Chapter 2

I stared at the calendar notification on my phone, a small cake icon marking today's date. My thirtieth birthday. I'd dropped hints for weeks—leaving magazine pages open to jewelry I liked, mentioning my favorite restaurant had a special tasting menu this month. Yet Danny had kissed me goodbye this morning without a single acknowledgment.

Maybe he was planning a surprise.

That hope lasted until he called at lunch, excitement bubbling in his voice. "Hadley, I need your help with something important."

"Of course," I said, heart lifting. Maybe he needed advice on my gift?

"I'm at Tiffany's. I want to get something really special for Rosalie's birthday next week, but I'm torn between two necklaces."

My stomach dropped. "Tiffany's?"

"Yeah, I'm thinking the platinum pendant with the sapphire—matches her eyes, you know?—but there's also this white gold chain with a diamond that's just... it's so her."

I closed my eyes, phone pressed against my ear as coworkers sang "Happy Birthday" to someone in the next cubicle. "Danny, do you know what today is?"

"Thursday? Wait, is there a meeting I forgot?"

"It's my birthday," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.

The silence lasted three full seconds.

"Shit," he finally muttered. "I knew that. I just... I've been so busy planning Rosalie's surprise party that I—"

"You're planning her a surprise party?"

"Good friends deserve the best, Hadley. She's been going through a lot with that promotion stress."

I swallowed hard. "And what do girlfriends deserve?"

"Don't be like that," he snapped. "Why are you always so jealous and petty about Rosalie? She's important to me, and you should be more supportive."

Something cold settled in my chest. "You know what? Get the sapphire. It does match her eyes."

I hung up before he could hear me cry.

* * *

Two weeks later, I sat alone at a round table draped in white linen, watching my boyfriend slow dance with my best friend at Marcus Chen's wedding reception. Danny's hand rested on the small of Rosalie's back, lower than was appropriate. Her red dress caught the light as they turned, her head tilted up toward him, laughing at something he'd said.

"Champagne?" A server paused beside me.

"Please," I said, taking two glasses. I downed the first in one long swallow.

Across the dance floor, Mrs. Chen—Marcus's mother—was watching me with undisguised pity. I forced a smile and raised my second glass in her direction, pretending this was exactly where I wanted to be: alone, while the man who supposedly loved me danced with someone else for the fourth song in a row.

As if sensing my gaze, Rosalie glanced over Danny's shoulder, meeting my eyes. A smile spread across her face—not friendly, but triumphant—as she deliberately rested her head against Danny's chest. His arms tightened around her.

"They make a cute couple," someone murmured at the next table, not realizing I could hear.

"Isn't he with the blonde girl, though?" another voice whispered back.

"Could've fooled me."

I stared into my empty glass, wishing I could disappear.

When the bouquet toss was announced, I stayed seated. Rosalie joined the cluster of single women, standing front and center. The bride turned, tossed, and somehow—despite at least five other women being closer—the flowers landed directly in Rosalie's outstretched hands.

She squealed in delight, clutching the bouquet to her chest before running straight to Danny. He grinned as she threw her arms around his neck, planting a kiss on his cheek while he spun her in a circle. Neither of them looked in my direction.

"You okay?" Marcus appeared beside me, concern etched on his face.

"Fine," I lied. "Beautiful wedding."

"Thanks." He hesitated. "Hadley, as your friend—"

"I'm going to get some air," I interrupted, unable to bear his sympathy.

I was halfway to the terrace when I saw them slip out a side door together—Danny and Rosalie, her hand in his, heading toward the garden. "Just going for a quick smoke break," Danny called over his shoulder to no one in particular.

Neither of them smoked.

I returned to our table and sat there, smiling emptily at passing guests, checking my watch every few minutes. Fifteen minutes passed. Then thirty. Then forty-five.

When they finally returned, Rosalie's carefully applied lipstick was smudged at one corner. Danny's shirt, pristinely tucked in during the ceremony, now had a wrinkle at the waist. They were laughing about something, stopping abruptly when they saw me.

"There you are!" Rosalie said brightly. "We were looking everywhere."

I stood up, my legs unsteady. "Excuse me," I managed. "Bathroom."

I barely made it into a stall before the tears came, hot and humiliating. I pressed my hand against my mouth to muffle the sound, shoulders shaking with the effort of silent crying.

The bathroom door opened, and I froze, holding my breath.

"Hadley?" It was Elena, Marcus's new wife. "Are you in here?"

I couldn't answer, but my silence was answer enough.

"Oh, honey." Her voice was gentle. "I saw what happened. I'm so sorry."

"I'm fine," I choked out, the lie obvious even to my own ears.

"No, you're not," she said firmly. "And you shouldn't be. You deserve someone who treats you like a priority, not an afterthought. We all see it, you know. The way he treats you versus how he treats her."

I opened the stall door, my makeup ruined, eyes swollen. "What am I supposed to do?"

Elena handed me a tissue. "That depends. How much longer are you willing to be invisible?"

I had no answer for her. But as I dabbed at my eyes, I wondered the same thing myself.

Chapter 3

The office had become my sanctuary, the one place where I felt competent and valued. After the humiliation of Marcus's wedding, I threw myself into work with desperate intensity, staying late most nights to avoid going home to Danny's casual indifference.

