
Forbidden Desires in Powerful Family
Chapter 3
The honeymoon suite at the Clooney estate should have been a sanctuary. Instead, it felt like a courtroom where I was the defendant in a crime I didn't understand.
Wyatt slammed the bedroom door behind us with such force that the crystal chandelier trembled, casting fractured light across the silk wallpaper. His bow tie hung loose around his neck, and his hair was disheveled from running his hands through it repeatedly during the car ride from the reception.
"What the hell was that, Carolina?" His voice cut through the room like a blade. "What was that performance back there?"
I stood frozen by the window, still wearing my wine-stained wedding dress. The fabric felt heavy and foreign against my skin now, a mockery of the dreams I'd carried into this day.
"Performance?" My voice came out smaller than I intended. "Wyatt, I just asked you to—"
"You asked me to what? To ignore my family? To pretend that Betty doesn't exist?" He whirled around to face me, his eyes blazing with an anger I'd never seen before. "She's my brother's wife, Carolina. She's part of this family, whether you like it or not."
The accusation hit me like a physical blow. "I never said she wasn't part of the family. I just thought that on our wedding day, maybe you could focus on—"
"On what? On your petty jealousies?" He laughed, but there was no humor in it. "God, Carolina, I thought you were better than this. I thought you were mature enough to handle being part of a real family."
Tears burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. "A real family doesn't ignore the bride at her own wedding, Wyatt. A real husband doesn't spend his reception taking care of another woman while his wife stands there in a ruined dress."
"She was hurt!" he exploded, his face flushing red. "What was I supposed to do, let her bleed all over the reception because my wife can't handle not being the center of attention for five minutes?"
The words felt like slaps. Each one landed with precision, designed to wound and diminish. This wasn't the man who had courted me with flowers and poetry, who had whispered promises of forever under the stars on campus.
"You're being paranoid, Carolina. You're creating problems where none exist." He loosened his cufflinks with sharp, angry movements. "Betty has been nothing but kind to you, and this is how you repay her? By acting like some jealous teenager?"
"I'm not jealous," I whispered, but even I could hear how weak it sounded.
"Aren't you?" He stepped closer, and I could smell the champagne on his breath. "Because from where I stood, it looked like you couldn't stand the thought of anyone else getting attention on your precious day."
The cruelty in his voice made me flinch. This was supposed to be our wedding night, the beginning of our life together. Instead, I felt like I was drowning in accusations and contempt.
"I'm sleeping in the guest room," he announced, grabbing his overnight bag from the dresser. "Maybe by morning you'll have figured out how to act like a grown woman instead of a spoiled child."
The door slammed behind him, leaving me alone in the honeymoon suite that now felt like a gilded prison.
The week that followed was a masterclass in emotional warfare, though I didn't recognize it as such at the time. Wyatt moved through our shared spaces like a ghost, present but untouchable. He slept in the guest room, ate breakfast before I woke up, and came home after I'd already gone to bed.
When we did encounter each other, his responses were clipped and cold. "Good morning" became a grunt. "How was your day" earned a shrug. It was as if I had become invisible in my own marriage.
But at family dinners, he transformed. His smile returned, bright and warm, but it was never directed at me. Instead, he lavished attention on Betty, asking about her day, complimenting her cooking, laughing at her stories about Leo's latest adventures.
"Betty, this pasta is incredible," he would say, his voice filled with the warmth that had once been mine. "You have to give Carolina the recipe."
Betty would beam at the praise, her cheeks flushing pink. "Oh, Wyatt, you're too kind. It's just something I threw together."
I sat at the other end of the table, picking at my food while watching this performance of domestic bliss. Kylan ate in silence, his dark eyes moving between his wife and brother with an expression I was beginning to recognize as carefully controlled fury.
"Carolina, dear, you're awfully quiet tonight," Eleanor observed during one particularly painful dinner. Her voice carried that deceptively sweet tone that wealthy women used when they wanted to deliver a subtle barb. "Is everything alright?"
All eyes turned to me, and I felt the weight of their collective judgment. "I'm fine, just tired."
"Marriage can be quite an adjustment," Eleanor continued, her smile sharp as crystal. "It takes time to learn how to be part of a family like ours."
The message was clear: I was the problem. I was the one who needed to adjust, to learn, to change.
It was Eleanor who delivered the final blow, cornering me in the library three days later while I tried to lose myself in a book.
"Carolina, we need to have a little chat." She settled into the leather chair across from me, her posture perfect, her expression serene. "I think it's time we addressed the elephant in the room."
My hands trembled as I closed the book. "I'm not sure what you mean."
"Oh, I think you do." Her smile never wavered, but her eyes were cold as winter. "Your behavior at the wedding, your attitude toward Betty, the way you've been treating my son—it's becoming quite concerning."
"Eleanor, I haven't—"
"Haven't what? Haven't been sulking around this house like a petulant child?" The sweetness in her voice made the words even more cutting. "Haven't been making everyone walk on eggshells because you can't handle the fact that Wyatt cares about his family?"
I felt my cheeks burn with shame and anger. "That's not fair."
"What's not fair, dear, is expecting a man to choose between his wife and his family." She leaned forward, her voice dropping to a whisper that somehow felt more threatening than shouting. "Betty has been part of this family for years. She's given us Leo, she's been a devoted wife to Kylan, and she's shown you nothing but kindness. And this is how you repay her?"
The words hit their mark with surgical precision. Doubt crept in like poison, making me question everything I'd seen and felt.
"I just thought—"
"You thought what? That marriage meant having your husband all to yourself? That's not how family works, Carolina." Eleanor's smile turned pitying. "Perhaps if you'd grown up in a family like ours, you'd understand. But you didn't, did you? You came from... simpler circumstances."
The dismissal in her voice made me feel small and foolish. Maybe she was right. Maybe I was being unreasonable, jealous, immature. Maybe this was just how wealthy families operated, and I was too naive to understand the dynamics.
"Family harmony is more important than any one person's feelings," Eleanor continued. "And right now, you're disrupting that harmony. Wyatt is miserable, Betty is walking on eggshells, and even little Leo has noticed the tension."
By the time she finished, I felt like I'd been dismantled piece by piece. Every doubt I'd harbored about my own perceptions had been magnified and weaponized against me.
That evening, Aunt Margaret called. Then Cousin Sarah. Then Wyatt's college friends. One by one, they delivered the same message with varying degrees of subtlety: I needed to apologize. I needed to be more understanding. I needed to fix whatever I had broken.
"Marriage is about compromise, dear," Aunt Margaret said, her voice crackling through the phone. "And sometimes that means swallowing your pride for the greater good."
As I sat alone in our bedroom that night, staring at my reflection in the vanity mirror, I barely recognized the woman looking back at me. The confident, happy bride from a week ago had been replaced by someone hollow-eyed and uncertain.
Maybe they were all right. Maybe I was the problem. Maybe I needed to learn how to be the kind of wife this family expected, the kind of woman who didn't ask difficult questions or demand too much attention.
The thought should have brought relief, but instead it felt like surrendering a piece of my soul.
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