Married to the Man I Hate

The days that followed Adrian's confession passed more quietly than I expected.

Not awkwardly. Not uneasily. Just... thoughtfully.

It was as though something invisible had shifted between us. We didn't speak about that night in the study-not directly-but it lingered in the way Adrian looked at me now. In the way his gaze softened when he thought I wasn't paying attention. In the way his voice lowered when he spoke my name, as if it carried more meaning than before.

And I felt it too.

I felt it when I poured him coffee in the mornings without being asked. When I placed his forgotten files neatly by the door. When I noticed the tension in his shoulders before he ever admitted he was tired.

Caring for him had become instinctive.

That realization frightened me.

---

One afternoon, Adrian came home earlier than usual. I was in the living room, folding laundry, when the front door opened. His steps were slower than normal, heavier.

I looked up immediately. "Adrian?"

He stopped when he saw me, surprise flickering across his face. "You're home."

"I canceled my appointment," I said. "My mother's resting today."

He nodded, loosening his jacket. Something was off-I could see it clearly now.

"Do you want tea?" I asked gently.

He hesitated. "Yes. That would be nice."

I followed him into the kitchen, watching as he leaned against the counter, eyes closed briefly, as if the simple act of standing still exhausted him.

When I handed him the cup, our fingers brushed. He flinched-just slightly.

"You're tense," I said quietly.

He opened his eyes. "Work."

I waited.

He exhaled slowly. "There's been pressure. My board thinks I've been... distracted lately."

My heart tightened. "Because of me?"

He looked at me sharply. "No. Because I've been human."

The bitterness in his tone startled me.

"They don't like that I've started declining late-night meetings," he continued. "They don't like that I leave events early. They don't like that I've stopped pretending my life is only numbers and contracts."

I stepped closer. "And what do you like?"

He looked at me then, truly looked at me. "I like coming home and knowing someone is here. Someone who sees me, not my position."

The words settled deep in my chest.

"You don't have to choose," I said softly. "You're allowed to have both."

His jaw tightened. "That's not how my world works."

"Then maybe your world needs to change," I replied gently.

Silence fell between us-not tense, but contemplative.

---

The next evening, Adrian invited me to another event. Smaller this time. More private.

"I don't expect you to stay long," he said. "But I want you there."

Not because you should be.

Because I want you.

I agreed.

The venue was intimate-a private dining hall filled with polished wood and soft lighting. This crowd felt different. Sharper. More observant.

I noticed the way eyes followed us as we entered.

And then I noticed her.

She stood near the far end of the room-tall, elegant, composed. Her gaze fixed on Adrian with familiarity.

She approached without hesitation.

"Adrian," she said smoothly. "It's been a while."

His posture stiffened. "Claire."

Claire.

She turned her attention to me slowly, assessing. "And you must be the wife."

I forced a polite smile. "Elena."

Her smile didn't reach her eyes. "I didn't realize you were married."

"I didn't announce it publicly," Adrian replied calmly. "That was intentional."

Interesting.

Claire tilted her head. "You've changed."

"I've grown," he corrected.

Her gaze flicked back to me. "And you're the reason?"

I opened my mouth, unsure how to answer, but Adrian spoke first.

"She's not the reason," he said firmly. "She's my partner."

Partner.

The word sent warmth through me-and tension through the room.

Claire's expression tightened briefly before smoothing. "Well. That explains a lot."

She excused herself moments later, leaving behind a ripple of unease.

"Who is she?" I asked quietly once we were alone.

Adrian's expression darkened slightly. "Someone from my past. Someone who expected me to remain unchanged."

"And did she... mean something to you?" I asked, surprised by the steadiness of my voice.

He turned to me fully. "Not the way you do."

My breath caught.

"I didn't plan that," he added quietly. "It just... happened."

So did love, I thought.

---

As the evening progressed, I noticed subtle shifts. Adrian stayed closer to me than usual. His hand brushed mine occasionally-not possessively, but protectively.

At one point, as someone made a dismissive remark about my background, Adrian's voice cut through the room like steel.

"She is my wife," he said calmly. "And I will not tolerate disrespect."

The silence that followed was immediate.

I stared at him, stunned.

Later, outside, under the night sky, I finally spoke. "You didn't have to do that."

"Yes," he said firmly. "I did."

He looked at me then, eyes intense but gentle. "You deserve to feel safe. Everywhere."

Emotion swelled in my chest, thick and overwhelming.

"Adrian..." I whispered.

He reached out, hesitating only briefly before placing his hands on my shoulders. "I don't know where this leads," he said quietly. "But I know I don't want to face it without you."

Tears blurred my vision. "I'm here."

And I meant it.

---

That night, lying awake, I realized something profound.

I wasn't just standing beside Adrian anymore.

I was becoming his steady place.

The place he returned to when the world demanded too much.

The place where he didn't have to perform.

And in becoming that for him, I was finding my own strength.

Love, I realized, wasn't about grand gestures.

It was about where you stood when everything else tried to pull you away.

And I knew where I stood.

Right beside him.

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