It was during one of those extended evenings that I noticed the small gestures. Scott would appear at my desk around four o'clock with my favorite coffee—a vanilla latte with an extra shot, something I'd mentioned offhandedly months ago. Unlike Danny, who couldn't remember if I preferred tea or coffee, Scott had not only remembered but had quietly observed that I added vanilla syrup when we grabbed drinks during lunch meetings.

"Thought you might need the caffeine boost," he'd say simply, setting the cup down without fanfare before returning to his office.

The projects started changing too. Instead of the routine domestic accounts I'd been handling, Scott began assigning me to international collaborations. "The Paris team specifically requested someone with your attention to detail," he explained when I questioned the sudden shift. "Plus, your French is better than mine."

I found myself on video calls with elegant Parisians who treated my input with respect, who asked for my opinions and actually listened to my responses. During one late-night call with the European division, I caught Scott watching from his office doorway, a small smile on his face as I confidently presented our quarterly projections in rapid French.

After the call ended, he lingered by my desk. "You're wasted on the Henderson account," he said quietly. "You should be doing work that challenges you."

"Thank you," I managed, surprised by the genuine warmth in his voice.

"I spent two years in Paris early in my career," he continued, settling into the chair across from my desk. "There's something about that city—it has a way of helping people discover who they really are when they're free from others' expectations."

The way he said it made me wonder if he knew more about my situation than he let on. But he didn't pry, didn't ask about the dark circles under my eyes or why I'd been working until nine every night for the past two weeks.

"Maybe I'll visit someday," I said, though the idea felt as distant as the moon.

"Maybe you will," Scott replied, and something in his tone suggested he believed it more than I did.

* * *

The scrapbook project started as a distraction. Danny had been particularly cold lately, barely speaking to me except to ask where his clean shirts were or whether I'd remembered to pay the electric bill. Rosalie called him constantly, and he'd disappear into the bedroom to take her calls, emerging twenty minutes later with an energy he never showed around me.

I needed something that was mine, something that connected me to happier memories. The idea of creating a scrapbook of significant moments in my life seemed therapeutic—college graduation, my first job, surviving the drowning incident that had brought Danny into my life.

That's what led me to the downtown library on a gray Saturday morning, while Danny slept off another late night "helping Rosalie with work stuff." The librarian, a kind woman with silver hair, showed me how to access the newspaper archives on the microfiche machine.

"What dates are you looking for, dear?"

"August fifteenth, six years ago," I said, my fingers trembling slightly as I adjusted the machine's focus. "There was an incident at Riverside Park—someone nearly drowned."

She helped me navigate to the right section, and I scrolled through page after page of local news. Traffic accidents, city council meetings, a farmer's market announcement. Then I found it—a small article buried on page seven of the Metro section:

*LOCAL WOMAN RESCUED FROM RIVERSIDE PARK LAKE*

*A 24-year-old woman was pulled from Riverside Park Lake yesterday afternoon after witnesses reported seeing her go under the water near the north dock. The victim, whose name is being withheld, was unconscious when rescued but responded to CPR administered by an unidentified man who pulled her from the water before emergency responders arrived. The rescuer, described by witnesses as having dark hair and wearing a company polo shirt, left the scene before paramedics could speak with him. The woman was transported to Memorial Hospital and is reported to be in stable condition.*

I read the paragraph three times, my heart pounding harder with each pass. Dark hair. Danny's hair had always been light brown, almost sandy in the summer sun. And a company polo shirt—Danny had been between jobs then, spending most of his time at the beach with friends.

My hands shook as I printed the article, the paper warm from the machine. Six years of gratitude, six years of feeling indebted to someone who might not have been my savior at all.

I drove home in a daze, the printed article burning like a brand in my purse. Danny was awake when I walked in, making breakfast and humming—actually humming—while he scrambled eggs.

"Good morning, beautiful," he said cheerfully, not bothering to look up. "Rosalie's coming over later to help me pick out new curtains for the living room. Hope that's okay."

I stared at him, this man I'd built my entire adult life around, and felt something fundamental shift inside my chest. "Danny," I said slowly, "tell me again about the day you saved me."

He glanced over, spatula in hand. "Why? You know the story."

"Humor me."

He shrugged, turning back to his eggs. "I was jogging past the lake, saw you go under, jumped in and pulled you out. Lucky I was there, right?"

"What were you wearing?"

"What kind of question is that?" He laughed, but it sounded forced. "I don't know, Hadley. It was six years ago. Probably just my usual running gear."

I pulled the article from my purse, smoothing it on the counter between us. "This says my rescuer was wearing a company polo shirt."

Danny's hand stilled on the spatula handle. For just a moment, something flickered across his face—surprise, maybe even panic. Then his expression hardened.

"Newspapers get details wrong all the time," he said dismissively. "You were unconscious, remember? You have no idea what I was wearing."

But I was watching him now, really watching him, and I could see the lie in the way he wouldn't meet my eyes, in the defensive set of his shoulders.

"You're right," I said quietly. "I was unconscious. I don't remember anything about that day."

Except now I was starting to wonder if I'd been unconscious about a lot more than just the drowning.

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