
He Married Me Just to Please Her
Chapter 3
The Metropolitan Museum's grand ballroom glittered with Manhattan's elite, their jewels catching the light from the crystal chandeliers overhead. I smoothed the silk of my midnight blue gown, the fabric chosen specifically because Seb had once mentioned it brought out my eyes. Tonight's charity auction was important—the kind of event where appearances mattered, where being the perfect Mrs. Thorne was essential.
I found Seb near the champagne table, deep in conversation with Marcus Whitfield about some merger. His profile was sharp in the golden light, handsome in that effortless way that had first caught my attention. I approached with practiced grace, my heels clicking softly against the marble floor.
"Darling," I said, sliding my hand through the crook of his arm. The fabric of his tuxedo was warm beneath my palm, but I felt him stiffen at my touch. "Marcus, how lovely to see you."
Seb's smile was automatic, the same one he'd perfected for business dinners. "Marcus was just telling me about the Rothschild acquisition."
I laughed at the appropriate moments as they continued their conversation, my fingers tracing small circles on Seb's sleeve. Each time I touched him, he grew more rigid, his body language screaming discomfort even as his words remained smooth and professional. When I leaned closer to whisper something about the auction items, he shifted almost imperceptibly away.
The gesture was so subtle that Marcus wouldn't have noticed, but to me it felt like a physical rejection. My hand fell from his arm, and I spent the rest of the conversation standing slightly apart, watching my husband treat me like an acquaintance he was forced to tolerate.
Two weeks later, at Daniel, one of Manhattan's most exclusive restaurants, I found myself studying other couples with the intensity of an anthropologist. The Harrisons, married fifteen years, shared knowing glances across their appetizers. When Margaret Harrison laughed at something her husband said, he reached across the table to squeeze her hand, his thumb stroking her knuckles with unconscious affection.
I turned my attention to Seb, who was explaining some complex financial strategy to our dinner companions. His hands moved as he spoke, elegant and expressive, but they never once reached for mine. When the waiter refilled my wine glass, Seb didn't notice. When I made a comment about the restaurant's artwork, he nodded politely but his eyes never left his business associates.
I was a prop in his performance, beautiful and well-dressed but ultimately irrelevant to the real conversation. The realization settled in my stomach like ice water, making the perfectly prepared Dover sole taste like ash.
"Don't you think so, Ellie?" Margaret Harrison's voice cut through my spiral of observation.
I blinked, realizing I'd missed the question entirely. "I'm sorry, what?"
"About the importance of supporting each other's passions in marriage," she repeated kindly. "I was just saying how Richard has been so supportive of my gallery work."
The word 'gallery' hit me like a physical blow. "Yes," I managed, my voice steady despite the turmoil in my chest. "Support is... essential."
Seb's fork paused halfway to his mouth, and for a moment our eyes met. Something flickered there—guilt, perhaps, or recognition. But then he looked away, back to his meal, back to his careful distance.
That night, alone in our bedroom while Seb worked late in his study, I opened my laptop. My fingers trembled as I typed 'Charlotte Morrison Bell' into the search bar. I'd avoided looking her up for three years, but now I needed to understand what made her worth destroying my life for.
The images that filled my screen were like daggers to my heart. Charlie looked radiant in every photo—her auburn hair catching gallery lights, her smile genuine and bright as she stood next to her paintings. She'd always been beautiful, but success had given her a glow that seemed to emanate from within.
I scrolled through article after article about her rising star in the contemporary art world. 'West Coast Sensation Takes Manhattan,' read one headline. 'The Next Georgia O'Keeffe,' proclaimed another. Her paintings sold for six figures now, her exhibitions drawing crowds and critical acclaim.
But it was the personal photos that destroyed me. Charlie and Ethan at gallery openings, his arm around her waist, both of them laughing at some private joke. The way he looked at her—like she was the only person in the room, like she hung the stars in the sky. It was the way I'd once dreamed Seb would look at me.
I slammed the laptop shut, my hands shaking. This was what I was competing with—not just a memory, but a living, breathing success story. Charlie had everything: talent, beauty, love, and a career that was flourishing beyond her wildest dreams. What did I have? A marriage built on lies and a husband who saw me as nothing more than a convenient shield.
The February gala at the Plaza was my last desperate attempt to prove our marriage meant something. I'd chosen my gown with military precision—a stunning red Valentino that hugged every curve, with a neckline that was sophisticated rather than scandalous. The color was bold, confident, the kind of dress that demanded attention.
As we walked into the ballroom, I slipped my hand into Seb's, interlacing our fingers. His palm was warm but lifeless, offering no pressure in return. Still, I held on, determined to project the image of a couple deeply in love.
"You look beautiful tonight," he murmured as we paused for the photographer, his lips barely moving.
"Thank you," I replied, leaning into him slightly. To anyone watching, we looked perfect—the golden couple, wealthy and attractive and completely devoted to each other.
But I could feel the tension in his body, the way he held himself apart even as he played his part. When I turned to kiss his cheek during a lull in conversation, his jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. When I rested my hand on his chest while talking to the Vanderbilts, he shifted just enough that my hand fell away naturally.
Every gesture of affection I attempted was met with subtle resistance, every touch deflected with the skill of a man who'd had months of practice. I was performing for an audience that couldn't see the truth—that my husband couldn't bear to have me touch him.
The final blow came when I spotted them across the room. Charlie and Ethan, elegant and radiant, moving through the crowd like they owned it. Charlie wore emerald green—my color, the one I'd worn that New Year's Eve when my world collapsed—and she looked absolutely stunning.
I watched as they approached other couples, noting the way Ethan's hand never left Charlie's back, how he leaned in to hear her whispered comments, how he smiled when she laughed. Real affection, real intimacy, the kind of connection I'd been desperately trying to manufacture with my own husband.
"Seb," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the orchestra. "Look at me."
He turned, his expression politely questioning. I reached up and cupped his face gently, my thumb tracing the line of his cheekbone. For just a moment, I thought I saw something real in his eyes—regret, perhaps, or sorrow.
But then he stepped back, breaking the contact, and I knew with devastating certainty that whatever I'd seen, it wasn't love. It wasn't even affection. It was pity.
I was Mrs. Sebastian Thorne, competent and beautiful and utterly, completely alone.
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