LOGINHELEN
I know now that grief doesn't arrive the way that it's described in books and shown in movies. There's no dramatic collapse, no scream that tears itself from my chest. What comes instead is a narrowing, a sensation like the world has tilted slightly off its axis and everything is now sliding – quietly, relentlessly – toward an edge that I can't see yet. I stand in the hospital corridor and feel as though I've been misfiled, placed in the wrong life, the wrong hour, the wrong body.
Edward is dead.
The doctor's official words move through me without resistance, settling somewhere low and heavy. My son – my beautiful, careful boy, who did everything correctly, who followed the rules as though obedience itself might guarantee survival – has died on stone church stairs in borrowed sunlight. The unfairness of it is almost abstract, I can't touch the pain without dissolving into it.
I don't allow myself to crumble; I watch instead.
It turns out that hospitals are excellent places for watching. Everyone is exposed here, stripped of pretense by exhaustion and fear. I see the way that the nurses glance at Iris – too beautiful, too stricken, too tragic in her ruined dress. I see how the room subtly rearranges itself around her presence, how pity and suspicion coexist too easily in the same look.
And most of all, I watch Thomas. I watch how he's already taken control of Iris.
It's unmistakable: the way he positions himself next to her, the way his body blocks hers from view, the way his hand remains on her back, as though it belongs there. He speaks for her, he decides for her. And she lets him.
The sight of her slight, trembling body being supported by his strength and muscle strikes me harder than the doctor’s words.
I tell myself that this is shock, that grief distorts perception. But the longer I watch them, the more certain I become that this is not something forming in the aftermath of disaster. There is no awkwardness, no hesitation, no negotiation of space. Thomas speaks quietly to her, and she listens – not merely hearing him, but receiving him, her shoulders easing under his hand, her breathing slowing in response to his voice.
This is not the beginning of something. This is the continuation.
I know Thomas well enough to recognize the shape of his attention. I've seen it before, felt it settle on me once, long ago, with the same quiet certainty. He doesn't rush, he doesn't reach. He just positions himself and waits for the world to adjust. It always does.
Iris looks up at him now, her eyes wide and searching, and something in her expression catches painfully at my chest. She looks like a child who's lost the rules mid-game, who's waiting for someone older to explain what happens next, and Thomas doesn't hesitate. He gives her instruction – not in words alone, but in posture, in tone, in the simple fact of remaining solid when everything else around her has fractured. He stands, holds out his hand, tells her to get up.
She obeys, of course. They leave the room together.
The intimacy of it feels invasive, almost obscene, given the circumstances. My son’s body is still warm somewhere behind a closed door, and already this dynamic has asserted itself, sliding into place with terrifying ease.
I look away from their departing backs, my throat tight.
This is not jealousy. This is not rivalry. This is something colder. Deeper. Darker.
Edward trusted his father implicitly. He believed, as I once did, that Thomas’s restraint was synonymous with virtue, that his control meant safety. Watching him now, watching the speed with which he has claimed responsibility for his dead son's wife – claimed her – I feel a sharp edge of doubt.
When did this begin? How long has this been happening between them? Did Edward know?
The questions loop without answers, irritating and persistent. I think of the way Thomas looked at her in the church, the intensity I dismissed as inappropriate timing, and feel something ugly twist inside me. I understand now that whatever is unfolding between them doesn't include me, so I'm alone in my devastation and loss. They have each other, and I have nothing and no one.
I press my lips together, swallowing the ache that threatens to rise. This isn't the moment for confrontation, nor is it the moment for accusations. But it is the moment that I begin to watch them both very carefully.
Because grief, I am learning, is not only sorrow.
Sometimes it's suspicion finding its first foothold.
