LOGINPOV: Emily
The nausea hit me first in the elevator. I had been standing there, coffee in hand, on my way down to meet Alexander's driver for a scheduled appearance at some charity luncheon. The elevator started moving and my stomach turned so violently I had to press my free hand flat against the wall.
I made it through the luncheon by drinking water and rearranging food on my plate and smiling at the right moments. Nobody noticed. I had gotten very good at performing fine.
That was three weeks after the night I had decided not to think about.
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By the second week of feeling wrong, I started paying attention. Not to the nausea alone. To the tiredness that sat behind my eyes no matter how much I slept. To the way certain smells hit me like something physical. Clara had made fish one evening and I had walked out of the kitchen so fast she called after me asking if I was alright.
"Just a headache," I said.
I said that a lot now.
At night I lay in bed and counted backwards and then counted again and each time I arrived at the same answer, which was the answer I was refusing to look at directly.
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Alexander had grown quieter since that morning. Not that he had ever been loud. But there was a difference between his normal distance and what existed between us now. He came home later. Left earlier. When we were in the same room he found ways to face slightly away, phone in hand, attention elsewhere. We spoke about logistics. Times, dates, what to wear to which event. Nothing else.
I watched him sometimes, when he wasn't looking. I watched the way he carried himself through his own home like he was passing through, like nothing in it belonged to him in any way that mattered. I wondered what had happened to him, specifically, to make a person that sealed.
Then I would remember the coldness of that morning and stop feeling curious. One afternoon I was coming down the hallway when I heard two of the cleaning staff talking in the laundry room. The door was half open. I wasn't trying to listen.
"How long do you think this one lasts?"
"Clara said a year contract. Same as the last arrangement."
A short laugh. "They never make it the full year. He makes sure of it."
"The cold shoulder treatment?"
"Works every time apparently. They either leave early or they stop trying. Either way he gets what he needs and moves on."
A pause.
"She seems different though. The new one."
"They all seem different in the beginning."
I walked past the doorway without slowing down. I kept my face completely neutral all the way to my room. I sat on the edge of the bed and pressed my hands together between my knees and breathed slowly until the tightness in my chest loosened enough to think.
They all seem different in the beginning.
I sat with that for a long time.
++++++++
I bought the test on a Tuesday. I didn't take the house car. I walked six blocks in a cap and jacket and paid cash at a small pharmacy where nobody knew my face. I bought two different brands because I didn't trust myself to believe one answer.
Back at the penthouse I waited until Clara had left for the evening and Alexander's schedule showed a dinner meeting until nine. I locked the bathroom door and sat on the edge of the tub and opened the first box with hands that weren't entirely steady.
While I waited I looked at the ceiling. There was a small water stain near the light fitting, barely visible. I focused on it and thought about completely unrelated things. My father's garden. A book I had been meaning to finish. Whether I had replied to my friend Sola's last message.
My phone buzzed on the counter. I turned it face down without looking at it. Then the timer I had set went off. I reached for the test slowly. The way you reach for something when part of you already knows what it's going to say and is trying to delay the moment of knowing for certain.
I picked it up. I looked at it. I put it down on the counter and picked up the second box to try again and see if I was day dreaming..
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The second test took longer to process because my hands were shaking badly enough that I had to set it down twice before I could open it properly. I sat back on the floor with my back against the tub. The tiles were cold through my clothes. I didn't move.
I thought about the night I had promised myself not to think about. I thought about the morning after and the sound of a cabinet closing and keys being picked up. I thought about contract wives who never last the full year.
I pressed the back of my hand against my mouth and breathed through my nose until the wave passed. There were no tears. I was somewhere beyond tears, in the strange numb place that comes after a shock lands and the body hasn't caught up yet.
A year. We had a contract for a year. No emotional involvement. No complications. A clean transaction, he had called it.
I almost laughed. I picked up the second test from the counter edge where I had set it to develop. I already knew. I had known since I reached for it. But I looked anyway because some part of me needed to see it again, needed the confirmation to be undeniable.
Two lines. And it was positive, I was still sitting on the bathroom floor staring at it when I heard the front door open.
He was home early. His footsteps crossed the living room. Moved down the hallway. I heard him pause outside the bathroom door.
A knock. Two short, quiet knocks.
"Emily." His voice, flat and unreadable as always, came through the door. "Clara said you didn't eat today. There's food."
I didn't answer.
A pause. Then the door handle moved. I had forgotten to lock it properly. The door opened and Alexander stood in the doorway in his coat, keys still in hand, and his eyes went from my face to the test sitting on the counter in front of me.
The silence that followed was the loudest thing I had ever heard..
