Haven Holden POV:
For the next two days, Ewing didn' t come home. It was his classic move-the silent treatment. He' d disappear, cutting off all contact, leaving me to stew in a pot of anxiety and self-doubt. In the past, the silence would have been unbearable. I would have called, texted, left tearful voicemails, convinced that I had done something terribly wrong. Eventually, I would break, apologizing for things that weren' t my fault, just to have him back. And he would return, magnanimous in his forgiveness, perhaps with a small, thoughtless gift, and I would be so grateful for the crumbs of his attention that I would forget the reason we fought in the first place.
My pain was once the leash he used to control me. But now, without love, the pain was gone. And so was his power.
I used his absence to pack. As I sorted through my belongings, I was struck by how little there was. My clothes, a few books, my drafting tools. The rest of the apartment-the furniture, the art on the walls, the mismatched coffee mugs-it was all his. I had moved into his life, his space, and in the process, I had erased myself. I hadn' t bought a new piece of furniture in seven years, hadn' t hung a single picture that he hadn' t approved of. I had stopped being a person and had become an accessory to his life.
The last day of the long weekend arrived. After dropping off my final box at a storage unit, I went to the office and formally submitted my resignation. My supervisor, a kind older woman named Maria, looked at me with concern.
"Are you sure about this, Haven?" she asked, her eyes scanning my face. "Is everything alright? Is it… is it because of the wedding?"
I blinked, confused. "What wedding?"
"Ewing' s," she said, looking surprised. "He applied for a transfer to the New York office a few weeks ago. He said he was getting married and needed to be closer to his fiancée' s family. The transfer was just approved."
The air left my lungs in a silent rush. New York. He was transferring to New York.
"He even put in for a spousal hire," Maria continued, oblivious to the turmoil inside me. "For his fiancée, Bree Campbell. It' s such a shame to lose you, dear. With your talent, you should have been leading projects, not just drafting for Ewing. You always held yourself back for him."
I stared at her, the pieces clicking together with a sickening finality. He had a plan. A whole future mapped out that didn' t include me, except as a backup. A safety net.
If Bree doesn' t work out, I' ll just marry Haven.
His words from the bar echoed in my mind, no longer a drunken boast but a cold, calculated strategy. He was going to give it one last shot with Bree, using the job in New York as a lure. And I was the consolation prize.
A bitter laugh escaped my lips. I didn' t bother correcting Maria' s misunderstanding. It didn' t matter anymore.
"I' m sure he' ll be very happy," I said, my voice hollow.
That evening, the entire department went out for a farewell dinner for another colleague who was leaving. I went, wanting one last normal night before my life imploded. I had a couple of glasses of wine, feeling the warm buzz loosen the knot of tension in my shoulders.
On my way back from the restroom, I passed a semi-private alcove. I heard Ewing' s voice and froze. He was there with his closest work friend, Mark.
"I just don' t get it, man," Mark was saying. "You had this New York transfer lined up, a golden opportunity. You said it was for Haven, to finally move back near her family."
"It was," Ewing admitted, his voice low. "But then… Bree wanted it. She said she' s always dreamed of working at the headquarters of Vanguard Innovations. Our firm partners with them all the time. She said if I could get her in, she' d… she' d consider us."
"Consider you?" Mark scoffed. "After all this time? And you just gave her the spot? What about Haven?"
"I' m going to give it one last shot with Bree," Ewing said, and the conviction in his voice was like a punch to the gut. "This is my chance. If she says yes, I' ll have everything I' ve ever wanted. And if she doesn' t… well, Haven will still be there. I' ll marry her. She' s a good woman. She' ll understand."
My nails dug into my palms, the sharp sting grounding me. He still thought I would be waiting. He still thought he held all the cards.
Just then, Bree appeared at the entrance to the alcove, a triumphant smirk on her face. She had clearly been listening.
"Did you hear that?" she whispered, her eyes glittering with malice. "He' s all mine. And you know what they say about Vanguard' s CEO, Kasen Coleman? He' s the most eligible bachelor in New York. Once I' m in the company, who knows what could happen."
She looked me up and down, a wave of pity and contempt washing over her features. "You see, Haven, some of us are winners, and some of us are… placeholders. But don' t worry. I won' t let him leave you with nothing. Once I' m settled, you can have him back."
Her victory felt so absolute, so complete, that she couldn't resist one final act of cruelty. As she turned to walk away, she stumbled, letting out a sharp cry and lurching towards me.
Her hand shot out, not to catch herself, but to shove me. Hard.
I stumbled backward, my head hitting the concrete wall with a sickening crack. Stars exploded behind my eyes, and a sharp, metallic taste filled my mouth.
Ewing rushed out of the alcove, his face a mask of alarm. He saw Bree, clutching her arm and wincing in fake pain, and then he saw me, leaning against the wall, a trickle of blood running from my hairline down my temple.
He didn't hesitate.
He pushed past me, his shoulder slamming into mine, and rushed to Bree' s side. "Are you okay? Did she hurt you?"
Bree looked up at him, her eyes wide and innocent. "She pushed me, Ewing. I was just trying to talk to her, and she went crazy."
His gaze snapped to me, and the concern in his eyes was replaced by pure, unadulterated fury. My head was pounding, the room was spinning, but the cold rage in his eyes cut through the haze.
Without a second thought, I swung my hand and slapped him across the face. The crack echoed in the narrow hallway. A smear of my blood now marked his cheek, a stark red against his pale skin.
"You' ve lost your mind," he spat, his voice trembling with rage. "You' re acting like a damn shrew, Haven."
