
My Groom Left Me for My Roommate at the Altar
Chapter 3
The basket was sitting on the kitchen island when I came down for coffee.
It was a good basket. Woven, cream-colored, with a ribbon tied around the handle in a bow that was somehow not embarrassing. I stood in the doorway and looked at it.
It moved.
A small white head pushed up through the ribbon — round ears, black button nose, fur like something you'd see on a cloud if clouds were soft enough to be worth touching. It blinked at me. Then it made a sound that was not quite a bark and not quite a squeak, but landed somewhere between the two in a register that did something involuntary to my chest.
I looked at Trey.
He was leaning in the doorway to the hall, coffee already in hand, watching me with an expression I almost caught before he adjusted it into something more neutral. Almost.
'What is this,' I said. Not a question, exactly.
'Samoyed,' he said. 'Eight weeks old.'
The puppy put both front paws on the edge of the basket and wobbled. I crossed the kitchen before I made a decision about it and lifted him out, and he immediately climbed up my arm and settled into the crook of my elbow with the absolute confidence of an animal who had already determined where he belonged.
He was warm. He was impossibly soft. He smelled like something clean and new.
I looked down at him. He looked up at me. We reached an understanding.
'Why a Samoyed,' I said.
Trey considered this for a moment. 'They're very loyal,' he said. 'To the right person.'
I looked at the puppy. Not at Trey.
'He's adequate,' I said.
I did not put Biscuit down for the rest of the morning.
---
Trey told me we had plans for the weekend. No further details. I had learned, in four days of marriage, that pressing him for details was an exercise in receiving beautifully constructed non-answers delivered with complete warmth, so I stopped asking and went to pack a bag.
The Rolls-Royce Phantom was waiting downstairs at seven Friday evening. I sat in the back on leather that probably cost more than my first year at Columbia and watched Trey watch the city out the window, and I thought: he moves through the world like he built it.
Bergdorf's was closed. Privately, for us, the floor lit up and every sales associate knowing his name before he said it. They brought champagne I didn't ask for and Birkins I didn't have to request — three of them, in colors I would have chosen myself if I'd been given thirty seconds and a catalog. Cognac. Vert Cypress. A limited black I recognized from the waitlist I'd been on for two years.
I ran my thumb along the edge of the black one.
'How did you know,' I said.
'Know what?' He was looking at a display case, apparently very interested in a silk scarf.
I let it go.
The helicopter to the Hamptons took forty minutes. The Marshall estate appeared below us at dusk — white shingle, green hedges, the Atlantic going silver at the edges. I pressed my face to the window like I was twelve years old and then remembered myself and sat back.
Trey was watching me with that expression again. The one I didn't have a name for yet.
Saturday morning, the yacht. Sunday morning, the photographs were everywhere — someone had documented all of it with the practiced invisibility of a person paid to be invisible, and Serena Voss had run the images with a caption that was essentially a sonnet about the Birkins.
I was drinking my coffee when Daphne's Instagram post came through. A restaurant I recognized — the kind with a six-week wait and a tasting menu that started at four hundred dollars — her table dressed up in a way that suggested the expense was casual. The post had seventeen comments. Three of them asked, in different variations, about the handbags I'd been carrying.
I took a sip of my coffee.
I put my phone face-down.
I felt almost entirely nothing, except for the small, warm satisfaction of a woman who has placed all her pieces correctly.
---
The penthouse was quiet by eleven.
I was on the sofa with Biscuit, my laptop open and the preliminary files for my fashion brand spread across the cushions. I'd shelved the brand two years ago when Cole asked me to focus on wedding planning. I had told myself I didn't mind. I was beginning to understand I had minded considerably.
Trey had said goodnight at ten and disappeared toward his study. I noted, privately, that he looked tired in a way he didn't usually permit to show. I noted, also privately, that I had noticed.
Biscuit was asleep on my thigh, his breathing slow and even, his fur very warm against my hand.
At nearly midnight, the piano started.
It came from the east room — something slow and unfamiliar, not a piece I recognized. The melody had a quality I didn't have an immediate word for. Patient, maybe. Like it had been waiting a long time to be played.
I told myself I was stretching my legs. I took Biscuit off my lap — he made a sound of protest and then went back to sleep on the cushion — and I walked down the hall.
The east room was dark except for the lamp light drifting from the hall. Trey sat at the piano with his back to the door, in a dark shirt with the sleeves pushed up, his shoulders moving slightly with the music. He hadn't heard me.
Biscuit had. The puppy padded past my ankles and crossed the room and sat down directly on Trey's feet with complete, unilateral confidence.
Trey didn't stop playing. He looked down at Biscuit for a moment, and something in the line of his shoulders changed — softened, maybe. He kept playing.
I stood in the doorway and I watched his shoulders and I listened to the music.
I stayed longer than I meant to.
I filed it — the dark room, the melody I didn't recognize, the dog asleep on his feet, the way he'd looked down at Biscuit with an expression no one was supposed to see — into a private archive I had not yet named and was increasingly aware of anyway.
Then I turned and went back to my sofa and my brand files and my cooling coffee.
I did not think about the piano.
I thought about it for a very long time.
You may also like





