Her face tightened. “I was only welcoming her.”
“No,” he said. “You were auditioning for my disappointment. As usual.”
She let out a breath through her nose and walked off.
We drove to his estate after dark. I barely spoke. Rick didn’t push.
In the bedroom, I stood before a mirror and stared at myself in that dress. I didn’t look beautiful. I looked arranged, expensive… and temporary.
The door opened behind me.
“I was only welcoming her.”
Rick stepped in, closed it softly, and the room went quiet.
Then he said, “Layla, now that you’re my wife… I can finally tell you the truth. It’s too late to walk away.”
My hands went cold.
“Rick, what does that mean?”
He looked at me. “It means you were wrong about why I asked you.”
I turned to face him fully. “Then tell me.”
He didn’t move closer.
“I am dying, Layla.”
“What?”
“My heart,” he said. “Maybe months. A year, if the Lord is feeling theatrical.”
“It’s too late to walk away.”
I gripped the back of a chair.
“Why are you telling me this now?”
“Because,” he said quietly, “my family has spent years circling my death like shoppers outside a store. Last spring, my own son tried to have me declared mentally diminished.”
I stared at him. “Your own son?”
“Yes. David.”
“What does that have to do with me?”
“Everything.” Rick nodded toward the folder on the bedside table. “Open it.”
I did.