Olivia stood frozen in the garden, the echo of the slamming door reverberating in her bones. The warmth of the sun felt artificial, a cruel joke against the icy shock that had flooded her system. She stumbled back to the main house on autopilot, her mind a chaotic mess of past and present colliding.
Ethan. He was here. He was Harrison's son. The son who was a 'wanderer', the artist living in the guest house. Harrison's son. Her stepson-to-be. The thought was a dizzying, nauseating loop.
She didn't tell Harrison. How could she? "Hi, honey, by the way, your son is the one who deflowered me and then abandoned me after prom?" The very idea was ludicrous. And what would be the point? It was a decade ago. A lifetime. They were different people now. She was engaged to his father. The past had to stay in the past.
But the look on Ethan's face... it wasn't the cold, uncaring expression of someone who had simply gotten tired of a girl. It was pure, unadulterated shock, and something that looked a lot like pain. It didn't fit the narrative she had built for herself over ten long years.
That night, she lay in Harrison's arms in his ridiculously comfortable king-sized bed, staring at the ceiling. Harrison slept peacefully, one arm draped over her waist. She, on the other hand, was a prisoner of her own memories.
She was seventeen again, a shy, bookish girl who felt invisible. Then, Ethan Cole had transferred to her high school mid-semester. He was a painter, an outsider with an air of quiet confidence that drew people to him. He was beautiful in a way that felt unattainable. When he first spoke to her in the art room, commenting on the sketch she was working on, she'd been too stunned to form a coherent sentence.
Their love had been a slow burn, a secret world built for two. He was her first kiss, fumbling and perfect behind the gym bleachers. He was her first real boyfriend, walking her home, holding her hand as if she were made of glass. He was her first lover, on a blanket under the stars at a lookout point, his touch both reverent and passionate. He had whispered that he loved her, that she was his whole world. And she had believed him with every fiber of her being.
But their relationship, so pure and intense, had attracted envy. The popular girls, led by a venomous queen bee named Chloe, hated Olivia for capturing the attention of the most intriguing new guy in school. They started rumors, subtle at first, then bolder. They whispered that Ethan was only with her because she was easy, because he felt sorry for her. Olivia ignored it, trusting in Ethan's love.
Then came prom night. She remembered the excitement, the beautiful emerald dress she'd found at a thrift store and altered herself. She remembered meeting her friends for pre-prom pictures at Chloe's house, a place she'd only agreed to go to because they'd all insisted. She remembered taking a sip of punch, a sweet, fruity concoction.
After that, everything was a terrifying blank. A void.
The next thing she knew, she was waking up in a strange, sterile hotel room, alone. She was still in her dress, but it was rumpled. She felt a profound, bone-deep wrongness, a fog in her head, and a sickening lurch in her stomach. Panic had seized her. She didn't know where she was or how she'd gotten there. She'd fumbled for her phone, calling Ethan again and again. It went straight to voicemail. She called her friends, who acted surprised, telling her she'd just disappeared from prom with some guy they didn't know. They'd sounded almost gleeful.
Then the rumors started at school. Ethan had left. Transferred, they said, the Monday after prom. He was gone, without a word, without a goodbye. The whispers intensified. Chloe's voice was the loudest: "I told you. He got what he wanted and got tired of her. Used her and dumped her. So pathetic."
Her world had crumbled. The one person she trusted implicitly, the boy who had held her and promised her forever, had vanished after their first time. It had to be true. Why else would he leave? The betrayal was a physical wound, a searing pain in her chest that had taken years to scar over. She had promised herself then, with tears streaming down her face, that she would never let herself be that vulnerable again. She would never trust a man with her whole heart.
And she hadn't. Until Harrison. He was safe. He was stable. His love felt steady, unwavering, nothing like the wildfire she'd had with Ethan.
Now, the source of that wildfire was back, sleeping just a hundred yards away. And the look in his eyes... it wasn't the look of a man who had tired of her.
The next morning, Olivia was in the kitchen, mechanically making coffee, when she heard the front door open. Harrison's voice boomed through the house.
"Ethan! Good morning, son. There's someone I want you to officially meet."
Olivia's hand froze on the coffee pot. She heard the measured tread of footsteps on the marble floor. Turning, she saw them standing in the archway to the kitchen. Harrison, beaming with pride, his arm around the shoulders of a pale, tight-lipped Ethan.
