Chapter 5

For a long time, neither of them spoke. The only sounds were their ragged breaths and the soft hum of Olivia's computer. They were anchored to each other by their joined hands, two survivors of a shipwreck finally finding each other on a desolate shore.

Olivia was the first to break the silence. "Who was he? The man in the room?"

Ethan shook his head, his thumb unconsciously stroking the back of her hand, a gesture so familiar it made her heart ache. "I don't know. I never saw his face clearly. He was just a shadow, a monster. After the accident, everything was a blur of hospitals and recovery. By the time I was well enough to think straight, I just wanted to forget. I convinced myself you were part of a past I needed to bury."

"Chloe," Olivia whispered, the name tasting like poison. "It had to be her. She was always so jealous. She must have paid someone, set the whole thing up."

"It doesn't matter who it was," Ethan said, his voice hard. "The damage was done. To you. To us." He finally looked down at their hands, as if just realizing they were touching. He didn't let go. "I'm so sorry, Olivia. For not staying. For not trying to find you, to ask you. For believing the worst."

"And I'm sorry for believing you just got tired of me," she confessed, a fresh tear sliding down her cheek. "I should have known. I should have trusted you."

"How could you?" he said softly. "I was gone. The evidence was all there. It's what they wanted."

The truth, now that it was out, was a living thing between them. It had a weight, a gravity, that was both liberating and terrifying. It explained the past, but it did nothing to simplify the present. If anything, it made it infinitely more complicated.

"What do we do now?" Olivia asked, the question a whisper of fear.

Ethan looked towards the door, as if he could see through the walls to his father in his study. "I don't know," he admitted. "He's my father. He loves you. And you're engaged to him."

The word 'engaged' landed between them like a grenade. Olivia pulled her hands back, the reality of her situation crashing down on her. She was wearing Harrison's ring. She had promised herself to him. He was a good man, a kind man, who had given her a sense of safety she'd craved for a decade.

"I can't hurt him, Ethan," she said, her voice firming even as her heart broke. "He doesn't deserve this. He's been nothing but wonderful to me."

Ethan's expression tightened. "And what about us? What about what we lost? What about the fact that we were victims of a horrible crime, and it tore us apart? Doesn't that deserve something?"

"Deserve what?" she cried, standing up and pacing the room. "A happy ending? We're not in a movie, Ethan. This is real life. In real life, you don't get to fall back in love with your fiancé's son. It's not just wrong, it's... It's devastating. It would destroy him."

Ethan stood up as well, his tall frame filling the space. "And what about destroying us... again?"

The raw plea in his voice cut her to the quick. She looked at him, this man she had loved with her entire being, the man she now knew had loved her just as fiercely, and had suffered just as much. The pull towards him was a physical force, a magnetic attraction that defied all logic and morality.

"Ethan," she said, her voice pleading. "Please. Don't."

He took a step towards her, closing the distance between them. He was so close she could feel the heat radiating from his body; smell the familiar, clean scent of him that had haunted her dreams for years.

"I never stopped," he said, his voice a low, desperate whisper. "Not for one single day. I filled sketchbooks with your face. I compared every woman I met to you, and they all fell short. I came back here to finally move on, to start fresh. And then I saw you in my garden, and my whole world collapsed again. Because you're still it for me, Olivia. You're still the only one my heart beats for ."

His hand came up, his fingers trembling as they brushed a stray strand of hair from her face. The touch was like a brand, searing her skin. Every nerve in her body was screaming for her to lean into him, to close the final inch between them and feel his lips on hers again.

"Please," she breathed, but she didn't know if she was begging him to stop or to continue.

He leaned in, his forehead resting against hers. Their eyes were locked, his whiskey-colored depths swirling with a decade of longing, hers a storm of green conflict and desire. They stood there, teetering on the precipice, the ghost of their past and the impossibility of their present swirling around them.

Then, a sound shattered the moment. The distant, cheerful ring of Harrison's ringtone from the study downstairs. It was a jarring, mundane intrusion of reality.

They sprang apart as if shocked. Olivia stumbled back, her hand flying to her lips, which still tingled from his nearness. Ethan ran a hand through his hair, his chest heaving.

"I'm sorry," he muttered, not meeting her eyes. "I shouldn't have... I'm sorry."

