The veil was heavy, threaded with pearls that pulled against my scalp. The walk down the aisle felt endless, a parade not of joy but of judgment. I could hear the whispers rising from polished pews, faces turning, eyes following every step I took.
"Is that the Blackwood girl?"
"The bankrupt heiress?"
"She must be desperate to agree to this marriage..."
They didn't whisper quietly enough. Each word pierced deeper than the pins holding my veil.
At the altar stood Leon Martins. Tall. Immaculate. Cold. His dark suit was tailored like armor, his expression carved from stone. He didn't smile when I reached him. He didn't even pretend. His eyes, steel gray and unblinking, met mine, and in them I found no comfort. Only possession.
The priest's voice blurred as vows spilled from his lips. The Martins family had arranged everything, venue, guest list, press. Even the gown I wore wasn't mine. My father's debts had reduced me to a pawn, and this was the price: my name, my freedom, my future.
I said "I do." The words were bitter ash in my mouth.
Leon's "I do" was sharp, clipped. Not affection, not promise. Obligation.
The applause that followed sounded like mockery.
When his lips brushed mine in the ceremonial kiss, his hand pressed too firmly against my jaw. It was a warning dressed as affection. The cameras flashed, capturing the moment the world believed in love but I knew was a transaction.
Afterward, in the Martins limousine, silence weighed heavier than the veil now discarded beside me. My ring sparkled cruelly under the city lights, the emerald centerpiece worth more than the home my father had gambled away.
Leon sat opposite me, one arm resting lazily across the leather seat, eyes fixed out the tinted glass. He hadn't spoken since the cathedral. He didn't need to. His indifference was louder than words.
I broke first. "I suppose congratulations are in order." My voice trembled against the silence.
Leon turned his head slowly, as if even acknowledging me cost him effort. His gaze locked on me, dissecting rather than admiring. "Congratulations," he repeated flatly. "You've just secured your family's survival. Consider yourself... useful."
Useful. As if I were a tool.
I swallowed, fingers curling against my lap. "You didn't have to marry me if you resented it this much."
He leaned forward, his presence filling the confined space, voice low and deliberate. "Make no mistake, Zara Evelyn Blackwood. I don't resent this marriage. But don't delude yourself into thinking it was for you."
I stiffened at the use of my maiden name.
His lips curved, humorless. "Soon, it won't matter. Blackwood is dead. From this moment, you are Zara Evelyn Martins. Don't forget it."
The words hit harder than the vows. It wasn't just a marriage; it was erasure.
When the car pulled into the Martins estate, my breath caught. The mansion rose like a fortress against the night, all glass and steel, its grandeur overwhelming. Servants lined the staircase, bowing as the new bride stepped out. Cameras flashed from beyond the gates, the world hungry to see the fairy tale.
But this wasn't a fairy tale.
Leon offered his arm, not out of courtesy but control. His grip was iron as he guided me inside. The hallways smelled faintly of roses and polished marble, yet every corner screamed wealth colder than ice.
Upstairs, in the master bedroom, he finally released me.
"This room is yours," he said, his voice clipped. "Ours, technically. Though I don't expect you to touch anything without reason."
The implication was clear: I was a guest in a house that bore my new name.
I turned to him, anger rising despite fear. "Why marry me at all if you despise me this much?"
For the first time, something flickered across his face, something darker than indifference. He stepped closer, shadows deepening his features.
"Because, Zara," he murmured, voice edged like a blade, "some secrets are easier to bury with a wife."
My blood ran cold.
Before I could respond, he turned away, loosening his tie as if the conversation meant nothing. "We'll make a public appearance tomorrow. The Martins reputation demands it. Learn quickly, your smiles aren't for me. They're for them."
And with that, he disappeared into the adjoining study, leaving me alone with a silence that felt more binding than the vows.
I sank onto the edge of the bed, my gown spilling across the floor like a shroud. My reflection in the mirror was unfamiliar: the jewels, the flawless makeup, the woman with eyes too hollow for her age.
I didn't marry for love. I married to pay a debt.
But as Leon's last words echoed in my mind, a new dread settled in my chest.
He hadn't married me to save me.
He married me to bury something far darker than indifference.