"Olivia, honey," Harrison said, his voice full of warmth. "This is my son, Ethan. Ethan, this is Olivia. My fiancée."
Ethan's eyes met hers. The shock from yesterday was gone, replaced by a carefully constructed mask of polite indifference. But she could see the storm raging beneath the surface, a tempest of pain, confusion, and something else she couldn't name. He looked at her as if she were a stranger, a piece of his father's furniture.
He extended a hand. It was a formal, distant gesture. "It's nice to meet you... Olivia."
His fingers were cool as they briefly clasped hers. The touch, even that fleeting contact, sent a jolt of electricity through her, a visceral reminder of a connection she thought had been severed forever. She saw a flicker of that same shock in his eyes before he looked away.
"It's... nice to meet you too, Ethan," she managed to say, her voice remarkably steady despite the frantic drumming of her heart. "Your father has told me so much about you."
"Has he?" Ethan's gaze flickered to his father, then back to her, a ghost of a bitter smile playing on his lips. "I'm sure he has."
The silence that followed was thick enough to cut. Harrison, oblivious to the tension, clapped his hands together. "Well, this is wonderful! My two favorite people, finally in the same room. Ethan, why don't you stay for breakfast?"
"I can't," Ethan said, his eyes still fixed on Olivia with an unnerving intensity. "I have to get to the clinic. But... it was a memorable meeting." He gave her one last, long look, a look that seemed to sear itself into her soul, before turning and walking away.
Olivia stood there, gripping the handle of the coffee pot so tightly her knuckles were white. Ten years of silence had just been shattered, and the fallout had only just begun
The first week of living under the same roof as Ethan was a masterclass in torture. The house, once a symbol of her future happiness, felt like a minefield. Every creak of the floorboards, every distant sound from the direction of the guest house, made her heart lurch.
Ethan was a ghost, but a very tangible one. He'd materialize at odd hours. She'd be reading in the living room and hear the soft thud of the front door as he came to use the main house's mailroom. She'd be swimming laps in the pool before work and see the curtain in his guest house window twitch. He was avoiding her with the same fervor she was using to avoid him, but in a house this size, it was an impossible task.
Their first real, unavoidable collision happened on a Tuesday evening. Harrison was working late, and Olivia, craving a snack, padded into the kitchen in her yoga pants and a loose-fitting tank top, her hair piled into a messy bun. The kitchen was dark, save for the light from the open refrigerator. Standing in front of it, silhouetted against the glow, was Ethan.
He was in a similar state of undress: grey sweatpants slung low on his hips and a thin t-shirt that clung to the defined muscles of his back. He was holding a carton of orange juice, drinking straight from it. He froze when he heard her, the carton halfway to his lips.
For a long, breathless moment, neither of them moved. The only sound was the low hum of the refrigerator.
"Sorry," Olivia mumbled, her voice sounding strange to her own ears. "I didn't think anyone would be in here."
He slowly lowered the carton, his eyes traveling over her in the dim light. The look wasn't lecherous, but it was intense, a slow perusal that made her skin tingle. He finally met her gaze, his expression unreadable. "It's your kitchen now. You don't have to apologize for using it."
The words were neutral, but his tone was laced with an undercurrent of something she couldn't decipher. Resentment? Pain? Longing?
She moved into the kitchen, giving him a wide berth, and opened a cabinet, pretending to look for a snack she didn't actually want. The silence was suffocating.
"How can you do it?" His voice was quiet, cutting through the tension.
She turned, her hand still on the cabinet door. "Do what?"
He set the juice carton down on the counter with a deliberate thud. "Stand there. In this kitchen. With him. After everything."
A flare of her old anger, the anger she'd nurtured for a decade, ignited in her chest. "After everything? After you left without a word? After you made me feel like the biggest fool in the world?" She kept her voice low, but it shook with emotion. "You don't get to stand there and judge me, Ethan. You lost that right ten years ago."
He flinched as if she'd struck him. "You think I wanted to leave?"
"I don't know what to think!" she hissed, stepping closer, her own hurt propelling her forward. "One minute we're planning our future, and the next you're gone. No call. No letter. Nothing. Just... vanished. I had to hear from the rumor mill that you'd gotten what you wanted and got tired of me.' So, yes, Ethan. That's what I think."
