The laughter hit her first. Not the words. Not even the tone.
Just that bright, careless burst of sound from the far side of the ballroom, the kind people only produce when they feel safe being cruel. Maya Brown stood beside a ten-foot arrangement of white orchids in the Grand Astor Hotel, one hand around the stem of a champagne flute she had not touched in twenty minutes, and watched three women in jeweled gowns pretend not to stare at her. The room glowed with money, crystal chandeliers and mirrored walls and silver trays drifting through the crowd under the hands of silent waiters.
Outside, Manhattan was cold and wet from an early spring rain. Inside, everyone was polished enough to reflect light. She had known this would happen the moment Taylor told her she had to attend.
It’s important for the company, he had said that afternoon, standing in the doorway of the suite he had given her in his penthouse, already in his tuxedo shirt, cufflinks catching the low light. People expect to see my wife. Wife.
Even now, three months into the arrangement, the word still had edges. Maya had looked up from the paperback she was not really reading and said, “Then maybe you should have married someone they’d find easier to photograph.”
Taylor had gone still for half a second. “You’re not hiding because of them.”
“No,” she had said.
“I’m going because I signed papers. That’s all.”
Now here she was, under hotel lights that made every flaw feel brighter and every glance sharper. Her blue dress was simple, old, and carefully pressed.
She had worn pearl earrings that belonged to her grandmother and low heels because she knew she could not survive one of Taylor’s events in shoes built for display instead of standing. Her hair was pinned back neatly. She had done everything possible not to invite notice.
It had not mattered. One of the women near the bar tilted her head toward Maya and murmured something to the others. Another looked over openly.
Then came the laugh again, a little louder. Maya shifted her weight. Her ankles were swelling.
Her chest had that familiar tight warning pressure, not yet pain but close enough to make her aware of every breath. She told herself to stay where she was. Smile if necessary.
Last an hour and leave. Then one of the women said, in a voice just careless enough to claim innocence, “I still think it was some kind of stunt. There’s no way Taylor King marries that on purpose.”
The story doesn’t end here – it continues on the next page.
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