Shattered Symphony: His Regret Came Too Late Novel Cover

Shattered Symphony: His Regret Came Too Late

8.6 / 10.0
Following a fatal betrayal in a frozen river, a violin prodigy regresses three years alongside her husband, Julian. When a catastrophic earthquake strikes, Julian chooses his childhood friend over her again, resulting in a marble pillar crushing her hands. As her musical future vanishes, Julian misinterprets her demand for divorce as a petty tantrum. While he pressures her to surrender her violin to his friend, she silently orchestrates her departure, leaving him to face a future of late regret.

Shattered Symphony: His Regret Came Too Late Chapter 1

Chapter 1

The freezing water of the river was still choking my lungs.

I gasped, my hands flying to my throat, expecting to feel the icy current dragging me down into the abyss. Instead, my fingers brushed against warm, dry skin and the heavy silk of a designer gown. The suffocating darkness of my watery grave was gone, replaced by the blinding, opulent glow of a thousand crystal lights.

"Julian, the flashing cameras are giving me such a terrible headache," a high, delicate voice whined to my left. "Can we please go to the VIP lounge? I feel like I can't breathe out here."

I blinked against the sudden onslaught of light and noise. The smell of expensive champagne, roasted truffles, and vanilla perfume hit my senses like a physical blow. I was standing in the center of the St. Regis grand ballroom.

*Three years ago.*

My breath caught in my throat. I stared down at my hands—my perfect, unblemished hands. The hands of a violin prodigy, insured for millions. They weren't blue with frostbite. They weren't sinking into the murky depths of the Thames.

"Are you deaf, Clara?"

The harsh, commanding voice snapped my attention upward. Julian Thorne stood mere inches from me, his jaw clenched in that familiar, arrogant line. He looked exactly as he had on the night of the catastrophic charity gala: devastatingly handsome in his bespoke tuxedo, his dark eyes radiating a possessive intensity. But that intensity wasn't directed at me, his wife of two years. It was focused entirely on the woman clinging to his arm like a fragile vine.

Chloe Mercer.

"Chloe asked you a question," Julian demanded, his tone dripping with hypocritical impatience. "Stop hovering there like a statue and go get her a glass of water. Can't you see the crowd is overwhelming her?"

Chloe pressed her face against Julian's shoulder, her doe eyes peeking out at me with a manipulative, practiced innocence. "It's okay, Julian," she murmured, her voice laced with a parasitic sweetness. "Clara is the star tonight. I shouldn't have even come. I'm just ruining your evening."

"Don't say that," Julian said softly, his hand coming up to stroke Chloe's hair. "You belong here just as much as anyone."

I stared at them, the phantom chill of the river water still freezing my veins. I remembered this night. This was the night of the gala earthquake. This was the night the first crack in my marriage had violently shattered my reality. And miraculously, impossibly, I had woken up right before it happened.

"Clara!" Julian barked. "The water!"

Before I could open my mouth to respond, a low, unnatural rumble vibrated through the soles of my heels.

The champagne flutes on the nearest table began to rattle. A woman near the stage let out a confused laugh, thinking it was part of the evening's entertainment. But then the floor heaved.

It wasn't a gentle roll. It was a violent, jarring snap that threw half the ballroom to the floor.

"Earthquake!" someone screamed.

Panic erupted. The elegant string quartet's music was drowned out by the sound of shattering glass and terrified shrieks. The grand ballroom transformed into a chaotic stampede of silk and tuxedos.

"Julian!" Chloe shrieked, burying her face into his chest. "Julian, I'm scared!"

"I've got you! I've got you, Chloe!" Julian yelled over the din, wrapping his arms fiercely around her waist.

The floor violently jerked again. I lost my footing, thrown backward against one of the massive marble pillars supporting the balcony. My heel caught in the hem of my dress, and I fell hard, my knee twisting painfully.

Above me, a sickening *crack* echoed through the air.

I looked up. A jagged fissure was tearing through the marble pillar right above my head. Dust and chunks of plaster began to rain down on my shoulders. If the pillar gave way, the entire balcony would collapse on top of me.

"Julian!" I screamed, my voice tearing through my throat. I reached out toward him. He was only ten feet away, shielding Chloe near the open terrace doors. "Julian, help me! My leg is caught! The pillar is cracking!"

Julian turned his head. His dark eyes met mine through the haze of falling dust. For a fraction of a second, I saw his gaze drop to my tangled leg, then up to the fracturing marble above me.

"Julian, please!" I begged, struggling frantically to rip the heavy silk of my gown away from my trapped heel. "I can't move!"

Chloe let out a breathless, theatrical sob. "Julian, my chest... I can't breathe. I'm having a panic attack!"

Julian's expression hardened into a mask of righteous fury. He glared at me as if I were a nuisance interrupting a business meeting. "Chloe is having a panic attack, Clara! Stop being selfish for once in your life!"

My heart stopped.

*Stop being selfish.*

"I'll send security in for you!" Julian yelled, not looking back at me again. He scooped Chloe up into his arms, holding her tightly against his chest, and ran out the terrace doors, disappearing into the safety of the gardens.

