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Chapter fourteen

Arthur

Ireturn to my bedroom alone. The door closes with a soft click that brings immediate relief.

The wedding day—if one can call it that—is complete. The objective achieved. Lindsay Smith is now installed in the guest suite as planned.

I remove my jacket, hanging it on the valet stand where tomorrow's suit already waits.

My watch comes off next, placed on its charging stand. Cufflinks deposited in their leather case.

Each motion exact, each item returning to its designated place.

I don’t rush any of it.

The house settles into silence around me. Henry is asleep—or at least confined to his room for the night. The new Mrs. Dupree is similarly contained.

For a moment, I consider verifying that she has everything she needs.

I discard the thought. No need.

All is orderly. As it should be.

Everything is where it belongs.

I open my closet to hang the day's trousers and find myself pausing, hand hovering near the high shelf above the suits.

The cedar box sits untouched, gathering a fine film of dust that I notice but haven't instructed the staff to clean.

Inside, beneath financial documents and my grandfather's pocket watch, lies a photograph I haven't looked at in months.

Paper edges slightly worn despite its protective sleeve. The colors still vibrant, though not as vibrant as memory insists they were.

Catherine. Her head thrown back in laughter at something I'd said. Hair caught by wind at the shoreline. My arm around her waist, my own smile unfamiliar to my current self.

How young we were.

"Life's too short to miss the sunset," she'd said.

She had no idea how short.

I study the photograph longer than I intended, tracing the outline of her face with eyes that refuse to blink. We were so certain then. So convinced that our carefully constructed plans would unfold exactly as designed. Harvard MBA for me. Medical research for her. Two children, perhaps three. A legacy built on complementary strengths.

I remember believing love made things stable. That sharing strengths and weaknesses with one trusted person made risk worthwhile. That the joy of connection outweighed the constant work of maintaining it.

I was wrong.

I know better now and I won’t make that mistake again.

Love had not saved Catherine. It had made her loss unbearable.

Today's wedding bears no resemblance to our first. No beaming relatives clutching handkerchiefs. No champagne toast. No whispered promises of forever.

Only the mechanical exchange of consent, the legal documents, the efficient transfer of status.

Where my first marriage had been built on emotional investment, this one is constructed from mutual pragmatism.

There will be no confusion about that. I will not fall in love again—least of all with my new wife.