Chapter 5

The air in my apartment felt stifling, heavy with the weight of unsaid goodbyes. Damari hadn' t called since he' d rushed off to Cydney' s supposed emergency. Not that I was waiting for him to. The silence from him was just another confirmation of his true priorities. He had made his choice, and I had made mine.

I spent the morning methodically packing. Not just his things, but mine too. I was leaving New York. This city, once home to my dreams with Damari, now felt like a mausoleum of broken promises. My sister had called again, offering support, reminding me of the family setup in Austin. A new city, new opportunities, a new life. The thought, once terrifying, now felt like a lifeline.

Just as I wrestled a particularly stubborn box of architecture books, my doorbell rang. My heart clenched. It had to be him. I hesitated, then took a deep breath. This was it. The final confrontation.

I opened the door. Damari stood there, looking disheveled, his eyes red-rimmed and bloodshot. He looked like he hadn't slept, a stark contrast to his usual impeccable appearance. He almost looked pitiful. Almost.

"Augusta," he began, his voice hoarse, "I know you're upset. But Cydney… she really needed me. She was hysterical. She thought someone was following her at the docks."

His explanation, meant to elicit sympathy, only hardened my resolve. Always Cydney. Always her drama taking precedence. "And what does that have to do with us, Damari?" I asked, my voice flat.

He ran a hand through his hair, looking exasperated. "It has everything to do with us! I told her she has to back off. She knows her place. I yelled at her, Augusta. I told her she crossed a line. And she cried, she was so upset." He paused, as if expecting me to be impressed by his supposed firmness. "She apologized. She said she understood how important you are to me."

Understood how important I am? The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. She understood alright. She understood how to manipulate him, how to drive a wedge between us, how to ensure she remained the central figure in his life. And he, in his pathetic cowardice, mistook her manipulation for genuine remorse.

"You yelled at her," I repeated, my voice devoid of emotion. "And she cried. And that makes everything okay?"

He stepped into the apartment, noticing the packed boxes. His eyes widened, a flicker of panic replacing his exhaustion. "What is all this? Augusta, what are you doing?"

"I'm leaving," I stated, simply. "I'm selling the apartment. I'm moving."

His jaw dropped. "Moving? Where? What about us? We're supposed to get married. We have a life here." He gestured vaguely around the apartment, his hand shaking.

"We were supposed to get married, Damari," I corrected him, my voice chillingly calm. "But that was before I discovered that you actively sabotaged our marriage for four years. That was before you chose your obsessive assistant over me, over our future, again and again."

"No!" He took a step towards me, his eyes wide, pleading. "Augusta, you don't understand. It's not like that. I love you! I always have. Cydney... she's just a responsibility. An obligation."

An obligation. That was his excuse. My heart, which had been broken, now felt utterly disgusted. "Is she an obligation, Damari, or is she the woman you constantly choose? The woman whose emotional needs always, always trump mine?" I pointed to the boxes. "You see these? These are the remnants of a life you promised me, a life you were too cowardly to build."

He looked at the boxes, then back at me, his face a mask of disbelief. "You're serious. You're actually leaving."

"I am." My voice was firm. "I'm done waiting for you to choose me. I'm done with the lies, with the deceit, with constantly being second place to your 'fragile' assistant."

Before he could respond, his phone, which he held loosely in his hand, vibrated. It was a text message. I saw the preview on the screen. From Cydney. "Damari, I'm so scared. I think someone's outside my apartment. I'm all alone."

He glanced at the message, then at me. His eyes flickered, a familiar panic starting to creep in. He was caught between his crumbling facade with me and Cydney's manufactured crisis. And in that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that he would, once again, choose her.

"Augusta," he started, his voice strained, "I... I have to..."

"Go," I finished for him, my voice cold, precise. "Go be Cydney's hero. You're clearly better at that than being a fiancé."

He hesitated, a look of profound guilt and indecision on his face. He wanted to argue, to plead, but Cydney's words, her manufactured distress, had already pulled him away. He turned, rushing out of my apartment, leaving the door ajar, leaving me surrounded by my packed boxes and the stark reality of my solitude.

As he ran down the hallway, I saw a flash of movement outside my door. Cydney. She was standing there, a small, triumphant smile playing on her lips. She met my gaze, her eyes cold, victorious. She hadn't been in trouble at all. She had been there, waiting, watching, orchestrating his departure. Her text message, her fake distress, was merely a tactic to pull him away, to ensure I couldn't deliver the final blow.

A cold shiver ran down my spine. She was far more manipulative than I had ever given her credit for. And Damari, in his blindness, was completely her pawn.

I closed the door, the click echoing in the suddenly silent apartment. The last remnants of my love for him, the last vestiges of hope, had finally evaporated. He had left me for her, even in the very moment I was trying to end things. It wasn't just a betrayal; it was a final, damning confirmation. I was truly, irrevocably, done. My heart was a barren wasteland, but my resolve was solid. New York was behind me. A new future waited.

Chapter 6

Two days later, the apartment felt colder, emptier without the emotional baggage of Damari. I had refused to answer any of his calls, choosing instead to focus on the logistics of my impending move. My phone screen flashed with his name, then Cydney's, then his again. I ignored them all. They were a part of the past I was actively shedding.

I was in the middle of taping up the last box of my architectural models when I heard a furious pounding on my door. It wasn't the tentative knock of a hopeful lover; it was the aggressive thud of someone demanding entry. I knew it was him.

I opened the door, my face a mask of weary indifference. Damari stood there, his eyes ablaze with a mixture of anger and panic. "Augusta! What the hell is going on? Why aren't you answering my calls? Why are all these boxes here?" He pushed past me, his gaze sweeping over the chaotic living room.

