Avery Bright POV:
The ten days felt like a lifetime suspended in alcohol. I found myself in a dimly lit bar, the kind of place Alexander, with his polished tastes, would have hated. The sticky floor and the scent of stale beer were a comfort, a world away from the pristine life he had curated for us.
"Another one, Avery?" Maria slid a fresh glass of whiskey across the bar towards me. "Maybe you should slow down."
I ignored her, taking a long swallow. The burn in my throat was a welcome distraction from the hollow ache in my chest. "He used to love me, M. I know he did."
"Of course, he did," she said softly, wrapping an arm around my shoulders.
The bar's speaker crackled to life, playing a song that was popular our senior year of high school. The melody was a key turning a lock in my memory, and a wave of pain so intense it made me gasp washed over me.
It was the night of the car crash. A drunk driver had run a red light, t-boning my little convertible. I remember the screech of tires, the shattering glass, and then, Alexander's face, pale and terrified, leaning over me. He had been following me home, just to make sure I was safe. He' d held my hand in the ambulance, his grip a lifeline, refusing to let go even when the paramedics tried to move him. He had stayed by my hospital bed for three days straight, never leaving, whispering that he couldn't live without me.
Love wasn't a constant state. It was a series of moments, of choices. He had chosen to love me then. And now, he had chosen to stop. The thought was a shard of ice in my heart.
Maria eventually managed to pour me into a cab and get me home. My home. The house Alexander and I had bought together. The moment I stepped through the door, the scent of his cologne hit me, and I felt the alcohol-fueled numbness begin to wear off, replaced by a fresh wave of grief.
He was waiting for me in the living room, his arms crossed, a thunderous expression on his face.
"Where have you been?" he demanded, his voice low and dangerous.
"Out," I slurred, kicking off my heels.
"Out where? Dressed like that?" He gestured to my dress, which suddenly felt too short, too tight. "You've been drinking."
He strode towards me, grabbing my arm and pulling me against him. His touch, which used to feel like home, now felt like a cage. "You know I don't like it when you go to those places, Avery. You're my fiancée. You represent me."
"Let go of me, Alex," I said, trying to push him away.
Maria, who had been hovering in the doorway, stepped forward. "Alexander, she's had a rough night. Just let her sleep it off."
"This is between me and Avery," he snapped without looking at her. He turned his cold gaze back to me. "Tell your friend to leave."
I met Maria's worried eyes and gave her a slight nod. "It's okay, M. I can handle this." I needed to face him alone.
Once the door clicked shut behind her, Alexander's grip tightened. "Are you trying to make me angry, Avery? Is that it? Because it's working."
"You want to know what's making me angry, Alex?" I shot back, my voice dripping with sarcasm. "The fact that you think you have any right to be angry at all. After you left me standing at the altar for the ninety-ninth time for her."
Before he could answer, a crash echoed from upstairs. Our bedroom.
Alexander immediately released me, his concern for me vanishing in an instant. He shoved me aside so hard I stumbled back against the wall, and took the stairs two at a time.
I followed, my heart a leaden weight in my chest. I already knew who I would find.
Kiara was sitting on the floor of our bedroom, surrounded by shattered glass. A small trickle of blood ran down her finger. She looked up at Alexander with wide, tear-filled eyes. A perfect damsel in distress.
"What are you doing in my house?" I demanded, my voice shaking with rage. "In my bedroom?"
"Avery, calm down," Alexander said, rushing to Kiara's side. "She was just released from the wellness center. She has nowhere else to go. I couldn't just leave her on the street."
He was crouched beside her now, dabbing at her finger with his handkerchief with an infuriating tenderness.
Then my eyes landed on the source of the broken glass. It was my mother's crystal music box, the last thing she gave me before she died. It lay in a thousand pieces on the hardwood floor.
The air left my lungs.
"I'm so sorry, Avery," Kiara whimpered, though her eyes held a triumphant glint. "It was an accident. I was just looking at it. I can pay for it."
Pay for it? How could she possibly pay for the memory of my mother's hands placing it in mine, her voice frail as she told me to always listen to my own music?
