He did not know that the tower in Midtown with my surname in burnished steel over the entrance was not named after some long-dead patriarch, but after me.
He did not know that his father’s law firm had spent the last eight months negotiating the most important transaction in its history with my company.
He did not know any of it because some foolish, stubborn part of me had still wanted the fairytale to begin before money entered the room and sat down between us.
That night he came over with apologies shaped like excuses.
He brought peonies, because he had once heard me say I preferred flowers that looked as though they belonged in old paintings. He opened a bottle of wine from my kitchen without asking, because at some point he had begun to confuse access with intimacy. He stood near the island in his charcoal coat and looked exactly like the sort of man women forgave too often.
“Vivian,” he said softly, “I’m sorry.”
I leaned against the counter and folded my arms. “For what, specifically?”
He flinched. Not from the question, but from the knowledge that I intended to make him answer it honestly.
“For the way my mother spoke to you.”
“And?”