His Sacred Promise, My Stolen Dreams

His Sacred Promise, My Stolen Dreams

Gavin

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My fiancé, Ethan, insisted we use our life savings-the money for our dream architectural firm-to buy a house for his widowed friend, Kiera. He called it a sacred promise. I called it betrayal. After weeks of fighting, I discovered the truth. He hadn't been asking for my permission; he had already emptied our joint account two months ago. A photo confirmed it: him and Kiera, toasting with champagne, celebrating the day he stole our future. He then had the nerve to ask me to design her new house for free. When I finally confronted him, he chose to believe her fake pregnancy and her staged fall, calling me a "monster" as he rushed her to the hospital. He didn't just take our money; he stole my voice and painted me as the villain in his story. So while he played the hero for her, I quietly canceled our wedding, sold our assets, and booked a one-way ticket to a new life. He thought he was breaking me, but he was setting me free.

Chapter 1

My fiancé, Ethan, insisted we use our life savings-the money for our dream architectural firm-to buy a house for his widowed friend, Kiera. He called it a sacred promise. I called it betrayal.

After weeks of fighting, I discovered the truth. He hadn't been asking for my permission; he had already emptied our joint account two months ago.

A photo confirmed it: him and Kiera, toasting with champagne, celebrating the day he stole our future. He then had the nerve to ask me to design her new house for free.

When I finally confronted him, he chose to believe her fake pregnancy and her staged fall, calling me a "monster" as he rushed her to the hospital.

He didn't just take our money; he stole my voice and painted me as the villain in his story.

So while he played the hero for her, I quietly canceled our wedding, sold our assets, and booked a one-way ticket to a new life. He thought he was breaking me, but he was setting me free.

Chapter 1

Cassie POV:

My fiancé, Ethan Wolf, believed that using our life savings-the money we' d painstakingly saved to start our own architectural firm-to buy a house for his childhood friend, Kiera Preston, was a "sacred promise" he couldn't break. I believed it was a betrayal that would demolish everything we had built.

"Cassie, we have to do this," Ethan said, his voice a low, steady drone that had become a familiar torment over the past few weeks.

He stood in the middle of our living room, the one I had designed with such care, as if he were addressing a jury. His corporate lawyer persona was in full effect, articulate and unwavering.

"Have to?" I asked, my voice thin, stretched tight like an old rubber band. "Ethan, this is our firm. Our dream. We've talked about this since college."

He sighed, a long, suffering sound that was meant to convey my unreasonableness. "Kiera is a widow. She has a child. Her husband, Mark, asked me to look after them."

"Look after them, or buy them a mansion?" I countered, my hands clenching into fists at my sides. "There's a difference, Ethan. A huge difference."

He took a step closer, his gaze intense, trying to bore into my resolve. "It's a house, Cassie. A home for a grieving family."

"It's our future, Ethan," I said, a tremor running through me. "It' s every late night I spent sketching, every coffee I skipped, every penny we put aside."

He ran a hand through his perfectly coiffed hair, a sign of his growing frustration. "Don't you have any compassion? She lost her husband. She's fragile."

"I have compassion," I shot back, my voice rising. "But I also have common sense. And a sense of self-preservation. This isn't about compassion anymore; this is about draining us dry for someone else's benefit."

His jaw tightened. "She needs this, Cassie. And Mark trusted me."

"And what about me, Ethan?" I asked, my voice cracking. "What about my trust? What about our trust?"

Our apartment, usually a haven of quiet productivity, felt charged with unspoken accusations. The air was thick with the weight of our unresolved conflict. This wasn't a conversation; it was a wall we kept hitting, again and again.

"It's not fair that you're making this so difficult," he accused, his tone shifting from pleading to outright blame. "You know how important this is to me. To Mark."

My mind reeled. How had we gotten here? This was beyond logic. My partner, the man I was supposed to marry, was prioritizing a vague, unconfirmed "promise" over our entire shared life.

"Difficult?" I echoed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "You think I'm making this difficult? Ethan, you want to spend every cent we have on a house for Kiera. A house for her. Not for us. Not for our firm."

The exhaustion was a heavy cloak, wrapping around me, suffocating me. Weeks of this same argument, the same circular logic, the same brick wall. My body ached with it, my spirit felt brittle.