He left me.

The realization hit me with the force of a physical blow, colder than the river had been. He left me to die.

A deafening groan tore through the ceiling. The massive, two-ton crystal chandelier suspended above the center of the room ripped free from its moorings.

Time seemed to slow down. I wrenched my leg free from the fabric, scrambling backward with every ounce of graceful instinct I possessed. But I wasn't fast enough.

The chandelier slammed into the floor with the force of a bomb.

Shards of crystal and twisted metal exploded outward. A heavy, gilded iron support beam snapped off the main structure and hurtled directly toward my face.

Acting on pure instinct, I threw my left arm up to protect my head.

The iron bar smashed into my hand, pinning it violently against the shattered marble floor.

A scream of pure, unadulterated agony ripped from my lungs, but I couldn't even hear it over the roaring in my ears. The pain was blinding, white-hot, and absolute. It felt as though my hand had been tossed into a woodchipper. Blood instantly pooled beneath my fingers, soaking into the pristine white silk of my gown.

The earthquake subsided, leaving behind a terrifying, ringing silence broken only by the whimpers of the injured.

I lay on my side, gasping for air, the metallic taste of blood in my mouth. My left hand was trapped beneath the heavy iron, completely numb yet radiating a sickening, throbbing heat.

Through the ringing in my ears, a voice drifted in from the open terrace doors.

It was Julian.

He was standing just outside in the garden, his back to the ruined ballroom. He was holding Chloe's face in his hands.

"It's okay," Julian was murmuring, his voice raw, shaking with a desperate terror I had never heard from him before. "I've got you. I've got you."

"Julian, it was so awful," Chloe sobbed, clinging to his lapels. "I thought we were going to die."

"Shh," Julian whispered, kissing her forehead. His next words were so quiet, so choked with emotion, that I almost didn't catch them. "I'm right here. I won't let you drown this time. I swear to God, Chloe, I won't lose you to the water again."

The blood in my veins turned to ice.

*I won't let you drown this time.*

*I won't lose you to the water again.*

He knew.

He remembered the river. He remembered the accident three years in the future, where our car had plunged off the bridge into the freezing Thames. He remembered how he had unbuckled Chloe and dragged her to the surface, leaving me trapped in the backseat as the water filled my lungs.

Julian Thorne had regressed, just like I had.

He had been given a second chance, a miraculous reset of the universe. And with the full knowledge of my agonizing, watery death in his mind, he had looked at me trapped beneath a cracking pillar... and he had chosen to abandon me all over again.

A dark, hysterical laugh bubbled up in my throat, mixing with a cough of dust and blood. The internal wound I had carried for years—the desperate need to be perfect, to be worthy of his love—snapped like a fragile violin string.

It was gone. The love was gone. The devotion was gone.

Darkness edged into my vision, pulling me into unconsciousness as paramedics finally burst through the ballroom doors.

***

The pungent smell of antiseptic and bleach woke me.

I opened my eyes to the harsh fluorescent lights of a hospital room. The steady, rhythmic beeping of a heart monitor filled the silence.

I didn't panic. I didn't cry. My mind felt strangely detached, wrapped in a calculating, stoic calm. I slowly turned my head.

My left arm was elevated on a stack of pillows, wrapped from the elbow down in thick, heavy layers of white gauze. It felt like a block of lead. I couldn't move my fingers. I couldn't even feel them.

The door clicked open, and an older man in a white coat walked in. His nametag read *Dr. Aris, Chief of Orthopedic Surgery*. He held a tablet in his hands, and the expression on his face was one I recognized from funerals.

"Miss Vance," Dr. Aris said softly, using my maiden name, perhaps recognizing me from the concert posters plastered across the city. He pulled up a chair and sat beside the bed. "You're awake. How is your pain?"

"I don't feel anything," I replied, my voice steady, though it sounded like it belonged to a stranger. "My hand is completely numb."

Dr. Aris swallowed hard, looking down at his tablet before meeting my eyes again. The profound pity in his gaze made my stomach clench.

"Clara," he began, his voice dropping to a gentle, devastating murmur. "The iron beam that struck your hand caused catastrophic crush trauma. We spent six hours in surgery trying to repair the damage."

"And?" I asked, my tone graceful and even, betraying none of the terror freezing my heart.

"The bones were shattered, but we stabilized them with pins," Dr. Aris explained, his eyes filled with sorrow. "However... the lacerations were deep. The extensor and flexor tendons in your fingers, as well as the primary motor nerves, were completely severed."

Silence stretched between us, heavy and absolute.

I stared at the thick white bandages. "What are you telling me, Doctor?"

Dr. Aris looked at my mangled hand with profound pity. "Miss Vance, your tendons are severed beyond full functional repair. You will have basic mobility eventually, but the fine motor control is gone forever. I am so deeply sorry." He paused, his voice cracking slightly. "You will never hold a violin bow again."

Continue Reading

Shattered Symphony: His Regret Came Too Late of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
all

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