No, please. Be precise. Was I not strange? Not dull? Not unattractive? Or have you simply decided five years sounds longer when the woman can answer back?”
A couple passed close beside us, laughing too brightly.
Peter lowered his voice.
“I was wrong about you.”
“You know nothing about me.”
“I know enough to regret what I said.”
“That must be uncomfortable.”
His eyes met mine then, and for a second the practised man disappeared.
In his place was someone tired, cornered and perhaps, to his own disgust, ashamed.
It might have moved me if it had arrived before the vows.
It might have mattered if I had not heard him laughing.
But timing is a moral act.
You do not get to wound someone in private and apologise only when public ruin becomes possible.
The music swelled.
His hand remained careful on my back.
The ballroom blurred around us: the flowers, the chandeliers, the rows of faces, the camera lenses waiting for proof that this transaction had a heartbeat.
For one weak moment, I could almost believe the man holding me wanted to be better than the man I had overheard.
Then the old words returned.
Strange.
Dull.
Unattractive.
Five years.
The final note faded.
I stepped away.
“Apology rejected,” I said.
The guests clapped.
They thought the dance had ended.
Peter understood that something else had.
For the rest of the reception, he stayed close enough to perform husband but not close enough to speak.
That was wise of him.
My father watched from the top table with an expression I could not quite read.
He knew the business reasons for the marriage.
He knew the contract.
He knew the risks.
He did not know what Peter had said behind the door.
Or perhaps he did, and simply believed pride was an affordable casualty.
Fathers in rooms like ours often call a daughter strong when what they mean is useful.
I smiled until my cheeks ached.
I thanked people for coming.
I held a glass of champagne I did not drink.
Near midnight, someone placed a fur-trimmed wrap over my shoulders, someone else found my bouquet, and the photographers shouted for one more kiss outside the hotel entrance.
Peter leaned towards me.
I turned my cheek.
The cameras loved it anyway.
The car waiting for us was black, silent and too warm.
Rain traced thin silver lines down the window as the hotel disappeared behind us.
For the first time all day, no one was watching.
Peter sat beside me, still in his wedding suit, his profile cut sharply against the passing lights.
“I didn’t make a bet,” he said suddenly.
I looked at him.
“Is that meant to comfort me?”
“No. I only mean that word is wrong.”
“How fortunate for you. We can adjust the vocabulary while leaving the cruelty intact.”
He exhaled.
“I said those things because I was angry.”
“At me?”
“At the arrangement.”
“And I was the nearest object soft enough to insult.”
He had no answer.
The silence that followed was almost civil.
That was worse.
Anger can be clean.
Civility lets people pretend the knife is not still in the room.
The car stopped beneath the building where the lawyers had decided we would live.
Our penthouse, the documents called it.
The phrase was absurd.
Nothing becomes shared simply because a solicitor types it neatly.
We took the private lift without speaking.
In the mirrored wall, we looked like strangers dressed as bride and groom for a magazine shoot.
My hair was still pinned.
His bow tie was undone.
My ring shone.
His did too.
The lift opened into marble, steel, glass and a view so wide it seemed to accuse the city of being small.
The penthouse was beautiful in the way expensive places often are when no one has loved them.
Everything was perfect.
Nothing was welcoming.
There were pale sofas no one would dare sit on carelessly, shelves arranged with art books no one had opened, and a kitchen so clean it looked recently invented.
On the counter sat an electric kettle, two white mugs and a tea towel folded with hotel precision.
The detail almost made me laugh.
A small domestic gesture in a room designed to prevent intimacy.
Peter removed his jacket and laid it over the back of a chair.
“You can take the main bedroom,” he said.
“How generous.”
“I’ll sleep in the guest room.”
“That was already my assumption.”
He looked at me for a long moment.
The city light caught the tiredness around his eyes.
I had not noticed it at the church.
I had been too busy bleeding politely.
“There are staff in the morning,” he said. “You can change whatever you like.”
“I don’t intend to decorate a cage.”
“It isn’t a cage.”
“No. Cages usually admit what they are.”
His mouth opened, then closed.
Good again.
I had discovered that Peter Strickland was most honest when silenced.
On the glass coffee table lay the instruments of our arrangement.
Two key cards.
A folded copy of the marriage contract.
A cream envelope from the solicitors.
A hotel note written in careful ink, congratulating us on our marriage and wishing us every happiness.
Every happiness.
People wrote the strangest things on paper.
I slipped off one glove and touched the corner of the contract.
The paper was thick.
The terms inside were thicker.
Five years.
Separate assets.
Public appearances.
Private discretion.
No scandal.
No unilateral exit without penalty.
A marriage built not on love, nor even on trust, but on the hope that two proud families could profit from endurance.
Peter watched my hand.
“You read it again?” he asked.
“I read everything before I sign it.”
“I know.”
“Do you?”
“Yes.”
There it was again, that quiet discomfort, as if some part of him had begun revising me against his will.
Too late.
I turned towards the corridor.
The bedroom door stood open, showing cream carpet, a low bed, a vase of white flowers and a suitcase already placed beside the wardrobe.
My suitcase.
Even my arrival had been arranged by someone else.
“Adelaide,” Peter said.
I stopped but did not turn.
He said my name differently this time.
Not as a command.
Not as an apology either.
More like a warning.
I turned slowly.
He had not moved from the coffee table.
One hand rested beside the solicitor’s envelope.
His wedding ring flashed in the lamplight, absurdly new.
“If we are to survive this,” he said, “you need to know there are things I wasn’t allowed to tell you.”
I stared at him.
The day had been long enough for humiliation, vows, champagne, cameras, lies and a rejected apology.
It had not left room for mystery.
“You mistake me for someone still interested in your explanations,” I said.
“I don’t.”
The answer came too quickly.
That stopped me.
Peter looked down at the envelope as if it might move by itself.
“My board knows about the marriage,” he said. “Your father knows about the agreement. The lawyers know more than either of us would like.”
“Then it sounds as though I am the only uninformed person in my own wedding.”
His face tightened.
“Yes.”
A kettle clicked off in the kitchen.
Neither of us had turned it on.
The sound was small, domestic and completely wrong.
Steam began to rise from the spout.
I looked towards it, then back at Peter.
He followed my gaze, and for the first time that night, fear moved openly across his face.
The private lift chimed.
Peter went very still.
The doors opened.
His mother stepped out first, dressed in black, her rain-damp coat shining at the shoulders.
She held a phone in one hand and a folder in the other, the cardboard bent under the force of her grip.
Behind her came a young woman I recognised from the family photographs, Peter’s sister, though she looked nothing like the poised girl in the frames.
Her face was pale.
Her eyes were fixed on the cream envelope.
“No,” she whispered.
Peter took one step towards her.
She shook her head.
Then her knees gave way, and she folded onto the marble floor with one hand over her mouth.
The room changed.
The penthouse, the contract, the cold flowers, the glittering view, all of it seemed to draw back from the table.
Peter’s mother did not look at her son.
She looked at me.
“Don’t touch that envelope, Adelaide,” she said.
Her voice was calm.
That made it worse.
I looked at Peter.
He had gone white.
The apology in the ballroom had been shame.
This was terror.
My hand hovered above the envelope.
The flap was already loose.
The paper inside had shifted just enough for me to see the first line, though not enough to read it.
Peter whispered my name.
His sister made a broken sound from the floor.
His mother stepped closer, still holding the bent folder.
“That paper,” she said, “is the reason he married you.”
And at last, the entire room went silent.