Something inside me snapped. I lunged forward and slapped her, the sound echoing in the silent room.
"Get out of my house!" I screamed.
Before the words were even out of my mouth, Alexander was on his feet. He grabbed me, pulling me back from Kiara with bruising force.
"Have you lost your mind?" he yelled, his face inches from mine. "She's fragile, Avery! Look at what you did! It' s always about you, isn' t it? The spoiled little princess who can't stand it when someone else gets a sliver of attention."
He dragged me out of the bedroom and into the master bathroom, his fingers digging into my arm. He shoved me under the showerhead and twisted the knob.
Ice-cold water rained down on me, drenching my hair, my dress, my skin. I gasped, the shock of it stealing my breath.
"Maybe that will cool you off," he snarled, his eyes blazing with a fury I had never seen directed at me before. "You need to get a grip, Avery. This childish, jealous act is getting old."
He slammed the bathroom door shut, leaving me shivering and soaked in the dark. The sound of the lock clicking into place was the sound of my last hope dying.
Through the door, I could hear him murmuring softly to Kiara, his voice laced with the concern he no longer had for me.
I sank to the cold tile floor, the water plastering my hair to my face. He had once promised to build a world for me. Now, he wouldn't even give me a world where I was safe in my own home. The cold wasn't just in the water; it was seeping into my bones, into the very core of my soul, freezing everything that was left of the girl who had loved Alexander Holt.
Avery Bright POV:
I don't know how long I sat there on the cold tile, shivering, before the water finally stopped. I stripped off the soaking dress and wrapped myself in a towel, my movements stiff and robotic. I walked to the guest room, avoiding my own, unable to face the scene of my final humiliation.
As I passed the master bedroom, the door was ajar. I couldn't help but look. Alexander was sitting on the edge of our bed, the bed we had shared for years, and he was gently wrapping a bandage around Kiara's finger. The lamplight softened the lines of his face, casting him in a gentle glow. The look in his eyes… it was the same look he had given me after he'd punched that boy for pulling my hair. Protective. Devoted.
And it was all for her. My replacement.
That night, I dreamt of us. Not the good memories, but the small, insidious moments I had ignored. The way his eyes would glaze over when I talked about my work. The impatience in his voice when I called him at the office. The countless "rescheduled" date nights. The cracks had been there all along; I had just been too in love to see them.
I woke up with a pounding headache and a mouth as dry as sandpaper. Stumbling downstairs for a glass of water, I found Kiara sitting at my dining table, sipping tea from my favorite mug. She was wearing one of Alexander's dress shirts, which hung off her small frame, making her look even more waiflike and innocent.
She smiled at me, a lazy, triumphant smirk. "Good morning, Avery. Sleep well?"
I ignored her, heading for the kitchen.
"You know," she continued, her voice light and conversational, "Alex worries so much about you. He says you're like this beautiful, fragile vase that he has to protect from the world." Her smirk widened. "But even the most beautiful vase is just an object. Empty. It's people like me, people with real pain, who can actually make him feel something. I'm not the one destroying your relationship, Avery. I'm the one saving him from it."
"You need professional help," I said, my voice flat.
"Maybe," she conceded. "But I have something you don't. His heart." She leaned forward, her eyes gleaming with malice. "He told me everything, you know. About the wedding. About how he couldn't bear to see me hurt, so he married you off to his driver just to get me off his back. A nobody for a nobody. It's almost poetic."
The confirmation, hearing it from her lips, was like swallowing glass. "A man who would do that," I said, my voice dangerously quiet, "isn't a prize to be won, Kiara. He's a liability."
She laughed. "You're just saying that because you lost. You want to see how much you've lost? Let's play a little game."
Before I could react, she grabbed the kettle of boiling water from the counter. Her movements were swift, deliberate. She flung the scalding contents directly at my legs.
The pain was instantaneous and excruciating. I screamed, stumbling back as my skin erupted in angry, red welts. Blisters were already forming on my shin.
