The martini splashed across my knees before I fully realized that Victoria Richardson had done it deliberately.
The liquid was icy, sugary, and clung to my skin, carrying the scent of expensive citrus and pure disdain.
A stream of olive brine trickled down my legs and pooled inside my sandals.
The ocean breeze coming off the Atlantic struck my face with a sharp taste of salt.
Soft jazz drifted from the yacht’s speakers, polished and cheerful, as though the entire afternoon had been arranged to disguise cruelty beneath elegance.
“Oops,” Victoria said.
There was not even the slightest attempt at sounding apologetic.
Her circle of friends chuckled into their crystal glasses, the sound crisp and hollow, while I watched the stain spread across the light linen fabric of my dress.
I had purchased that dress during a department store sale the previous week because Liam had told me his parents’ yacht gathering was “casual, but Mom notices things.”
He delivered the remark as though it were half joke, half caution.
I should have paid attention to the caution.
Victoria glanced at the stain and then back at me.
“Clean that up,” she said. “You’re used to mopping floors, aren’t you?”
Several guests laughed louder.
Not because the remark was amusing.
People like that laugh to signal where their loyalties lie.
I turned toward Liam.
He lounged comfortably in a teak chair, mirrored sunglasses concealing his eyes, one ankle resting over the other, an imported beer sweating in his hand.
He had witnessed everything.
He knew perfectly well his mother had thrown the drink.
He also knew I was waiting for him to stand up.
Instead, he turned his attention toward the harbor.
That single moment captured Liam completely.
Elegant posture, costly silence, and a backbone too weak to support either.
We had been together for eight months.
Long enough for him to know exactly where I hid my spare apartment key.
Long enough for a toothbrush of his to become a permanent fixture in my bathroom.
Long enough for me to pick him up after a specialist appointment because he said he did not want his parents involved since they turned every issue into a matter of appearances.
I had sat beside him beneath harsh fluorescent lights in a waiting room while he joked about terrible coffee.
I had once delivered soup to his front porch when he was ill because he did not want me catching what he had.
I had foolishly convinced myself that private affection translated into public loyalty.
Some lessons arrive dressed in linen and mirrored sunglasses.