The Morning After Her Wedding, His Mother Brought Transfer Papers-yumihong

The morning after my wedding, I woke up to the smell of roses dying in a hotel suite.

There was champagne left warm in two glasses on the sideboard.

There were white petals scattered near the balcony door.

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There was sunlight coming through the curtains so bright and clean it made the whole room look innocent.

For a few seconds, before I sat up, I almost let myself believe the hard part was over.

The wedding had been beautiful in the way expensive rooms can make almost anything look beautiful.

There had been candles, string lights, white linens, and relatives using the word forever as if it were a decoration.

Ethan had cried when I walked toward him.

At least I thought he had.

He had taken my hands under the flowers and whispered, “I’m never letting you carry anything alone again.”

That sentence had stayed with me through dinner, through the first dance, through his mother Lydia standing too close to him in every picture.

I should have paid more attention to how Lydia watched me.

Not like a mother watching her son marry.

Like a woman watching a door she expected to open.

At 8:52 a.m., someone knocked on the suite door.

I thought it was room service.

Ethan was already dressed.

That was the first thing I noticed when he came out of the bathroom and did not look surprised.

He wore the same white shirt from the night before, but the tie was gone and the sleeves were rolled to his elbows.

His wedding band flashed on his finger when he adjusted his cuff.

“Are you expecting someone?” I asked.

He did not answer fast enough.

The knock came again.

Then the door opened, and Lydia Hale walked in wearing ivory.

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