Chapter 6

Ada Mcfadden POV:

The name hung in the humid Bali air, a fragile truth finally given voice. "Julian," I repeated, my gaze unwavering, meeting Clayton's raw, shattered eyes. "I did it all for Julian."

Clayton stared at me, his face draining of color, disbelief warring with a dawning, terrible understanding. "Julian?" he rasped, the name a foreign sound on his lips. "You... you married me for Julian?"

His voice was hoarse, a strangled whisper. "You endured five years of... this... for my dead brother?" He gestured vaguely between us, then at the chaotic market. His mind, so brilliant at deciphering complex algorithms and market trends, seemed incapable of grasping this simple, devastating truth.

"To fulfill his last wish," I clarified softly, the words a balm to my long-suffering soul. "To scatter his ashes on Mars."

His head snapped back as if struck. "Mars? That's what this was all about? A space memorial? You married me because of some bizarre NASA protocol for him?"

His chest heaved, a storm brewing in his eyes. "You played the devoted wife, the lovesick fool, you tolerated Gisele, you picked up her pills-all for Julian? You used me, Ada? You actually used me?"

The accusation, though true, felt hollow. He had used me, too. We had been two transactional entities, each fulfilling a need for the other, unaware of the vastly different currencies we traded in.

"We both got what we wanted, Clayton," I replied, my voice steady. "You got a compliant wife who didn't interfere with your lifestyle. I got access to Julian's dream."

Gisele, who had been listening with a mixture of confusion and growing alarm, finally interjected, her voice shrill. "Clayton? What is she talking about? Who is Julian? What's going on?" She reached for his arm, her eyes darting between us. "You look... sick."

Clayton didn't respond to Gisele. His eyes were still fixed on me, a maelstrom of emotions swirling within them: anger, betrayal, and a raw, agonizing pain that seemed to rip through him.

Then, with a sudden, violent movement, he shoved Gisele's hand away. "Get away from me, Gisele," he snarled, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "Just... leave."

Gisele recoiled, her face contorted in shock. "What? Clayton! What are you saying? You just promised to marry me! We're engaged!"

"No," he said, his eyes still on me, still burning. "We're not. It's over, Gisele. Go."

"Over?" Gisele shrieked, her voice echoing through the market. "You can't do this! Not after everything! Not after five years of being your public girlfriend! You'll regret this, Clayton! I'll ruin you!"

He finally tore his gaze from me, turning to Gisele, but his eyes were cold, devoid of any warmth or concern. "Do what you want, Gisele," he said, his voice flat, emotionless. "Say what you want. I don't care anymore."

He reached into his pocket, pulled out his wallet, and extracted a thick wad of cash. He threw it at her feet. "Here. For your troubles. Now go."

Gisele stared at the money, then at him, her face a mask of disbelief. "You're... you're breaking up with me? For her?" She pointed a trembling finger at me. "After she just admitted she used you?"

Clayton ignored her entirely. He took a hesitant step towards me, his eyes now filled with a desperate plea. "Ada," he whispered, his voice raw with pain. "I... I made a mistake. A terrible mistake."

He reached for my hand, his fingers trembling as they brushed mine. "I understand now. I understand why you did it. But please, Ada. Don't leave. Don't leave me now. We can fix this. We can start over. A real marriage. I swear, I'll be different. I'll be the husband you deserve. I'll be... Julian for you, if that's what you need."

His words, intended to be a heartfelt confession, were a perverse insult. To be Julian for me? Julian was gone. He could never be Julian. And I didn't want him to be. I wanted him to be nothing.

I pulled my hand away, my gaze firm. "No, Clayton. There is nothing to fix. And I don't want you to be Julian. Julian is dead."

His eyes widened, his face crumpling in pain. "Ada, please! Don't do this! I love you! I know it now! I love you!" He tried to grab my arm, but I sidestepped him.

My hand snapped out, a sharp, stinging slap echoing through the market. My palm burned. His head jerked to the side, a crimson mark blooming on his cheek.

He stood frozen, his eyes wide with shock, his hand slowly rising to touch the red imprint on his face. He looked utterly bewildered, as if he couldn't comprehend what had just happened.

Gisele, who had been momentarily stunned, suddenly shrieked. "You bitch! How dare you hit him!" She launched herself at Clayton, clawing at his chest, her nails raking through his expensive shirt. "You changed him! You made him like this!"

Clayton barely flinched, his eyes never leaving mine. He seized Gisele's wrists, his voice a low, urgent plea. "Ada, please! Don't go! I need you! I love you more than anything!" He looked at me, a desperate, raw plea in his eyes, even as Gisele continued to struggle against his grip.

"Gisele, stop," he said, his voice strained. "It's not her fault. It's mine. All mine." He pushed Gisele away, not roughly, but with a finality that brooked no argument. "I never loved you, Gisele. I used you. Just like I let Ada use me. It was all a game for me. But it's not a game anymore."

He reached into his wallet again, pulling out a credit card. "Take this, Gisele. Go wherever you want. Buy whatever you want. It's yours. Just leave us alone."

Gisele stared at the card, then at Clayton's tormented face. Her fury slowly dissolved into a mixture of disbelief and a chilling understanding. She snatched the card, her eyes still narrowed, but her voice was surprisingly calm. "You'll regret this, Clayton," she vowed, her words a chilling prophecy. Then she turned and walked away, her heels clicking rapidly, her head held high.

