I never told my parents who my husband really was.

That sentence sounds simple now, almost harmless, like the kind of quiet omission families absorb without much damage. But silence has a way of turning poisonous when it sits too long in the wrong house, and for three years mine had been ripening at my parents’ dining table, beside polished silver and imported wine, beneath chandeliers that cast everyone in flattering light except me.

To them, Ethan Cole was my mistake.

Not a scandalous mistake. That might have at least been interesting enough to command their attention. No, Ethan was something worse in their eyes—disappointing. A quiet man. A contained man. A man who did not perform success in ways they could admire on sight. He did not pull up in bright cars that announced themselves before the engine died. He did not mention numbers, nor investments, nor exclusive clubs. He did not linger over labels or watch faces or the kind of shallow details my mother used to notice with the speed and precision of a jeweler.

He wore dark sweaters, plain jackets, simple watches, and an expression of calm that seemed to offend people who mistook modesty for weakness. My parents were two of those people.