Her New Husband Demanded Her Company, But She Had Already Set the Trap-congtien

The morning after my wedding, my husband brought a notary to breakfast.

Not flowers.

Not coffee in bed.

Image

A notary.

The dining room smelled like strong coffee, buttered toast, and white roses left wilting in vases from the reception the night before.

Morning light came in through the tall windows in bright pale strips, falling across the breakfast plates, the folded linen napkins, and the folder Gregory placed beside my cup like it was nothing.

I was still in my white robe.

I was still wearing the diamond earrings my grandmother Isabela had left me.

And somehow, despite everything I had survived in business and in life, there was still one small foolish part of me that had wanted to believe marriage meant safety.

Gregory kissed my forehead.

His mouth was warm.

His eyes were not.

“Sign here, Olivia,” he said.

His mother, Meredith, sat behind him with a smile so soft it might have looked kind to someone who had never heard her sharpen her voice in private.

His father, Richard, leaned back with one ankle over his knee, already comfortable in a room and a future that did not belong to him.

A notary I had never met opened his leather folder.

Meredith slid the papers closer to me with two polished fingers.

“It’s the practical thing,” she said. “A wife’s assets should support her husband’s family.”

I looked down.

Transfer of Ownership.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *