Sophie's laughter followed me out of the penthouse, sharp and brittle like breaking glass.
I didn't remember getting to the elevator. Didn't remember the doorman's disgusted stare as I stumbled through the lobby with Marshmallow clutched against my chest. My coat was wrapped around her trembling body, and I could feel her heartbeat—too fast, too weak—through the fabric.
The night air bit at my skin. December in California wasn't supposed to be this cold, but I felt it in my bones, in my teeth, in the hollow space where my heart used to be.
Eddie gave her to me.
The words played on loop in my head, each repetition like another crack in a dam that was already breaking.
I pulled out my phone with numb fingers and searched for emergency vets. The first three results were closed. The fourth—Westside Animal Hospital—showed open 24 hours.
Twenty-minute walk. I started moving.
Marshmallow made small sounds against my chest, pitiful little cries that cut through me. I whispered to her, meaningless comfort words that probably meant more to me than to her. Each step felt like moving through water.
The clinic appeared like a mirage—fluorescent lights spilling onto the sidewalk, a blue cross glowing above the door. I pushed inside, and warmth hit my face along with the smell of antiseptic and something else, something clean and safe.
A woman at the front desk looked up, her expression shifting from routine politeness to alarm.
"Please," I managed. "My cat—she needs help."
Before the receptionist could respond, a door behind her opened. A man stepped through, tall and broad-shouldered, wearing scrubs with a stethoscope around his neck. His hair was dark, slightly mussed like he'd been running his hands through it, and his eyes—brown, warm, concerned—fixed on Marshmallow immediately.
"Bring her back," he said. Not a question. A command born from urgency, not authority.
I followed him through the door into a bright examination room. He gestured to the steel table, and I laid Marshmallow down as gently as I could. She mewed, a sound so broken it physically hurt.
"I'm Dr. Hayes," he said, already moving, hands gentle as they examined her. "Noah Hayes. Can you tell me what happened?"
I tried to speak. My throat closed around the words.
His eyes flicked to me, just for a second, and something in his expression softened. "It's okay. Just start anywhere."
"She was missing. Three months." The words came out jagged. "I just found her. Someone—" I couldn't say it. Couldn't make it real by speaking it aloud.
Noah's jaw tightened as his fingers traced the surgical scars around Marshmallow's eyes and ears. "These are recent. Cosmetic procedures. Unauthorized, by the look of it." His voice stayed calm, professional, but I heard the anger underneath. "She's severely malnourished and dehydrated. I need to run some tests, start fluids immediately."
He looked at me then, really looked at me, and I realized tears were streaming down my face.
"She's going to make it through tonight," he said, and it wasn't empty reassurance. It was a promise. "But I need you to trust me and let me work. Can you do that?"
I nodded. Couldn't do anything else.
"Sarah," he called toward the door. The receptionist appeared. "Get an IV started, run a full panel, and prepare the isolation room. I'll be working through the night."
The next hours blurred together. Sarah led me to a waiting room that smelled like coffee and fear. The chairs were worn but clean, the walls decorated with photos of happy pets and their owners. I sat. Stood. Paced. Sat again.
Sometime around midnight, Noah appeared in the doorway. His scrubs had a smudge of something on them, and exhaustion lined his face, but his eyes were kind.
"She's stable," he said, and my knees went weak with relief. "I've got her on fluids and antibiotics. The procedures she underwent—" His mouth tightened. "They were done without proper care. But she's a fighter."
"Can I see her?"
"In a bit. Let her rest first." He crossed the room and sat beside me, not too close, respecting my space. "You want coffee? It's terrible, but it's warm."
I shook my head, then changed my mind. "Yes. Please."
He returned with two Styrofoam cups, handed me one, and settled back into his chair. We sat in silence while I wrapped my hands around the cup, letting the heat seep into my frozen fingers.
"Three months is a long time to be missing," Noah said quietly. "You must have looked everywhere."
"I did." My voice cracked. "Flyers, shelters, websites. I thought—" The sob caught me by surprise. "I thought she was dead."
"But she wasn't." He didn't touch me, didn't crowd me, just sat there with his terrible coffee and his steady presence. "You found her. That's what matters."
"Someone gave her away." The words felt like broken glass coming up. "Someone I trusted. He gave her to—" I couldn't finish.
Noah's expression didn't change, but something flickered in his eyes. Understanding, maybe. Or recognition of a particular kind of pain.
