Chapter 5

Ryan moved into his Canary Wharf pied-à-terre, a high-rise flat with a sweeping view of the Thames.

He was clearly resorting to his favourite tactic — the cold shoulder — to wear down my resolve. In the eyes of a man who mastered the art of M&A and risk assessment, emotions were just another negotiation.

He believed that as long as he remained sufficiently indifferent, I would eventually crawl back to repair the rift, terrified of losing the social status that came with being "the future Mrs. Carter".

I handled the situation with the efficiency of a solicitor closing a contract. I contacted Sotheby's International Realty and listed our Mayfair duplex for sale.

On the afternoon I handed the keys to the agent, I found a misplaced financing draft tucked between the shelves. It belonged to the project Ryan was currently spearheading, one that was vital to his firm. Out of what little professional loyalty I had left, I decided to drop it off at his apartment on my way out.

When I arrived, the heavy walnut door was slightly ajar. The sounds of male laughter drifted out, punctuated by the occasional high-pitched, affected giggle.

As I reached out to knock, Emily's voice filtered through the hallway:

"Ryan, there's been so much talk at the charity teas and private-club lunches lately. Everyone is asking if you plan to make things official after I caught that bouquet at Claridge's..."

"If this isn't cleared up, how can I ever show my face in the City circles again?"

My hand froze in the chilly corridor.

Before Ryan could speak, his friends — the usual crowd from the Mayfair private clubs — began to jeer:

"Come on, Emily, are you really looking for a 'clarification', or are you just trying to get Ryan to give you a title right here and now?"

A wave of suggestive laughter followed. Emily merely giggled, her tone radiating the confidence of someone who had already won.

"That's enough, stop teasing her," Ryan's voice rang out, carrying that casual, superior indulgence. "Don't worry about such social trifles. People will forget soon enough."

"People will forget soon enough."

Those words stripped away the very last shred of hesitation in my heart. I suddenly remembered three years ago, when I had hoped he would go public after a stray paparazzi shot caught us together. The statement he'd had the PR department issue back then was colder than a parking ticket.

It turned out he never cared about "social impact"; he only cared whether the woman standing next to him was useful enough to acknowledge.

"But Ryan," another man interjected tentatively, "how do you plan to settle things with Claire? I actually received her invitation for next Saturday. Do you really intend to miss your own wedding?"

After a brief silence, Ryan let out a dismissive chuckle, as if he'd just heard a poorly constructed business joke:

"Let her be."

"I've indulged her in small matters, but this time, she needs to understand that some chips shouldn't be played recklessly."

"Hah," someone teased, "so you really plan on letting her play a solo part at the church?"

Ryan remained silent, which was as good as a confirmation.

I looked at the shadow cast by the hallway sconce and realised these eight years had been a lavish performance for an audience that never intended to clap.

I gently placed the financing draft on the doormat and pushed it through the gap with the tip of my toe. Then, I turned and walked down the corridor, the sound of my heels echoing on the floor.

Chapter 6

Ryan sat in his leather chair at the Canary Wharf office, checking his phone for the third time that hour.

His conversation with Claire remained stalled at five days ago. His last message — "I'll move back once you've thought things through" — lay there like an anonymous letter tossed into the Thames, without causing even the smallest ripple.

This wasn't like Claire. As one of London's elite wedding planners, even in the heat of a cold war, she usually knew exactly how to use polished social cues to pressure him. But this time, her social media accounts were silent.

"Ryan," his partner said, showing him a phone at their private club with a look of subtle admiration, "for God's sake, this set of bridal photos of your future Mrs... it's the best 'advertisement' The Savoy has seen in a decade."

Ryan squinted, his gaze falling on the screen.

It was a series of posts on Stella's Instagram. In the photos, Claire wore a minimalist, ivory silk-satin gown, standing before a massive floor-to-ceiling window. A rare London sunset cast a cold, golden glow around her.

She tilted her head slightly, her fingertips grazing the lace at her collar. Her eyes lacked the usual inquiry and compromise he was used to; instead, they held a sense of near-unsettling tranquillity.

The comment section was already overrun by the elite circles:

"Goodness, is Claire for real this time?"

"Ryan, do you realise you've won the finest prize in all of London?"

Seeing this, the unease in Ryan's heart was instantly eclipsed by a swelling sense of vanity.

"Let her be," he said, taking a sip of his whisky with a cold smirk. "She's just using the most expensive way possible to keep this cold war going. She's planned this dream for so many years; now she's just trying to force my hand."

"But," the partner hesitated, "the date is set for next Saturday. Do you really intend to let her stand at the venue alone?"

"You don't understand, it's an ultimatum," Ryan said, spinning his glass with certainty. "If I give in now, she'll only push harder next time. When she realises there's no groom standing there next Saturday, she'll realise how foolish it is to gamble with her reputation."

In his eyes, everything Claire did was merely professional packaging for her "social climb".

October 28th.

The morning broke with a rare clear sky in London.

Ryan woke up to find his friends tagging him frantically in their group chat. Stella had just updated her Instagram story, showing an impeccably decorated suite at a country-house hotel.

"Groom, you have three hours." Stella's caption read, dripping with provocation.

Ryan stared at the photo, and the tension in his heart finally snapped. He imagined the moment he would walk into the wedding venue — the shift in Claire from grievance to surprise — and was already rehearsing the elegant lines he would use to end this "cold war".

"Fine. I'll give her a way out."

He walked toward his dressing room. That expensive, bespoke morning suit was already prepared, complete with the tie and cufflinks.

He drove toward the Mayfair duplex they had once shared, intending to intercept the wedding car before it left for the venue. He even brought a bouquet of white roses from his usual Mayfair florist. This time, he intended to hand them back to her himself.

However, when his sports car pulled up in front of the familiar townhouse, he froze completely.

There were no flowers, no wedding cars — only a "SOLD" sign from Sotheby's International Realty, looking exceptionally ironic in the London sun.

He frantically dialled Claire's number, only to be met with the same mechanical voicemail prompt.

In that moment, a chill he had never felt before crawled up his spine.

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