The world blurred as rage consumed me. My mother's ashes—in the pie? The room spun as I lunged toward Mira, my hands outstretched to grab her, to shake her, to make her understand the horror of what she'd done.
"You sick, twisted bitch!" I screamed, my voice unrecognizable even to myself.
I didn't make it three steps before Desmond's arms wrapped around me from behind, his grip painfully tight against my ribs.
"Lyric, stop!" he hissed in my ear. "You're making a scene!"
"A scene?" I twisted in his arms, trying to break free. "She put my mother's remains in our food! My mother, Desmond!"
His grip tightened. "It was just a joke," he said, but his voice wavered. "Mira didn't mean any harm."
I fought harder, desperation giving me strength. "Let go of me!"
Mira stood across the table, tears streaming down her face in a perfect performance. "I just wanted to honor her memory," she sobbed. "I thought it would be beautiful to include her in your engagement."
The guests murmured, some looking horrified, others confused. Rebecca, my best friend, pushed through the crowd toward me.
"Desmond, you're hurting her," she said sharply.
"Stay out of this," he snapped, his face darkening with an anger I'd rarely seen.
I wrenched one arm free and swung at Mira, but Desmond yanked me back so hard I lost my balance. We crashed backward, my hip hitting the edge of the dining table. Pain shot through me as my head struck the corner with a sickening crack.
The room went silent except for the ringing in my ears. I tasted blood where I'd bitten my lip. Warm wetness trickled down my temple.
"Oh my God," someone whispered.
Through blurring vision, I saw Mira's face transform from fake tears to genuine alarm. "Someone call an ambulance!"
Desmond knelt beside me, his hands shaking as he touched my bleeding head. "Lyric, I'm sorry. I didn't mean—"
"Don't touch me," I whispered, my voice breaking.
---
The hospital room smelled of antiseptic and despair. The doctor had just left after explaining the concussion protocol. I stared at the ceiling, counting the tiles to avoid thinking about what had happened.
My phone buzzed with messages from concerned guests, but nothing from Desmond. Not even an apology.
"He's probably comforting her," I whispered to the empty room.
---
Across town, in the house Desmond and I shared, Mira sat cross-legged on his couch, her wet bathing suit dripping onto the leather.
"That went horribly wrong," she said, sipping his whiskey. "I never thought she'd react like that."
Desmond paced the living room, running his hands through his hair. "She hit her head pretty bad. What if she has brain damage?"
Mira rolled her eyes. "Don't be dramatic. She'll be fine."
"She needs to understand it was just a joke," he muttered. "You were trying to be nice."
"Exactly." Mira set down her glass and stood, moving to him with practiced grace. "Des, I'm worried about her. That reaction was... unhinged. She might need professional help."
He nodded slowly, his expression troubled.
"I'll clean up the mess while you shower," she offered sweetly. "The remaining ashes need to be taken care of."
Desmond sighed. "Thank you, Mira. I don't know what I'd do without you."
She smiled, watching him trudge upstairs before she moved to the dining room where the urn still sat on the counter. With deliberate slowness, she carried it outside to the swimming pool, unscrewed the lid, and poured the remaining ashes into the water.
"Cleaning up the mess Lyric made," she whispered to herself, watching the gray particles swirl in the blue water before disappearing.
---
Three days later, the doctor discharged me with strict instructions to rest. Rebecca drove me home, her face tight with concern.
"Are you sure you want to go back there?" she asked. "You could stay with me."
"I need to get my things," I said quietly. "And figure out what happens next."
The house was quiet when we arrived. Rebecca followed me inside, carrying my small overnight bag.
"I'm going to pack some more clothes," I said, heading upstairs.
As we passed the French doors leading to the backyard pool, movement caught my eye. Two figures entwined in the water, their heads above the surface, bodies pressed together in the shallow end.
Desmond and Mira.
I froze, unable to process what I was seeing. Mira's eyes met mine through the glass, and a slow, triumphant smile spread across her face. She pressed herself closer to Desmond, who seemed oblivious to my presence until Mira whispered something in his ear.
He turned, his eyes widening as they met mine.
The scream that tore from my throat didn't sound human.
