Before that week, he had never been especially clingy. He was affectionate in private, sure, but not in a greeting-card way. Marcus was the type of man who would toss an arm around me while watching TV, kiss me quickly on his way out the door, text me a meme at lunch instead of something romantic. He was not a man who asked if I had texted my friends back with the concerned sweetness of someone auditioning for Husband of the Year.
That week, though, he became warm in a way that felt managed.
It was not love exactly. It was control wearing soft clothes.
He wanted me pointed in one direction long enough for something else to happen behind my back.
I did not know that yet. Not fully. But my body knew.
That is the part I keep coming back to now. My body knew before my pride was ready to admit it. My stomach tightened when he said certain things. My chest went cold when he answered too quickly. Something in me leaned back from his touch even as my face kept smiling, because sometimes the part of you trained to be polite is slower than the part of you built to survive.
Marcus was thirty, handsome in that loose, confident way that makes people assume a man has more money than he does. He had dark hair that never looked like he had tried too hard, a lean face, and a voice that could make excuses sound like strategy. He called himself a freelance brand strategist, which sounded impressive when we first met and increasingly suspicious as the months passed. He was always between projects. Always waiting on a client payment. Always about to lock something in. Always building momentum. He spoke about his career like a plane that was permanently taxiing and never quite taking off.
For most of the year before the wedding, I had been carrying more than my share.
More rent. More groceries. More utilities. More deposits.
I did it because I loved him. I did it because I told myself partnership meant sometimes one person was steadier for a while. I did it because I had grown up watching my father work long hours when my mother went back to school, then my mother do the same when my father’s company downsized. Marriage, in my mind, meant taking turns being strong.
Yes, I know.
Believe me, I know.w
I have already had that argument with myself in at least twelve showers, three grocery store parking lots, one Target aisle, and during an entire oil change where the mechanic asked if I was okay because apparently silent tears while holding a coupon are not subtle.
My friends had planned a bachelorette weekend at a countryside resort two hours from Raleigh, out near the foothills, the kind of place that advertised itself with fireplaces, hiking trails, spa robes, and women laughing at salad in matching pajamas. The wedding was the following Saturday. This was supposed to be my final girls’ weekend before becoming Mrs. Claire Hale, a name I had practiced writing exactly once before feeling embarrassed even though I was alone.