POV: EmilyI did not move. The door was half open behind me, the warmth of the building at my back, the cold street air on my face, and I stood exactly where I was and looked at him across the width of the road.He was standing in the shadow between two streetlights. Dark coat, no umbrella, and the rain had started again without my noticing, the soft persistent kind that didn't announce itself. It was coming down on him and he wasn't moving. His hands were at his sides. His face was turned toward me.The same rain, I thought about it before I could stop myself. The same rain that had been falling the night I walked into his office with wet hair and shaking hands and sat across a desk from a stranger and signed my name.He looked different from this distance. Or maybe the distance was doing something to my perception. The controlled stillness I associated with him, that armoured, deliberate quality, was present but altered. He was still. But it wasn't the stillness of a man in command
POV: EmilyFive months looked different than I had expected. Not worse. Just more real. More undeniable. The kind of sight that meant strangers on the bus occasionally smiled at me in a knowing way and shop assistants asked when I was due and I had stopped being startled by it and started simply answering.March, Due in March.My father texted every morning at eight-fifteen without fail. Not long messages. Usually just a single line. How did you sleep? Eating properly. Cold today, wear something warm. The kind of messages that were really just a way of saying: I am here. I am paying attention. I am not going anywhere.He had taken the news about the pregnancy with a silence that lasted about forty seconds and then broken into the specific careful gentleness of a man rearranging himself around something important. He had not asked about Alexander. Not once. He had simply said, "Tell me what you need," and then started doing the things on that list before I had finished saying them.He
POV: AlexanderMy father called at seven in the evening. I was still in the office. I had been in the office since seven that morning and had not noticed the hours passing, which was normal. I noticed time passing only when something interrupted the work, and the work had been sufficient today to fill every available space.I answered without looking away from the document on my screen."Father.""Put down whatever you're reading," he said.I put it down. Not because he told me to. Because the quality of his voice was different. Structured in a way that was distinct from his usual precision. Richard Kane was always deliberate but there were gradations, and this particular gradation meant he had prepared for the call before making it.I leaned back in my chair. "What is it?""I received some photographs this evening," he said. "Through a private channel. I'm going to tell you what they show and I need you to listen without interrupting.""Go ahead.""Emily Carter," he said. "On a stree
POV: VivienneThe photographs arrived in a folder at eleven in the morning. I was at my desk with coffee and the financial pages when the notification came through. I closed the newspaper, opened the laptop, and clicked into the folder with the methodical attention I gave everything that arrived from my sources. No rushing. No skipping ahead. You looked at information in sequence or you missed the things that mattered.Forty-seven photographs, Twelve days of coverage. I went through them one by one. Emily Carter on Birch Street. Emily Carter entering a small clinic on a quiet road, head slightly down, the particular forward lean of someone who didn't want to be recognised. Emily Carter at a coffee shop with a laptop, working, her hand wrapped around a cup. Emily Carter and the man, Dominic Reyes, at a Thai restaurant two nights ago, sitting close, his hand moving over hers across the table.I paused on that one. Studied it. His body language was unmistakable. The way he was leaning to
POV: DominicI had been carrying it for a long time. That was the honest thing, the thing I had never said out loud to anyone, not even to myself in the direct and unambiguous way that truth requires. I had dressed it in other language for years. She's my best friend. The timing was never right. She has enough going on. All of that was true. None of it was the whole truth.The whole truth was simpler and more inconvenient. I had loved Emily Carter since we were twenty-two years old and sitting on the floor of a university library at two in the morning, surrounded by her notes and my coffee and the specific quiet of a building full of sleeping books, and she had looked up at me mid-sentence and laughed at something I said and I had felt something shift in my chest that had never fully shifted back.We had drifted toward each other that year and then both pulled back, almost at the same time, with the unspoken agreement of two people who cared about something too much to risk it on bad
POV: EmilyI stood in the doorway holding the envelope for a moment after the man in the suit had gone. Then I closed the door and went to the kitchen table and sat down and looked at it.Kane Legal Associates. Printed in clean black letters on the top left corner. My name on the front in the same font, precise and impersonal, the way institutions address people they do not know and do not intend to.I opened it carefully. Not slowly. I was not the kind of person who delayed bad news. I slid my finger under the seal and pulled out three folded pages and opened them flat on the table.I read it once, quickly, Then I sat back and looked at the ceiling for a moment. Then I read it again.+++++++++The letter was structured in four sections. The first confirmed that Alexander Kane was not pursuing enforcement of any contractual obligations related to Emily Rose Carter's departure from the marital residence. The second confirmed that the financial arrangement remained fully intact. Her fat
POV: AlexanderThe penthouse was quiet when I got home. That was not unusual. It was always quiet. I had designed my life around quiet. No unnecessary noise, no clutter, no one waiting up with questions about where I had been or how the dinner went. Quiet was efficient. Quiet was mine.I set my key
POV: EmilyI moved faster than I had ever moved in my life. The test went into my robe pocket in one motion. I stood up from the floor and turned on the tap and splashed cold water on my face just as Alexander stepped fully into the bathroom doorway."What are you doing on the floor?" he asked."I
POV: EmilyThe penthouse didn't feel like anyone lived there. That was the first thing I noticed when the elevator opened directly into the living room. Everything was grey and white and glass. Clean lines, no clutter, no photographs on the walls. A large window ran the full length of one side, sho
POV: EmilyThe dress cost more than my father's first car. I knew because the stylist told me, cheerfully, while tightening the corset at the back. I stood in front of the mirror and looked at a woman I didn't recognize. White lace, fitted waist, hair pinned up with small pearls threaded through it