At that exact moment, Alexander walked in, his briefcase in hand. "What's going on?"
His eyes widened in alarm as he saw me on the floor, clutching my leg. For a split second, I saw a flicker of the old Alex, the one who would have rushed to my side.
But then Kiara burst into tears. "Alex! I'm so sorry!" she wailed, rushing to him. "I was just trying to make Avery some tea to apologize for last night, and she… she knocked it out of my hands! She said I wasn't worthy of being in her kitchen!"
I stared at her, dumbfounded by the audacity of her lie.
I watched Alexander's face. The initial shock and concern for me slowly cooled, replaced by a familiar look of weary disappointment. He was already choosing to believe her.
"Avery," he said, his voice laced with disapproval. "Was that really necessary? You know how clumsy she can be."
"She threw it on me, Alex!" I cried, the injustice of it all making the pain even worse. "Look at my leg! Check the security cameras if you don't believe me!"
He scoffed. "Don't be ridiculous. You want me to pull security footage in my own home to prove my fiancée is a bully? Do you have any idea how that makes you sound? You're starting to act just like your father, using these petty dramas to get attention."
The mention of my father was a low blow, and he knew it. My father, a man who had cheated on my dying mother and then had the gall to bring his mistress to her funeral. The wound was still raw, a source of deep shame and pain.
My hand moved before I could think. I slapped him, hard, across the face. The sound was sharp, final.
He stood there, stunned, one hand rising to his cheek. He didn't even seem angry, just… resigned.
Kiara chose that moment to let out another pained cry. "Alex, my hand… the one I cut last night… it hurts so much."
His attention snapped back to her instantly. He scooped her up in his arms, his face a mask of concern once more. "I'll take you to the hospital, get it checked out."
As he carried her past me, he paused. "The driver will be here in five minutes to take you to get that burn looked at," he said, his voice devoid of any emotion. He didn't even look at me.
Then they were gone.
I sat on my kitchen floor, surrounded by spilled water and the wreckage of my life, a bitter laugh bubbling up in my throat. He was sending his driver-my fraudulent husband-to take me to the hospital. The irony was suffocating.
"I'm breaking up with you, Alexander Holt," I whispered to the empty room.
He didn't hear me. He was already gone, racing to the side of the woman he truly loved.
I pulled myself up, ignoring the searing pain in my leg, and hobbled to the hospital on my own. I wasn't going to wait for him anymore. Not for a ride, not for an apology, not for a love that had already died.
Avery Bright POV:
The pain in my leg gave way to a fever that night. I tossed and turned in the guest room bed, my body aching, my mind a feverish swamp of memories. In my delirium, I thought I felt a cool hand on my forehead, heard a familiar voice murmuring my name, but it all dissolved into the haze.
When I woke, the fever had broken. Alexander was sitting in a chair by the bed, his face etched with concern. "You scared me, Avery. Your fever was dangerously high."
He reached for my hand, but I pulled it away.
"Why didn't you call me?" he chided gently. "You know I would have come home. You don't always have to be so strong."
A laugh, sharp and humorless, escaped my lips. "Oh, that's rich. Coming from you." I met his gaze, my own eyes cold. "You and Kiara-a manipulative liar and a self-absorbed fool. You're perfect for each other."
A flash of panic crossed his face. Did she know? How much did she know? He quickly schooled his features back into a mask of weary patience. "Avery, please. Kiara has a severe anemic condition. She bruises easily. She didn't mean for any of this to happen."
He leaned forward, his voice dropping to the low, earnest tone that used to make my heart melt. "I know I've been… distracted. Once Kiara is back on her feet, I promise, we'll have the wedding. The biggest, most beautiful wedding this city has ever seen. Just like you've always wanted."
I just stared at him. Did he really think a party was what I wanted? Did he understand me at all? Or was I just a role he needed someone to play? The perfect, supportive fiancée.
His phone buzzed. He glanced at the screen, his expression immediately shifting. It was her.
"Hello?" he answered, his voice dropping to a whisper. He stood up and walked towards the door. "No, no, I'm not with anyone. Just in a meeting… Yes, of course. I'll be there as soon as I can."
