LOGINPOV: Emily
The 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. Beautiful, in the way that things purchased with money tend to be.
Outside the church doors, I could already hear them. Cameras. Voices. The low roar of a crowd that had gathered because Alexander Kane was getting married and that was apparently news worth standing in the cold for.
"Sixty seconds," someone said near the door.
I picked up my bouquet. White roses. No one had asked what I liked.
The doors opened. The noise hit me first. Camera shutters firing like rainfall, voices rising, a blur of faces pressed against barriers lining the path. I walked, because that was the only option. I kept my chin level and my shoulders back and I thought about my father, who was home this morning, safe, free, sitting in his kitchen probably drinking tea he couldn't taste.
I thought about that with every step.
The church interior was stunning and cold. Candles everywhere, tall white flowers, rows of guests in expensive clothes who all turned to look at me with the particular expression people wear when they are watching something they will discuss for weeks. I didn't know most of them. A few faces I recognized from newspapers or television. Business people. Socialites. A senator near the front.
And at the end of the aisle, Alexander.
He stood with his hands clasped in front of him, wearing a dark suit, watching me approach the way you watch a flight board for your departure gate. Present, but not invested. His best man stood beside him, a tall man with a relaxed smile who was clearly doing the emotional work for both of them.
I reached the altar.
Alexander looked at me. "You look fine," he said quietly.
Not beautiful, not stunning.. I smiled anyway, because sixty cameras were pointed at my face.
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The vows were the strangest part. We stood facing each other and I listened to the officiant's words drift past me like sounds from another room. To love and to cherish. In sickness and in health. I repeated what I was told to repeat. Alexander did the same, in that same low, controlled voice he used for everything. Like he was confirming the terms of an acquisition.
When he slid the ring onto my finger, his hand was steady. Mine wasn't. The ring was a perfect fit, which meant someone had found out my size without asking me, and I didn't know why that bothered me more than anything else so far.
"You may kiss the bride."
Alexander looked at me. Something passed behind his eyes, too fast to name. Then he leaned in and pressed his lips to my cheek. Brief. Formal.
The crowd erupted anyway.
I heard a woman two rows back say to her companion, "He hasn't looked at her once with any warmth." The companion hushed her, but I had already heard it.
++++++++++
I noticed her during the signing. We had moved to a side room, just the two of us and two witnesses, to sign the official registry. Through the open doorway I had a partial view of the church, guests milling and talking. And standing near the back, not talking to anyone, was a woman in a fitted black dress.
She was striking. Dark hair, severe cheekbones, the kind of beauty that announces itself without effort. She was staring at Alexander's back with an expression I understood immediately because I had seen it before on my own face in harder moments.
Fury, The kind that comes from something personal. She felt my gaze and looked at me instead. I looked away first.
"Emily."
Alexander was holding the pen out. I took it and signed my name under his on the registry. Emily Rose Carter-Kane.
The hyphen felt like a leash.
+++++++++
The reception was at a hotel rooftop, glass and steel and a view of the city skyline that was genuinely breathtaking. I stood near the edge for a while, holding a glass of champagne I hadn't touched, watching guests laugh and greet each other like this was simply a wonderful party.
I overheard two older men near me without meaning to.
"Kane doesn't do anything without a reason."
"Married in under twenty-four hours. She must be very important to whatever he's building."
"Or very convenient."
They laughed and moved on. I took a sip of champagne. Across the room I watched Alexander work it. There was no other word. He moved from group to group with a handshake and a brief smile and people lit up around him the way people do around power. He laughed once, sharp and short, at something an older man said. It was the first time I had seen him laugh.
He didn't look for me. Not once.
I thought about what the neighbor's daughter had said to me this morning while I was getting ready. You're marrying Alexander Kane? My God, Emily, do you know what they say about him?
I had asked what they said.
She had hesitated. Just that he doesn't let people get close. Someone tried once. It didn't end well for her.
I hadn't asked who. I wasn't sure I wanted to know.
Now I found myself scanning the room and locating the woman in black almost immediately, because some part of me had been tracking her. She was at the bar, alone, turning a glass slowly in her hands. She looked up and found Alexander across the room, and her jaw tightened.
I was still watching her when I felt Alexander beside me. I hadn't heard him approach. He stood close, close enough that anyone watching would see a husband speaking quietly to his wife at their reception. He picked up a glass from a passing tray and looked out at the skyline.
Then he tilted his head toward me, just slightly.
"You did well today," he said. "The cameras liked you."
I kept my own gaze forward. "I'm glad I was convincing."
A short silence.
"Make sure you stay convincing." His voice was low, completely even. "Because I need to be clear about something before tonight gets any further."
I waited.
"Don't misunderstand this." The words arrived without heat, without cruelty, which somehow made them worse. "You're just a contract. Nothing more."
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: EmilyThe flat was on the third floor of a narrow building on Birch Street, above a bakery called Emmett's that had been there, according to the landlord, since before either of us was born.He said it like a selling point. I took it as one. The flat itself was small. One bedroom, a living roo
POV: AlexanderThe car hit a stretch of clear road and my assistant took the opportunity to speak."The PR team wants a response window," she said. "They're saying if we don't put something out by noon it looks like confirmation."I was reading the article on my phone. I finished the last paragraph
POV: EmilyI sat very still with the phone against my ear."He called you," I said again. Not a question this time. I needed to hear myself say it a second time because the first time had not fully landed."This morning," my father said. "Around nine. I didn't recognise the number at first. He intr
POV: EmilySix weeks was long enough to build a routine and short enough that the routine still felt borrowed. I woke up every morning in Dominic's spare room at seven, before his alarm went off down the hall. I made tea in his kitchen while he slept, sitting at the table with my laptop open, picki