"Are we even partners anymore, Ethan?" I asked, the words a raw whisper. My voice trembled, betraying the calm I desperately tried to project. "Because partners discuss things. Partners make decisions together."

He paused, a flicker of something-regret? guilt?-crossing his face. He reached out, his hand hovering, then dropping. "Cassie, please. Don't say that." His tone softened, a brief respite from the relentless pressure.

"It's just... I'm the only one who can do this for her," he continued, the momentary softness evaporating, replaced by a familiar self-importance. "No one else is stepping up."

"So you just take our money? Just empty out our joint account without telling me?" I asked, the question hanging heavy in the air.

He shifted uncomfortably. "It's not 'emptying out,' Cassie. It's an investment in goodwill. And it's just money."

"Just money?" My voice was barely audible. "Is our dream 'just' a dream? Is our future 'just' a future?"

He came closer, trying to take my hands. "Don't you see? If I do this, it proves my love for you. It proves I'm a man of my word. This is for us, ultimately." He tried to pull me into a hug.

I pulled away, a chill creeping up my spine. A cold, hard knot formed in my stomach. His words, meant to reassure, only twisted the knife deeper. He was using our love, his "honor," as a shield for his betrayal. It wasn't love; it was pure manipulation. I saw it now, like a sudden, blinding flash. We weren't building a future; he was systematically dismantling ours, brick by painful brick.

The sharp, insistent ring of his phone cut through the suffocating tension. He pulled it out, his eyes darting to the screen. Kiera's name flashed brightly.

"I need to take this," he muttered, already halfway across the room, turning his back to me. He lowered his voice, retreating to the balcony, the hushed tones a stark reminder of the secrets he kept. He always did this now, took her calls in secret, like a guilty teenager.

I watched him go, a profound ache settling in my chest. Eight years. Eight years of building, of planning, of dreaming. We had designed our lives together, meticulously, like the architectural blueprints I poured my soul into. Every corner, every beam, every window-each detail was a testament to our shared vision. And now, he was tearing down the foundations with Kiera's name painted on the rubble.

He used to tell me everything. Every legal strategy, every client drama, every family squabble. My phone, by contrast, rarely left my sight, its digital privacy a given in our open, trusting relationship. Or so I thought. But lately, his phone had become an extension of his body, fiercely guarded, often face down on a surface, notifications silent.

I had dismissed it, at first. Attributed it to the stress of his work, the demands of his increasingly high-profile cases. I had blindly trusted him, believed in the sanctity of our bond. I had convinced myself that any deviation was an anomaly, not a pattern. How foolish I had been. How utterly naive.

The balcony door slid open, and Ethan returned, his face a mixture of concern and forced cheerfulness. "Everything alright?" I asked, my voice flat, devoid of emotion.

"Fine. Just a small issue with Kiera's temporary housing," he said, too quickly. "I need to go assist her." He grabbed his keys, already heading for the door.

"Assist her where, Ethan?" I asked, my blood running cold. I knew the answer, even before he responded. My mind pieced together the fragments: the hushed call, his urgent departure, the subtle scent of expensive perfume clinging to his clothes when he'd come home late several times this month.

He paused at the threshold, avoiding my gaze. "Just... to the new place. To help her settle."

The "new place." The house, our house, that I refused to acknowledge, refused to even look at. He was going there. To our money, to her house.

The apartment door clicked shut behind him, leaving me in the silence. The silence of a future shattered. I walked to the kitchen island, my fingers brushing against the smooth, cold granite. My phone buzzed, vibrating insistently on the countertop. Brenna. My best friend Brenna, the sharpest journalist I knew, had promised to dig into Kiera's story. I had asked her to, not out of suspicion initially, but out of a desperate need to understand Ethan' s sudden, all-consuming obsession.

I picked up the phone. A single image filled the screen.

It was a bank transfer confirmation. A massive sum, our entire savings, funneled into an escrow account. The date on the transfer was two months ago. Two months before he even started arguing with me about it.

It hit me like a physical blow, knocking the air from my lungs. My knees buckled, and I gripped the countertop, fighting to stay upright. The world spun around me, the pristine white walls of our apartment closing in. The betrayal wasn't new. It was old. It was a done deal. And he had been lying to my face for weeks, pretending that my opinion, my dreams, even mattered.

He had already bought the house.

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