He hung up and turned back to me, a practiced, apologetic smile on his face. "Duty calls. You get some rest."
I just nodded, my face a blank mask. There was nothing left to say.
He hesitated at the door, a strange look in his eyes as he took in my pale face, the dark circles under my eyes. "I could stay," he offered, the words sounding hollow even to him. "If you really need me to."
It was a test. A final, cruel test to see if I would beg.
"Go," I said, my voice flat. "Your 'meeting' is waiting."
He seemed relieved. The flicker of guilt in his eyes was extinguished, replaced by the familiar justification. She was still the proud, difficult Avery. He was doing the right thing. He left without a backward glance.
The moment the door closed, the dam broke. I curled into a ball, pulling the blankets over my head as silent, wracking sobs shook my entire body. I cried for the boy who held my hand with scraped knuckles, for the young man who wrote me a hundred love letters, for the fiancé who named his company after me. I cried until my throat was raw and my eyes were swollen shut. I bit down on my own finger, the sharp pain a grounding force in the overwhelming sea of emotional agony. The taste of blood filled my mouth.
When the tears finally stopped, a chilling clarity took their place. I was done. Done waiting, done crying, done being his second choice.
I picked up my phone and dialed the number for Case Dyer, my so-called husband. The phone rang and rang before going to voicemail. "The number you have dialed is currently unavailable."
Unavailable. Of course. Just like everyone else. Just like Alexander. A bitter laugh escaped me. It seemed the universe was telling me I was completely and utterly alone.
Fine. If I was alone, I would save myself.
A manic energy seized me. I stalked into the living room and ripped our engagement photo off the wall. The image of us, smiling and happy, was a mockery. I smashed it on the floor, the sound of shattering glass a balm to my frayed nerves. I wasn't satisfied. I went through the house like a storm, gathering every photo, every memento, every gift he had ever given me.
I took the box of memories into the backyard. Shards of glass littered the floor around me, but I didn't care about the sting as I stepped on them. I found a pair of scissors and methodically began to destroy everything. I cut his face out of every photograph, leaving a jagged, empty space where he used to be. The wedding dress I wore for our first attempt, the one that cost a fortune, I shredded into ribbons.
I packed up all of his clothes, his books, his belongings, and had them sent to his office. I called a charity and told them to come take every piece of furniture he had ever picked out. I didn't want a single trace of him left in my life.
By dawn, the house was a hollow shell, echoing with the ghost of a love that had died. I showered, packed a bag with my essentials, and walked out the door without looking back.
I drove aimlessly for hours, the city lights blurring through my tear-streaked vision. I didn't need him. I didn't need anyone.
My car eventually ran low on gas, and I pulled into a gas station. Next to it was an outdoor supply store. A sign in the window advertised climbing gear and hiking equipment. A memory flickered-a trip to the mountains we had planned, one he had canceled at the last minute because Kiara was having a "panic attack."
"One day, Avery," he had promised. "We'll go."
I wasn't waiting for "one day" anymore.
I walked into the store and began filling a cart: a tent, a sleeping bag, a sturdy pair of hiking boots, a climbing harness. I was creating a new life for myself, one piece of equipment at a time.
As I was paying, my phone rang. It was Alexander. I ignored it. I was loading the gear into the back of my SUV when a car screeched to a halt beside me, blocking me in.
Alexander flung his door open, his face a mask of rage. "Where is she?" he roared.
"Where is who?" I asked calmly.
"Don't play dumb with me, Avery! Kiara is missing!" He stalked towards me, his eyes landing on the camping gear in my trunk. A dark, ugly suspicion twisted his features. "What is all this? Did you do something to her? Did you hurt her and now you're running away?"
He grabbed my chin, his fingers digging into my jaw, forcing me to look at him. "Listen to me, and listen carefully," he snarled, his voice a low, terrifying growl. "Kiara is more important than you can possibly imagine. If you've done anything to her, I swear to God, Avery, I will destroy you."