The 3 Files My Nephew Sent at 9:18 p.m. Ended My Daughter’s Engagement Before Dessert-QuynhTranJP

Marcus’s hand was already half-raised when Claire said it.

‘Study. Now.’

She did not say his name. She did not touch him. She did not look at the guests who were still laughing around the fireplace with dessert plates balanced on their palms.

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He must have heard something in her voice, because the smile held for one second too long, then settled into concern so polished it looked rehearsed.

‘Of course,’ he said.

He even put his glass down carefully.

That was the detail I remember.

A guilty man setting down a champagne flute as neatly as if he were about to discuss florist invoices.

Claire walked first. He followed her across the living room, past the mantel where he had stood all evening collecting compliments, past the framed engagement photos he had insisted looked better in black and white, past two coworkers who smiled at him and received a distracted nod in return. I moved behind them. Rosa appeared from the dining room carrying an empty tray, slid one look across my face, and changed direction without a word.

She knew to keep people away.

The study door closed with a soft click.

Inside, the room smelled faintly of cedar shelves and the bourbon Walter used to keep for guests. The lamp on the desk threw a pool of amber light over the blotter, the silver letter opener, the little stack of envelopes Claire had not yet mailed. Marcus stopped near the armchair by the window, still trying to look like a man stepping into a misunderstanding.

Claire stayed standing.

The green skirt of her dress brushed the rug when she turned. In her right hand was the folded cocktail napkin. Her left hand hung loose at her side, but I could see the tendon in her wrist pulled tight.

‘Tell me your real name,’ she said.

He gave a short breath that might have passed for surprise if I had not spent the last forty-eight minutes learning how much of him was performance.

‘Claire, what is this?’

‘Your real name.’

‘You’re upset.’

‘Your real name.’

No pleading. No accusation. Just the same sentence again.

He looked at me then, as if checking whether I was there to soften her.

I did not move.

His eyes shifted back to Claire. A tiny change came over his face. Not anger. Not panic. Calculation. The warmth drained out first, leaving the structure underneath it. The kind eyes stayed in place, but they no longer looked kind. They looked useful.

‘Marcus Webb is the name I use,’ he said.

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