"People who can hurt animals," he said, "can hurt anything. Anyone." He took a sip of coffee, grimaced. "I wasn't kidding. This is awful."
The laugh that escaped me was half-sob, but it was something. Something other than the crushing weight in my chest.
We sat there as the night deepened, as the clock ticked past one, then two. Noah kept disappearing to check on Marshmallow, returning each time with updates delivered in that same calm, competent voice. And each time, he brought something—fresh coffee, a blanket from somewhere, a granola bar from the vending machine.
Around three in the morning, he sat beside me again and said, "You can see her now, if you want. Just for a minute."
I followed him back through the doors, into a quiet room where Marshmallow lay on a heated pad, IV line attached to her tiny leg. She looked so small. So fragile. But her breathing was steady, and when I whispered her name, her ear twitched.
"Hey, baby," I murmured, reaching through the cage bars to stroke her head with one finger. "I'm here. I'm so sorry. But I'm here now."
Noah stood in the doorway, giving us space, and when I turned around with tears streaming down my face again, he simply handed me a tissue.
"She'll need to stay here for a few days," he said. "Maybe longer, depending on the test results. But Mikey—" He paused. "She's going to be okay."
I nodded, unable to speak.
"You should go home. Get some rest. I'll be here all night, and I'll call if anything changes."
"I don't want to leave her."
"I know." His voice was impossibly gentle. "But you can't help her if you collapse. And I promise you, I'll take care of her like she's my own."
Something in his eyes made me believe him. Made me trust him, this stranger who'd appeared in my worst moment and offered nothing but kindness without asking for anything in return.
As I finally left the clinic, stepping back into the cold December night, I realized I'd left my phone in the waiting room. When I went back to get it, I saw twenty-three missed calls from Eddie.
I stared at his name on the screen, and for the first time in three years, I felt nothing but cold, crystalline clarity.
Eddie gave her to Sophie.
Eddie, who'd held me while I cried over my missing cat.
Eddie, who I'd given everything to.
Eddie, who I thought I knew.
I deleted every voicemail without listening. Then I walked back out into the night, leaving them all behind in that bright, antiseptic waiting room where a stranger had shown me more kindness than the man I loved had shown me in months.
And somewhere in the darkness of that cold December morning, I felt the first stirrings of something dangerous.
Something that felt like rage.
I didn't sleep.
How could I, when every time I closed my eyes, I saw Marshmallow's scarred face? When Noah's words kept echoing in my head like a death knell?
Unauthorized surgeries. Cosmetic procedures. Done without proper care.
At eight in the morning, I was back at the clinic. My body felt hollow, like someone had scooped out everything inside and left only a shell that knew how to put one foot in front of the other.
Noah was in the examination room when I arrived, his scrubs different from last night but his eyes carrying the same exhaustion I felt. He looked up when I entered, and something in his expression softened.
"You didn't sleep either," I said.
A small, rueful smile. "Occupational hazard." He gestured toward a chair, and I sat while he pulled up something on his tablet. "I want to show you the X-rays and test results. You deserve to know exactly what was done to her."
The images on the screen looked alien. Wrong. Noah's finger traced lines and shadows that meant nothing to me until he started explaining.
"The procedures on her face—they removed tissue around her eyes to create a more 'doe-eyed' appearance. It's purely cosmetic, something you'd see in show cats, except this was done without anesthesia monitoring or post-operative care." His jaw tightened. "She also had her ear cartilage trimmed. Again, aesthetic. No medical reason."
My hands clenched in my lap. "She was in pain."
"Significant pain, yes. And look here—" He swiped to another image. "Her ribs are visible on the scan. She's lost nearly thirty percent of her body weight. The malnutrition affected her kidney function. We're managing it, but—" He paused, meeting my eyes. "Mikey, if you'd found her even a week later, we might not have been able to save her."
The room tilted. I gripped the edge of the chair until my knuckles went white.
"Someone did this to her," Noah continued, and now his voice carried an edge I hadn't heard before. Anger, carefully controlled. "Someone took a healthy animal and mutilated her for photographs. For content." He set the tablet down. "I've seen a lot in this job, but this—this is cruelty for vanity. Nothing more."
Purely for aesthetic reasons. For Sophie's perfect Instagram feed. For her two million followers who didn't know and wouldn't care that a living creature had suffered for their entertainment.
And Eddie had given her to Sophie. Had known. Had lied.