He turned and left the room, his footsteps quick and decisive on the stairs. Olivia sank back onto the chair, her legs unable to support her. She had just been given the answer to a question that had plagued her for ten years. But it was an answer that opened a door to a future she couldn't possibly walk through. The truth had set them free from the past, but it had also imprisoned them in an impossible present.

Chapter 6

The days that followed the revelation in her office were a masterclass in duplicity. Olivia felt like she was living a double life. In front of Harrison, she played the part of the devoted fiancée, laughing at his jokes, discussing wedding venues, and letting him hold her hand. But her mind was a constant, torturous loop of memories and what-ifs, all centered on Ethan.

She became hyper-aware of his presence. She'd listen for the sound of his car, the soft closing of the guest house door. She found herself glancing towards the garden path every time she passed a window. It was an obsession, and she hated herself for it.

Ethan, for his part, became a ghost again, but a more tortured one. The brief, raw connection they'd shared had terrified him as much as it had her. He retreated completely, avoiding the main house, leaving for work before she woke up and returning long after she and Harrison had retired for the night.

But the tension was palpable, a low-frequency hum that vibrated just beneath the surface of their lives. Harrison, usually so perceptive in business, seemed blissfully unaware in his own home, attributing the odd silences to Ethan's naturally brooding artist personality and Olivia's pre-wedding jitters.

The cracks began to show in small ways.

One evening, Harrison was showing Olivia a collection of family photo albums. They were cozy on the couch, a bottle of wine open on the coffee table. He flipped through pages of Ethan as a baby, a toddler, a gap-toothed little boy. Each picture was a knife twist for Olivia. She saw the man she was falling for in the child's smile.

"And this," Harrison said, pointing to a photo of a lanky teenager with a rebellious glint in his eye, "is Ethan at sixteen, right before we moved. God, he was a handful. Always off sketching somewhere, lost in his own world."

Olivia's heart clenched. She knew that look. She'd been the recipient of it. She traced the outline of his teenage face with her fingertip.

"He was beautiful," she murmured, before she could stop herself.

Harrison chuckled, pulling her closer. "He was, wasn't he? Took after his mother. Still, I'm glad he's finally settling down. Maybe your presence here is good for him. A woman's touch." He kissed her temple. "Speaking of which, my mother is flying in next weekend. She'

wants to meet you. She's very excited."

Olivia's blood ran cold. Meeting Harrison's mother. The final step before the wedding. It should have felt like a milestone, a joyful event. Instead, it felt like another brick being laid in a wall that was closing in around her.

"That's... that's great," she managed, her voice a little too high.

Harrison didn't notice. He was already scrolling through his phone, showing her pictures of his mother's house in Connecticut. Olivia nodded along, but her mind was elsewhere. It was in the guest house, with the man who had just texted her for the first time since their almost-kiss.

Her phone buzzed silently in her pocket. She ignored it. It buzzed again. And again.

"Excuse me," she said, standing abruptly. "I just need to use the bathroom."

She walked calmly to the powder room off the hallway, closed the door, and leaned against it, her heart pounding. She pulled out her phone.

Ethan: I can't do this.

Ethan: The pretending. The avoidance. It's killing me.

Ethan: I need to see you. Alone. Just to talk. Please.

Olivia stared at the messages, her thumb hovering over the keyboard. Every rational cell in her brain screamed at her to delete them, to block his number, to run as far and as fast as she could. But her heart, that stupid, stubborn organ that had never stopped loving him, overruled them all.

Olivia: Where?

Ethan: The gazebo. By the old oak tree at the back of the property. Tomorrow morning. 6 am. Before he wakes up.

The old oak tree. It was a spot on the far edge of Harrison's sprawling property, a place she'd discovered on her walks. A small, rustic gazebo stood there, overlooking a dry creek bed. It was secluded, private. Dangerous.

Olivia: Okay.

She slipped the phone back into her pocket and washed her hands, staring at her reflection in the mirror. Her eyes were wide, her cheeks flushed. She looked like a woman on the edge of something monumental. She looked like a woman about to betray the man who loved her.

She walked back to the living room and snuggled back into Harrison's arms, accepting a kiss on the forehead, and feeling like the world's biggest fraud.

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