Love's Betrayal, Fortune's Irony
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gh law school. I worked three jobs and even took a knife for hi
awyer, I found him kissing his
ied to end my life, he brought his mistre
me, forcing me to play the perfect
to his power. He had the career I funded, the wo
ld me at knifepoint on a skyscra
ed the knife into Ar
l wife, I inher
pte
ie
an event planner meant I was always in the thick of it, orchestrating elegance from chaos. Tonight, the annual charity gala wa
she whispered, her eyes wide with admiratio
d four since I last truly looked at him. He was laughing, a rich, confident sound that tasted like ash i
nodded.
tation, instructing the chef on the placement of the miniature tarts. There was no p
inal cleanup, I felt a familiar presence behind me. I didn
ll
y, but still the same undertone of calculated charm. I ke
my voice as neutral
, a question that felt
e as ever, but something flickered there I couldn't qui
tured to the half-dismantled b
closer. "
imperceptibly. "Y
insisted, his
e. Every movement was precise, every instruction clear. When the last vendor truck pulled away,
ollo
ned the passenger door for me. I paused, then walked around to the back. Muscle memory, a
ine and the soft drumming of rain starting to fall on the roof. He star
mirror, meeting mine. "It was a client meeting. A potent
His words meant nothing to me. They were ju
r, Armand," I sai
probably expected a reaction, a flicker of pain, a
bruised plum, lay draped over the headrest. It smelled faintly of expensive perfume and so
en back to me through the mirror, a question in their depth
uptly changing the subject. "I was th
d in my stomach. My parent
n before. "But they' ve been a little under
w passing over his features. He sighed, a deep, weary sound that
emotions I refused to acknowledge. Once, his presence would have shattered
rred into streaks of color. My neighborhood, then my street. His car pulled up t
uilding. The one h
a silent question in my eyes. He
ing was okay," he mumbled, a rare tre
of me, the old, naive Ellie, wanted to believe this was a gesture
scanner, a ghost of a smile playing on his lips, as if expecting it to magically open
with increasing frustrati
one. He typed something, then pressed it back to the sc
vy, thick with the scent of mold and rust. He stepped inside, reaching for the light s
lization dawning on him.
a sudden, dawning horror. "Ellie?
. A few taps, a quick transfer. The overh
otos lay scattered across the floor, their smiling faces grotesque in their ruin. The sofa, once a place of comfort, was stained wi
where I had laid, bleeding, after I lost everything. After I lost our baby. After I
was a mask of shock, his eyes darting from the shredded
manager," I said, my voice cold and st
s of this place, this past. But his hand shot out, grabbing my ar
ent sent a jolt of pain up my arm, but it was nothing compared to the elect
istance between us as possible. My heart hammered a
ill suspended in the air. "Ell
oice sharp, final.
didn't wait for his reply, didn't look back. I just fled. Down the stairs, not daring to use the el
lly reached my actual home, the lights were off. My parents and Barton, my
mother, her hair still disheveled fro
d, her voice soft with relief
rying to sound normal, tho
ce. She simply walked to the stove, a small pot on the bu
ay of the shower, I scrubbed away the lingering scent of that old apartment, that old life. But the scars on my wri
the apartment, the quiet hum of the refrigerator, the dista
knock echoed through the
ront
rooms, drawn by the unexpected noise. My mother, eyes wide with alarm, clung t
lowly opene
suit was still perfect, his expression unreadable, a cool, calculating mask. He looked
voice calm, almost cord
en and kind, contorted into a ma