Clayton watched her go, then turned back to me, his eyes pleading, desperate. "See, Ada? She's gone. It's just us now. I'll do anything. Anything you want. Just tell me what to do. I'll change. I promise."

I looked at him, at the desperation in his eyes, the bruised mark on his cheek. He was vulnerable, broken. And yet, I felt nothing. No pity, no desire to comfort him. He was a stranger.

"I don't love you, Clayton," I said, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. "I never did. And I never will. We are over. There is no 'us.' There never was."

Chapter 7

Ada Mcfadden POV:

"We are over. There is no 'us.' There never was." My words, sharp and final, hung in the air. I turned and walked away, leaving Clayton standing amidst the bustling Bali market, his face a mask of shattered disbelief.

"Ada! Wait!" His voice was ragged, desperate, a sound I had never heard from him before. He stumbled after me, pushing through startled shoppers. "Please, Ada! Don't go! Don't leave me!"

He reached me, grasping my arm. "I'll be Julian for you, Ada! I can be him! We're identical! I can give you everything he would have!" His voice was choked with a raw, ugly desperation.

A pang of something akin to pity, cold and distant, pierced through me. He was truly lost, grasping at straws, offering to become a ghost. But Julian wasn't a role to be played, a set of shoes to be filled. He was a soul, unique and irreplaceable. And I didn't need a replacement. I needed to honor the one I had lost.

"I don't need a replacement, Clayton," I said, my voice firm, devoid of warmth. I pulled my arm from his grasp. "Julian was Julian. You are not him. And I am not yours."

He staggered back, his eyes unfocused, as if the ground beneath him had given way. "No! Ada, please! I'm sorry! I'm so, so sorry for everything! I was a fool! An arrogant, blind fool! Just give me a chance! One chance to make it right!"

His apologies were lost on me. I had stopped expecting them years ago, had built an impenetrable wall around my heart to survive his indifference. Now, that wall remained, solid and unyielding.

"There's nothing to make right, Clayton," I replied, my voice calm, almost detached. "What happened between us was a transaction. It served its purpose. It's done."

He stared at me, his eyes welling up with tears. "A transaction? Is that all I was to you? Just... a means to an end?"

"Yes," I confirmed, brutally honest. "Just like I was to you."

The word hit him like a physical blow. He reeled back, his hand flying to his chest, as if trying to staunch a wound. "No," he whispered, shaking his head. "No, Ada. You're wrong. I... I wasn't just using you. Not entirely. Not like that. I just... I didn't realize... I didn't see it until now."

"It doesn't matter, Clayton," I said, my voice flat. "Your realization changes nothing for me. You are a stranger to me. You always have been."

His face crumpled, a low moan escaping his lips. He looked utterly broken, a man stripped bare of his arrogance and power. He lunged forward again, trying to grasp my hands, to pull me back into his orbit.

"Ada, please! Don't say that! Don't!"

But I moved past him, my steps resolute. I had endured too much, sacrificed too much, to falter now.

"I love you, Clayton!" he cried out, his voice echoing through the market, drawing curious glances from passersby. "I love you!"

Suddenly, a piercing shriek cut through the air. "Clayton! You bastard! If you leave me, I'll jump!" It was Gisele, standing precariously on a rickety balcony railing overlooking the market square, her face streaked with tears, her eyes wild.

Clayton froze, his head snapping towards the sound. For a split second, I expected him to rush to her, to placate her, to fall back into his old patterns. But he didn't. His eyes, though momentarily diverted, remained cold, devoid of concern. He barely spared her a glance before his gaze snapped back to me, desperate, pleading.

"Ada, please! Don't listen to her! She means nothing to me! You're everything!" He tried to follow me, his eyes locked on my retreating back.

"Clayton! I'm serious! I'll do it! I'll end it all!" Gisele shrieked again, her voice thick with desperation.

He stopped, his shoulders slumping. He slowly turned towards her, his face a mask of cold resignation. There was no anger, no panic, no concern in his eyes. Only a profound, chilling indifference.

"Gisele," he said, his voice calm, eerily devoid of emotion. "I don't love you. I never did. And I don't care what you do."

His words, brutal in their honesty, ripped through the air. I remembered how he had always treated relationships as transactions, as games to be won, as means to an end. His lack of genuine empathy, his casual cruelty, was not new. It was merely directed at someone else now.

Gisele stared at him, her mouth agape. The realization of his utter indifference seemed to hit her with the force of a physical blow. Her face, contorted in fury and self-pity, slowly crumpled into despair. She knew, then, that she had truly lost him. Not to me, but to his own cold, calculating heart.

She stepped down from the railing, her shoulders shaking, her head bowed. A moment later, I saw her being led away by a concerned market vendor, her sobs echoing faintly. She had her credit card, her compensation. She would be fine. She would land on her feet, as she always did.

Clayton's gaze, devoid of Gisele, devoid of everything but me, turned back to my retreating figure. His eyes were wide with a raw, naked despair, his lips parted in a silent, desperate plea. He was still there, a lone, broken figure in the vibrant chaos of Bali, watching me walk away.

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