He stared at her, his face a mask of raw anguish. "Tired of you? Olivia, I... God, you have no idea."
"Then tell me!" she demanded, her voice cracking. "Make me understand. Why did you leave?"
He opened his mouth, his eyes burning with an urgent need to speak. But then, just as quickly, the shutters came down. He looked away, his jaw tightening. He shook his head, a single, sharp movement. "It doesn't matter. Not now. Not anymore."
He turned and walked out of the kitchen, leaving her standing there, more confused and hurt than ever. His refusal to explain felt like a second betrayal. It reopened a wound she thought had healed.
The next few days were a tense, silent war. They communicated through Harrison; their conversations were stilted and artificial. Then came the family dinner.
Harrison, ever the optimist, decided they needed a 'family bonding' night. He ordered Italian food, opened a bottle of expensive wine, and corralled them both into the formal dining room. It was a disaster from the start.
The conversation was painfully forced. Harrison chatted about work, a new project his firm was bidding on. He asked Ethan about his art therapy. He asked Olivia about a challenging new building design. He was a conductor trying to lead an orchestra of two completely different songs.
At one point, he reached over and took Olivia's hand, lifting it to his lips and kissing it gently. "I'm so lucky," he said, his eyes full of love for her. "To have found you, Liv."
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Ethan's hand tighten on his wine glass until his knuckles were white. He stared at his plate, his jaw working. The air in the room grew thick.
After dinner, as Harrison cleared the plates, Olivia and Ethan were left alone at the table. The silence was deafening.
"He really loves you, you know," Ethan said, his voice barely a whisper. He wasn't looking at her, but at the spot on the table where his father's hand had been.
"I know," she replied, her own voice equally quiet. "And I care about him. Deeply."
Finally, he looked at her. His eyes were haunted. "Do you love him, Olivia? The way you loved me?"
The question was a knife, sliding between her ribs. It was a question she had asked herself a hundred times. Her relationship with Harrison was built on comfort, respect, and gratitude. It was a calm, safe harbor. What she had with Ethan had been a tempest, a fire that both warmed and burned. Could you call the calm harbor 'love' if you'd only sought it out to escape the storm?
Before she could formulate an answer, Harrison bustled back in, all smiles. "Who's up for dessert?"
The moment was shattered. But the question hung in the air between them, unanswered and devastating.
That night, Olivia lay in bed next to Harrison's sleeping form, staring at the ceiling. A tear slid from the corner of her eye, tracing a path into her hair. She was engaged to a wonderful man. But the ghost in the garden had a face, and a voice, and eyes that held a decade of unanswered questions. And the walls she had so carefully built were beginning to crumble.
The tension in the house became a living entity, a silent, suffocating presence that followed Olivia everywhere. She found herself retreating to her home office, a bright room she'd claimed at the back of the house, burying herself in blueprints and project proposals. It was the only place she felt she could breathe.
One afternoon, a week after the disastrous family dinner, she was struggling with a particularly difficult design for a community center. The client wanted something that felt both modern and welcoming, and she was hitting a wall. Frustrated, she shoved her keyboard away and rubbed her tired eyes. She needed a distraction.
Her gaze fell on the stack of boxes still piled in the corner of the room, the last of her things from her old apartment. With a sigh, she got up and decided to finally tackle them. It was better than staring at a blank screen.
She opened the first box, which was filled with books. As she lifted them out, her fingers brushed against a worn, leather-bound sketchbook. Her heart gave a little lurch. It was one of hers from high school, a relic she'd kept but never looked at. Curiosity getting the better of her, she opened it.
The pages were filled with her own clumsy attempts at drawing, but scattered between them were sketches Ethan had done for her. Quick, affectionate doodles in the margins of her notes. A detailed drawing of her hands, which he said were the most expressive he'd ever seen. And in the back, pressed between two pages, was a small, folded piece of paper.
With trembling hands, she unfolded it. It was a note, written in his messy, artistic scrawl.
'Olivia,
I was trying to study for the history final, but all I could think about was the way you looked today in the sunlight. Your hair looked like spun gold. I can't believe you're mine. Ten years from now, I want to be looking at you in the sunlight in our own home, with our own life. This isn't just high school. This is forever. I know it.
