Richard’s first invitation to dinner came six months after she started.
“I’d like to thank you,” he’d said one evening as she gathered her things. “You’ve brought order into chaos.”
Peggy laughed nervously. “It’s my job.”
Richard smiled faintly. “Still. Dinner.”
She’d been stunned. Not because she wasn’t interested—Richard had always impressed her—but because she’d never expected to be chosen.
At dinner, Richard was charming in that controlled way he had, telling stories about court, about cases, about dealing with “difficult” people like they were puzzles he enjoyed solving. Peggy listened and laughed at the right moments. Richard watched her like he was measuring her.
When he proposed six months later, he did it with a ring too expensive and a seriousness that felt like a contract.
“I’m not a romantic man,” he’d said, holding the velvet box. “But I’m certain. You bring peace into my life. I want that. I want you.”
Peggy had said yes before she could second-guess herself.
Because she believed she’d found both security and love in one package.
The wedding was lovely in a formal, restrained way. Richard’s colleagues came. His children came.