A Wheelchair Test Exposed His Fiancée, But Midnight Broke Him-olive

The morning Nicholas began to doubt his own engagement, the light in his bedroom looked expensive and felt merciless.

It came through double-glazed windows in clean white strips, crossing the gray rugs, the low leather bench, and the mahogany dresser where dust had settled in a silver film overnight.

The house was beautiful in the way showrooms are beautiful.

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Nothing was out of place because nothing had been allowed to become real.

At thirty-two, Nicholas had built a real estate investment firm from the ground up, and people loved telling him he was lucky.

They did not see the nights he slept on office carpet, the years he ate gas station sandwiches between site visits, or the mornings he negotiated with lenders before sunrise.

Now the company brought in seven figures annually.

Now his suburban estate had silent appliances, polished stone counters, and rooms so perfect they seemed to reject ordinary life.

Now he had Victoria.

She was striking, composed, and sharp-edged in a way that made strangers glance twice in restaurants.

For a while, Nicholas mistook that attention for proof he had built something enviable.

His bedside clock chimed 7:30 AM in three soft notes.

He had been awake for hours.

The market had dropped hard the day before, and his laptop still sat open beside the bed with a capital restructure memo glowing on the screen.

Twenty site workers were listed in the danger column.

He knew their names.

The bedroom door opened without a knock.

Victoria stepped in wearing a beige trench coat, her dark hair arranged in glossy waves, her lipstick sharp and crimson.

The room filled with the heavy sweetness of her imported perfume.

“You’re still in bed?” she asked.

She was not looking at him.

She was watching herself in the full-length mirror while adjusting one gold earring.

“The luxury wedding planner is arriving at nine,” she said. “We need to decide on the silk drapes for the reception hall.”

Nicholas rubbed both hands over his face.

“I told you,” Victoria continued, “the imported ivory ones are three thousand dollars extra, but they make the ambient lighting look so much better on camera. We can’t have the photos looking cheap.”

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