ZARAInside, the boutique is much quieter than the street, though not silent. Soft music drifts from hidden speakers, subdued enough not to interfere with conversation, and somewhere beyond the main showroom a clothes rail moves across polished flooring with the faint, controlled whisper of expensive fabric.Everything is designed to feel effortless. The lighting is warm without revealing its source, the mirrors flattering without appearing dishonest, the chairs arranged to suggest comfort while ensuring no one forgets they are sitting somewhere exclusive.Helen gestures toward a pale velvet sofa near the fitting rooms.“Sit for a few minutes and warm up,” she says. “Unless you have somewhere else to be.”“I don’t.”The answer feels more revealing than it should.Daddy is upstairs in his office, surrounded by meetings and contracts and people who understand the machinery of money far better than I do. I’d planned to wander until he called. Maybe buy a coffee, maybe look at fabrics.I
IRISThe next morningThe city feels louder than I remember.Not louder in the ordinary sense, perhaps, because cities always possess a kind of permanent impatience, a restless pulse moving beneath traffic, footsteps, voices, sirens and the metallic thunder of trains disappearing into tunnels beneath the streets.Yet after weeks at the estate and at the cottage, where morning arrives through trees and the loudest sound is usually the kettle beginning to boil, the city presses against me from every direction at once. Glass towers catch the thin autumn light. Black cabs slide through wet intersections. People hurry past carrying coffees, briefcases and private emergencies, all of them moving with the confidence of those who know precisely where they belong.Daddy keeps one hand at the small of my back as we cross the pavement toward the entrance of Ashcroft Holdings, guiding without steering, close enough that I feel protected without being handled. He’s asked me twice whether I’m certa
MARGARETThe walk to the cottage takes less than ten minutes. Tonight, it feels considerably longer.Snow is being carried in the air, damp and cold against my face as I leave the side entrance and follow the edge of the kitchen garden toward the trees. I avoid the gravel path without consciously deciding to do so, keeping instead to the grass where my footsteps make almost no sound, and the knowledge of what I’m doing settles over me gradually, with each careful step and each glance toward the darkened windows of Ashcroft behind me.I’m sneaking across the estate that I call home. The humiliation should turn me around; it doesn’t, though.The cottage appears through the trees as a low shape of stone and warm glass, every window lit against the darkness. Smoke curls from the chimney. The curtains have not yet been drawn, and as I approach, slowing instinctively beneath the cover of an old cedar, I see movement inside.I stop.The sensible choice is still available to me – I could go ho
MARGARETThe next morningThe first sign is the bed.I go upstairs shortly after breakfast with fresh linen over one arm and Thomas’s shirts folded neatly in a basket, moving through the familiar corridors with the quiet efficiency of a woman who has performed the same duties for so long, that the house seems to anticipate her before she arrives. There are routines here older than many marriages, older than several members of staff, older even than Edward was permitted to become, and for years I’ve understood every one of them.Fires are laid before rooms grow cold. Curtains are opened before daylight becomes impatient. Coffee arrives when Thomas opens the first page of the morning paper, never before, never late. His suits are pressed, his cufflinks paired, his shaving water prepared when travel or sleeplessness has altered his schedule enough to require attention.Nothing is announced. Nothing needs to be. Ashcroft functions because I notice.Yet when I enter the master bedroom, the
THOMASI swirl the last sip of the rich, oaky wine in my glass before draining it in one smooth pull, the bold flavor lingering on my tongue. The studio hums with quiet anticipation, the low flicker of candlelight casting golden shadows across the hardwood floors, and the faint scent of her perfume still clings to the air. My pulse quickens as I turn toward the hallway, while heat builds low in my gutPushing the bedroom door open, I step inside and there she is, completely naked and kneeling beside the bed just as I instructed. Her skin glows in the lamplight, smooth and young and flushed, with her full breasts rising and falling steadily, nipples tightened into dark peaks. Her thighs are parted just enough to reveal the slick, glistening folds of her pussy, and her hands rest palms-up on her knees in perfect submission.The sight hits me like a spark, her eagerness to please radiating from every line of her body, her eyes lifting to meet mine with that mix of hunger and trust that a
THOMASLeaving Iris in the studio feels different this time, compared to last night.Not easy, precisely. Nothing about turning away from her after the past few days could ever feel easy. But when I stand near the door and look back, she’s not curled into herself or watching me leave with untrusting eyes.She’s seated at the cutting table with a pencil in her hand, her bandaged wrist resting carefully on a cushion, her coffee beside her, her sketches spread before her like evidence of a future she’s refused to surrender. The studio smells of paper, wool, and coffee, and for the first time since the accident, the room doesn’t feel like the place where she nearly died.It feels like hers again.“I’ll be at the house for a while,” I say.She glances up. “Working?”“Making calls all afternoon.”“Thomas Ashcroft calls,” she murmurs, returning to the sketch. “The most terrifying kind.”I almost smile. “Only for other people.”Her mouth curves, and the sight settles something in me.I leave