"I'm leaving, Damari," I stated, my voice calm. "I told you that already."

He turned to me, his eyes wide with disbelief. "Leaving? Where? You can't just leave! We're celebrating our anniversary tonight, remember? I've made reservations at The Oak Room, our special place."

The Oak Room. Another grand gesture, another attempt to recreate a past that was already a lie. And he still didn't understand. He thought a fancy dinner could erase years of deceit. "I'm moving to Austin, Damari," I said, cutting him off. "And no, I don't remember any anniversary. All I remember is you leaving me for Cydney's fake emergency, again."

His face paled. "Cydney's fake emergency? What are you talking about? She was genuinely distressed! You're being cruel, Augusta."

Cruel. The word twisted in my gut. He thought I was being cruel? "I saw her, Damari," I said, my voice flat. "Standing outside my door, watching you leave, a triumphant look on her face. Her 'emergency' was nothing but another one of her manipulations, and you, as usual, fell for it hook, line, and sinker."

His mouth opened and closed, no words coming out. He looked genuinely shocked, the carefully constructed facade of his innocence finally cracking. But then, it hardened. "You're imagining things, Augusta. You're jealous. You're trying to blame Cydney for your own insecurities."

My breath hitched. Jealous? Insecure? After everything, he was still twisting the narrative, still blaming me. "Insecure?" I laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. "I'm not insecure, Damari. I'm enlightened. I'm done with your lies, done with your manipulations, done with constantly being second best to your 'fragile' assistant."

He took a step towards me, his hand reaching out. "Augusta, please. Don't throw away everything we have. I know I messed up. But I love you. Let me try to make it right. Come to the reunion with me tonight. Our high school reunion. It will be good for us."

A high school reunion. The thought of facing our old friends, pretending everything was fine, was unbearable. But then, an idea sparked. This was my chance. My chance to make a clean break, publicly. "Fine," I said, surprising even myself. "I'll go to the reunion. But only to say goodbye."

His eyes lit up with a flicker of hope. He misinterpreted my words, as he always did. "Great! I knew you wouldn't give up on us. I'll pick you up at seven." He kissed my forehead, a ghost of a touch, and walked out, leaving me standing in the wreckage of our apartment, my heart a stone.

I walked to my bedroom, a profound sense of finality settling over me. This was it. The last act. The last time I would allow myself to be part of his charade. I would go to the reunion, and I would sever all ties, cleanly and irrevocably.

I was halfway through getting ready, pulling on a simple black dress, when my phone buzzed. A message from Damari: "Changing plans. Cydney needs a ride to the reunion too. We'll pick you up in ten minutes. She's going to help me coordinate with some old classmates for a surprise tribute to our history."

My blood ran cold. Cydney. Again. Always Cydney. Even on the night he was supposedly trying to win me back, she was there, inserted into our lives, orchestrating his plans. The audacity was breathtaking.

Less than ten minutes later, a car horn blared outside. I grabbed my small clutch, my heart pounding with a mixture of anger and resolve. I walked out and saw Damari's sleek black car. He was in the driver's seat, and in the passenger seat, Cydney sat, her head thrown back in a laugh, her hand resting casually on his arm. She wore a dress, one I recognized from a catalog he'd once shown me, saying, "This would look beautiful on you, Augusta."

I opened the back door and slid in. Cydney turned, her smile fading slightly when she saw me, replaced by a practiced expression of polite concern. "Augusta! So glad you could make it. Damari was so worried you wouldn't come."

I didn't respond. I just looked at Damari. He shifted uncomfortably, his eyes darting between us. "Cydney was just helping me with some details for the reunion," he said quickly, his voice a little too loud. "You know how disorganized these things can be."

"Of course," I said, my voice flat. "She's very good at 'details'." The subtle jab landed. Cydney's smile tightened.

The drive was tense, filled with Cydney's incessant chatter about "reunion logistics" and Damari's forced enthusiasm. I stared out the window, the city lights blurring into streaks of color. I felt utterly detached, a ghost in my own life.

We arrived at the venue, a grand ballroom transformed for the reunion. Our classmates, now older, some with families, mingled and laughed. As soon as we stepped in, we were swarmed. Damari, the golden boy, and me, his long-suffering fiancée.

"Damari! Augusta! You two are still together!" an old friend exclaimed, hugging me tight. "I always knew you'd make it. You two were always the dream couple."

The words felt like a cruel joke. Dream couple. My smile was brittle. Damari, ever the performer, put his arm around me, squeezing me gently. "Always," he said, his voice smooth, confident. "Augusta is my rock."

I felt Cydney flinch beside us, a subtle tremor. My gaze met hers. Her eyes, usually so deferential, now held a flicker of defiance, of resentment. She looked away quickly.

"You two are still the most envied couple," another classmate added. "After all these years, Damari still fighting for you after Eldridge's rejections. Such devotion!"

Devotion. The word was a knife twisting in my gut. He wasn't devoted. He was a liar. And Cydney, his indispensable shadow, was standing right there, basking in his false glory.

My eyes suddenly caught a flicker of something in Cydney's handbag, which she had placed carelessly on a nearby table. A small, metallic glint. It was a keycard. His office keycard. The one he kept exclusively for his most trusted personnel. The one he'd told me Cydney would never have access to after a certain incident. Another lie.

I looked at Damari, my face expressionless. He was still smiling, still playing the doting fiancé, utterly oblivious to the fresh wave of betrayal washing over me. The keycard was proof. Proof that he hadn't fired her, hadn't even reprimanded her. She was still his confidante, his partner in deceit.

"Yes," I said, my voice surprisingly steady, "such devotion."

The lie tasted like ash. My resolve hardened. This was my grand exit. I would not succumb to his charade. I would not allow his lies to define me any longer.

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