The scream that tore from my throat didn't sound human. Rebecca grabbed my arm, her fingers digging into my skin as she tried to steady me.
"Lyric, maybe we should go," she whispered, but I couldn't move. Couldn't tear my eyes away from the scene in the pool.
Desmond pushed away from Mira, water cascading down his chest as he stumbled toward the edge. "Lyric, wait—"
"Don't touch me," I hissed, backing away. "Don't you dare touch me."
Mira's laughter floated across the water, light and musical. "Oh, Des, she's so dramatic." She stretched languidly, not bothering to cover herself. "We were just cooling off. It's been so hot today."
Rebecca stepped between us, her small frame somehow imposing. "You need to get dressed. Both of you."
I turned and ran upstairs, my vision blurring with tears. Behind me, I heard Desmond calling my name, his voice frantic.
In our bedroom—no, my bedroom now—I yanked open the closet doors. Mira's designer dresses hung neatly beside my clothes, her expensive shoes lined up on the floor. My hands trembled as I pulled open my nightstand drawer.
A diamond bracelet I'd never seen before gleamed against the wood. I lifted it, the metal cold against my fingers.
"Looking for something?" Mira's voice came from the doorway. She leaned against the frame, wrapped in my bathrobe.
"Get out," I whispered.
"Actually," she said, stepping inside, "I think you should get out. This is Desmond's house, after all."
I threw the bracelet at her. It hit her shoulder and fell to the floor. "You planned this. All of it."
Mira shrugged, picking up the bracelet and sliding it onto her wrist. "I just took what was rightfully mine."
Desmond appeared behind her, his hair still wet, wearing just his swim trunks. "Lyric, please. Let's talk about this."
"There's nothing to talk about," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "You chose her. Over and over again."
"That's not true," he insisted, stepping into the room. "Mira was just comforting me because I was worried about your mental state."
"My mental state?" I laughed, the sound brittle. "After you let her put my mother's ashes in our food?"
"It was a misunderstanding," he said, running his hands through his hair. "She thought it would be a nice gesture."
Mira nodded sympathetically behind him. "I never meant to hurt you, Lyric."
I moved to the bed and yanked back the covers. The sheets were rumpled, and I could smell her perfume—expensive, cloying, nothing like my own.
"And this?" I demanded. "Was this a misunderstanding too?"
Desmond's face flushed red. "We were just talking."
"In my bed?" My voice rose. "While I was in the hospital?"
Mira's smile widened. She moved to the nightstand and picked up a folded note I hadn't noticed before. "Oh, I almost forgot." She handed it to me. "I left this for you."
The paper trembled in my hands as I unfolded it.
"Thanks for letting us use your bed," I read aloud, my voice hollow. "It's much more comfortable than Desmond's."
Something inside me snapped. I grabbed a suitcase from the closet and began throwing my clothes inside.
"You're leaving?" Desmond asked, his voice small.
"Yes," I said, not looking at him. "I'm leaving."
"Lyric, please." He moved toward me, but I stepped back.
"Don't touch me," I warned. "Don't ever touch me again."
"Fine," he said, his expression hardening. "But you need to know something." He took a deep breath. "Yes, I slept with Mira. But it wasn't what you think."
"Oh, really?" I zipped the suitcase closed. "What was it then?"
"Stress relief," he said quickly. "She was there for me when you were... difficult."
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my fiancé's face.
"And now?" I asked quietly.
"Now I want you to stay," he said, dropping to his knees. "I want us to get married, just like we planned."
Mira's face darkened behind him.
"The wedding will happen," he continued desperately. "But Mira has to be part of it. She's my oldest friend."
I looked at them both—Desmond on his knees, begging; Mira behind him, her eyes calculating even now.
"Your oldest friend," I repeated slowly. "Who you've been sleeping with behind my back."
"It was just sex," he insisted. "It didn't mean anything."
I picked up my suitcase and moved toward the door. "Neither does your proposal."
As I walked past Mira, her hand shot out, grabbing my wrist. "You can't just leave," she hissed. "We had a deal."
I yanked free of her grasp and kept walking, Desmond's pleas fading behind me as I headed for the door.