Yours always,
Ethan'
A sob escaped her lips. She pressed the note to her chest, the pain of the memory as fresh as if it were yesterday. 'This is forever.' The lie of it burned. She read it again, and a detail she'd never noticed before struck her. The date. It was the day before prom.
He had written this the day before he abandoned her. It didn't make sense. It made the betrayal even more incomprehensible. She was so lost in her grief and confusion that she didn't hear the soft knock on her doorframe.
"Olivia?"
She spun around, clutching the note. Ethan stood in the doorway, a hesitant look on his face. He held a small, paper-wrapped package in his hands.
"I'm sorry to bother you," he said, his voice gentle. "Harrison asked me to bring you this. He said you left your laptop bag in the car this morning."
He held out the package, his eyes taking in the open box, the sketchbook in her hand. She saw his gaze drop to the paper she was clutching against her chest. Recognition flickered in his eyes.
"Is that...?" he started, his voice trailing off.
Olivia, her defenses down, couldn't stop the flood of emotion. "You wrote me this," she whispered, holding up the note. "The day before prom. You said, 'This is forever.' And then you just... left."
He stared at the familiar piece of paper, his face paling. He took a slow step into the room, his eyes fixed on it. "I meant every word of it," he said, his voice thick.
"Then why?" she cried, the tears finally spilling over. "Why, Ethan? After ten years, you owe me that much."
He looked at her, truly looked at her, for the first time since that night in the garden. The mask was gone. All she saw was a raw, aching vulnerability. He took a deep, shuddering breath.
"Because I did see you that night, Olivia," he said, his voice cracking. "At prom. Chloe called me. She said you'd had too much to drink and were in trouble, that I needed to come get you from a hotel. She gave me the room number. I was so worried, I drove like a maniac. I got there, and the door was unlocked. I pushed it open, and... you were there. On the bed. With a man."
Olivia felt the blood drain from her face. The world tilted. The vague, terrifying blankness in her memory. The hotel room. A man.
"What?" The word was a breath, not a sound.
"I saw you, Liv. You were passed out, and he was... he was on top of you. I think I screamed. I charged at him, and we fought. He was out the window before I could even get my hands on him. I turned back to you, and you were just... lying there, unresponsive. I didn't know what to do. I was in shock. I was seventeen. I panicked. All I could think was that you had... that you had chosen to be with him. That I wasn't enough."
Olivia was shaking her head violently, her hands flying to her mouth. "No. No, Ethan. I didn't. I swear to you, I didn't. I was drugged. I don't remember anything. I woke up alone, confused, terrified. I tried to call you, but you didn't answer."
His face crumpled. "I changed my number. I couldn't bear to hear your voice. I got in my car, and I just drove. I wasn't watching the road. I was crying so hard. I ran a red light and got t-boned by a truck."
Olivia gasped, her hand flying to her chest. "Oh my God."
"I was in the hospital for weeks," he continued, the words pouring out of him now, a dam finally breaking. "Broken ribs, a collapsed lung, a shattered leg. When I woke up, my dad was there. My mom had flown in. I told them I wanted to leave the city, to attend college out of state, to never come back. I made them promise to send me away. I was so heartbroken and angry. I thought you had betrayed me. I thought the rumors were true."
He sank onto the arm of a chair, his head in his hands. Olivia stood frozen, the note still clutched in her hand, her mind reeling. The pieces were clicking into place, forming a picture so ugly and tragic it made her sick.
Chloe. The punch. The hotel. The man. The call to Ethan. It was a setup. A cruel, calculated plot to destroy them. And it had worked. Perfectly.
"Ethan," she whispered, moving towards him. She knelt in front of him, her hands reaching out to cover his. "I was drugged. I didn't know any man. I didn't do anything. I was a victim. And so were you."
He lifted his head, his eyes red-rimmed and full of a decade's worth of pain. "I know," he breathed. "I know that now. Seeing you here, with my dad, the way you looked at me in the garden... the Olivia I knew couldn't have done that. It's the only thing that's made me stop and think, really think, for the first time in ten years."
They stayed like that, kneeling on the floor of her office, their hands intertwined, the truth of their shared tragedy finally laid bare between them. The love they had buried, the anger they had nurtured, the grief they had carried alone-it all hung in the air, raw and potent. And in that moment of profound vulnerability, the old connection flared back to life, stronger and more dangerous than ever.