"I need to go," I said, standing abruptly. The chair scraped against the floor.
Noah stood too, concern flickering across his face. "Mikey—"
"I need to talk to someone." My voice sounded strange. Distant. "I need answers."
He studied me for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "Okay. But promise me you'll come back. Marshmallow will want to see you when she's more alert."
I promised. Then I left before he could see my hands shaking.
The fraternity house sat on Greek Row like a monument to privilege—three stories of white columns and perfectly manicured lawn, Christmas lights strung across the porch with careless elegance. Eddie's Audi was parked in the circular driveway, gleaming black and expensive.
I'd been here dozens of times. Had felt small every single time, like I was playing dress-up in someone else's life.
Now I felt nothing but cold purpose.
I didn't knock. I pushed through the front door and into the marble foyer where EDM pulsed from hidden speakers and the air smelled like expensive cologne and last night's beer.
Eddie was in the living room, sprawled on a leather couch with his phone in his hand. He looked up when I entered, and relief flooded his perfect face.
"Mikey, thank God. I've been calling you all night—"
"How did Sophie get my cat?"
He blinked. Smiled uncertainly. "Babe, we talked about this. That's not—"
"Stop lying." The words came out flat. Hard. "I saw Marshmallow. I took her to an emergency vet. She's covered in surgical scars from procedures done for aesthetic reasons. She's been starved and neglected and tortured for Sophie's Instagram feed."
Eddie's smile faltered. "Mikey, you're upset—"
"How. Did. Sophie. Get. My. Cat."
Silence. Long enough that I saw the exact moment he decided to stop pretending.
"I was just helping Sophie with a project." He stood, running a hand through his hair in that familiar gesture that used to make my heart flutter. Now it just looked practiced. "She needed a white cat for her content, and Marshmallow was perfect. I was going to tell you eventually—"
"You let me put up flyers." My voice cracked. "You held me while I cried. You helped me search shelters. And the whole time, you knew exactly where she was."
"Babe, you're overreacting—"
"She almost died!" The words exploded out of me. "She was mutilated and starved and if I'd found her even a week later, she'd be dead. Because you gave her to someone who treated her like a prop!"
Eddie's expression shifted. The concern melted away, replaced by something harder. Irritated. "Okay, first of all, I didn't know Sophie would do all that. Second, it's just a cat, Mikey. You're acting like I committed murder."
Just a cat.
Just.
A.
Cat.
"She was mine," I whispered. "She was the only thing in this city that was actually mine, and you took her. You gave her away like she was nothing."
"Because she is nothing!" Eddie's voice rose, frustration bleeding through his polished exterior. "Jesus Christ, Mikey, do you know how exhausting it is? You and your attachment to that animal, your constant worry about money, your—" He stopped himself, but too late.
The truth was already out, hanging in the air between us like poison gas.
"My what?" I asked softly. Dangerously. "Finish the sentence, Eddie."
He looked away, jaw working. When he spoke again, his voice was tight with poorly concealed disdain. "Your desperate need to make everything a tragedy. Sophie needed the cat for two months. That's it. But instead of being reasonable, you turn it into this massive betrayal."
"You lied to me for three months."
"I was managing the situation!" He threw his hands up. "I was trying to help a friend while keeping you from having one of your emotional breakdowns. You're welcome, by the way."
Something inside me went very still. Very quiet.
"Is that what this has been?" I asked. "Managing me?"
Eddie's eyes flickered with something—guilt, maybe, or just annoyance at being caught. "Don't twist my words."
"Your family business. The bankruptcy. All that money I gave you—"
"That was different—"
"How much of it was real, Eddie?"
He went silent. And in that silence, I saw everything I needed to see.
"Get out," he said finally. "You're being hysterical, and I'm done dealing with this."
I laughed. Actually laughed, high and broken and edged with something that might have been madness.
"I'm being hysterical," I repeated. "I'm the problem." I turned toward the door, then stopped. "Tell me one thing. Did you ever actually love me? Or was I just another project for you to manage?"
Eddie looked at me with those blue eyes that had once made me feel chosen. Special. Seen.
Now they just looked empty.
"Don't be dramatic, Mikey. It doesn't suit you."
I walked out. Down the marble steps, past the perfect lawn, away from the house that had always made me feel small.
And with every step, I felt something building inside me.
Something that felt like the beginning of an ending.
Or maybe, finally, a beginning.