He took a step back, pulling a whimpering Bree behind him as if protecting her from a wild animal.
"You know what? You were right. We are done," he said, his voice dripping with venom. "And this time, I mean it. Don' t expect me to come crawling back. I won' t be appeasing you anymore."
He turned, his arm protectively around Bree' s shoulders, and guided her back into the restaurant, the door swinging shut behind them with a definitive click.
I stood there for a long moment, the throbbing in my head a dull counterpoint to the hollow ache in my chest. It was a messy, ugly end to a seven-year lie.
But it was an end.
I turned and walked out of the restaurant, not looking back. The cool night air felt good on my face. My head hurt, and my heart felt bruised, but I knew, with a certainty that settled deep in my bones, that these wounds would heal.
I took a taxi straight to the airport and bought a one-way ticket to New York. As the plane took off, leaving the lights of Denver scattered like discarded jewels below, I didn' t feel sad. I felt a flicker of hope.
Ewing wouldn't look for me. He thought he had won. He had Bree, he had the job in New York. He had everything he wanted.
He had no idea what he had just lost.
Haven Holden POV:
A week after I returned to New York, my phone buzzed with a message from an unblocked number Ewing must have borrowed. "Hey, how are you holding up? Are you still crying?"
I had been so immersed in the whirlwind of my new-old life that I didn' t see his message until late that night. I was back in my family's sprawling Upper East Side penthouse, a place I had once run from, but which now felt like a sanctuary. My days were filled with meetings at Holden Properties, reacquainting myself with the empire I was born to inherit, and my evenings were spent with my parents, slowly mending the bridges I had burned for a man who wasn't worth the ashes.
His message, with its casual, condescending concern, felt like it was from another lifetime. Crying? I hadn't shed a single tear for him.
With a strange sense of calm, I typed a simple reply.
"I' m engaged."
His response was instantaneous.
"Don' t be ridiculous, Haven. Who would you be engaged to? You don' t know anyone in New York anymore."
Another message followed immediately.
"I get it. You' re trying to make me jealous. It' s a bold move, I' ll give you that. But it' s not going to work."
The speed of his replies was almost laughable. For years, I had waited hours, sometimes days, for a response from him. Now that I no longer cared, I had his undivided attention.
I remembered the countless nights I had feigned a headache or a bad day, just hoping for a scrap of his concern. He would offer a distracted pat on the back before turning back to his work or his phone. His indifference had been a constant, dull ache in my heart. It was a self-inflicted humiliation I was only now beginning to understand.
I had no desire to play his games anymore.
I didn' t reply. A moment later, my phone started ringing. Ewing' s borrowed number flashed on the screen.
I declined the call and blocked the number. Then, I sent him one last message from my own, now unblocked, number. A message I knew he wouldn' t be able to ignore.
"Goodbye, Ewing. My fiancé is waiting for me."
Then I blocked him for good.
It wasn't a lie. I was engaged.
My fiancé was Kasen Coleman. As in, the Coleman family, founders of Vanguard Innovations, the tech behemoth our family's real estate company had partnered with for decades. He was the brilliant, self-made CEO who had taken over the family business and quadrupled its value in five years.
He was the boy my parents had wanted me to marry all along.
Growing up, Kasen was the specter of perfection that haunted my childhood. He was the "son of our family friend" who always scored perfect grades, won national science fairs, and was accepted into every Ivy League university. While I was struggling with calculus, he was publishing papers on quantum computing. While I was going to college parties, he was interning at Google. After graduating from MIT with a double major in computer science and business, he didn't join the family company. Instead, he took over a small, failing subsidiary and, within two years, turned it into one of the most profitable branches of the corporation. Only then did he accept the CEO position, a move that silenced all critics and solidified his reputation as a prodigy.
We had run in the same circles our entire lives, but our paths rarely crossed. He was always quiet, intense, and focused. I found him intimidating. When my father called him to propose the marriage alliance after my return, I had been sure he would refuse. A man like Kasen Coleman didn't need an arranged marriage. He could have anyone he wanted.
To my astonishment, he agreed without hesitation.
Our engagement was a quiet affair, just our two families at a private dinner. He arrived with a simple, elegant bouquet of my favorite stargazerg lilies-a detail Ewing had never managed to remember. The engagement party was planned exactly to my taste, understated and intimate, a stark contrast to the lavish events our families usually favored.
When the time came, he didn't just present me with a ring. He got down on one knee, his dark, serious eyes holding mine. The diamond on the platinum band was flawless, but it was his words that took my breath away.
"Haven," he said, his voice a low, steady rumble. "I know this is an arrangement, but I promise you will have my utmost respect, my loyalty, and my protection. I will be a true partner to you, in every sense of the word."
He gave me everything Ewing had only ever promised. Sincerity. Respect.
I looked into his eyes and felt a sense of peace settle over me for the first time in years. I smiled, a real, genuine smile, and nodded. "Yes, Kasen. I will."
He slid the ring onto my finger, a perfect fit.
He was right. This was a partnership, a strategic alliance. There was no pretense of love, and that was a relief. Love had brought me nothing but pain. With Kasen, I wouldn't have to worry about him calling out another woman's name in his sleep. I wouldn't have to compete for his attention. This was a transaction, and the terms were clear. It was a safe, stable, and, frankly, brilliant move for both our families. It was the perfect ending.
After the whirlwind of the past week, I was exhausted. I lay on my bed, a cooling face mask on, scrolling through my phone. A video call request popped up. It was my best friend, Clara.
"So," she said, her grin wide. "Did he lose his mind? Is the crematorium officially open for business?"