Elianna remained on the bed, a small island in an ocean of white Egyptian cotton. The silk of her nightgown clung to her, outlining a body that was rigid with a shame so cold it felt like fear. She instinctively tucked her hands behind her back, hiding them in the folds of the sheets.
The only sound in the penthouse bedroom was the whisper of fabric against skin. The silence was a physical weight, pressing down on her chest, making it hard to draw a full breath.
He retrieved his watch from the nightstand, a Patek Philippe that cost more than a car. He didn't put it on. Instead, he walked over to her marble-topped vanity and tossed it down.
The sharp clatter of metal against stone shattered the quiet.
Elianna flinched, a small, involuntary jerk of her shoulders. The sound jolted her, and she finally found the courage to lift her head and look at his back. The custom tailoring of his suit jacket did little to soften the hard lines of his posture.
Her voice was a dry rasp, barely audible. "Adrien, I..."
"Don't."
The word was not shouted. It was quiet, flat, and more cutting than any yell could have been.
He turned then. His gray eyes, the color of a winter lake, settled on her. They held no heat, only a chilling mix of offense and sheer, unadulterated confusion. It was the look a man gives a complex equation he has no interest in solving.
Elianna's lips parted, but no words came out. The explanation was a tangled knot in her throat, choking her. She dropped her gaze to the intricate floral pattern on the duvet, tracing the lines with her eyes as if they held some secret answer.
Adrien picked up a cashmere coat that had been draped over a leather armchair. His tone was that of a CEO stating a quarterly loss. "The contract states we maintain the appearance of a functional marriage."
He paused, letting the words hang in the air between them.
"This," he said, his gaze sweeping over her huddled form, the vast empty space on the bed beside her, "is not functional."
Her fingernails dug into her palms. The sharp, grounding pain was a welcome distraction. It was something she could control.
She knew he was right. Their marriage was a transaction. A merger of Leach new money and Lancaster old prestige. Her older sister, Ivette, the one everyone expected him to marry, had run off to Europe with an artist weeks before the announcement. Elianna had been the substitute. The understudy pushed onto the stage.
He walked to the door, his hand resting on the cool brass handle.
He didn't open it immediately. He stopped, a silhouette against the warm light of the hallway.
A flicker of some weak, pathetic hope sparked in her chest. Maybe he would turn back. Maybe he would say something, anything, to bridge the chasm between them.
But when he spoke, his voice was still cold, the question posed with the detached curiosity of a business rival.
"Ivette ran off, and you stepped in. I never understood. Why did you agree to this, Elianna?"
The question was a scalpel, sliding between her ribs with surgical precision, straight into the one place she kept hidden from the world.
The blood drained from her face. She felt it go, leaving her skin as white as the sheets she was clutching. The air in her lungs vanished.
Adrien watched the life drain out of her expression. A flicker of annoyance crossed his face. He hadn't really wanted an answer. The question was just a final, parting shot.
He pulled the door open and walked out, not looking back.
The door clicked shut. It wasn't a slam. It was a soft, final sound that landed on Elianna's heart like a hammer blow.
She was alone.
The vast, opulent bedroom suddenly felt like a tomb. All the strength she had used to keep herself composed drained out of her, leaving her limp.
Slowly, she raised one of her hands. She stared at the small, pale brown mole on the inside of her wrist. A tiny, insignificant mark she had had her whole life.
She couldn't answer his question.
Because the real answer was a secret buried so deep, she rarely dared to touch it herself. It was a dark room in the back of her mind, and Adrien's question had just thrown the door wide open.
A wave of dizziness, horribly familiar, washed over her.
She forced herself off the bed. Her feet felt unsteady on the plush carpet as she made her way to the en-suite bathroom. The room was all marble and chrome, reflecting a dozen fractured versions of herself.
The woman in the mirror was a stranger. Pale face, haunted eyes. Her light blue irises, usually calm, were wide with a terror that felt ancient.
Her hand didn't shake as she opened the mirrored cabinet. It was a practiced, familiar movement. She tipped two small white pills into her palm. She didn't need the water.