The Images still flashed in my head like they had been seared into the inside of my eyelids. I had no idea how long I stood there, frozen in place, watching the twisted, vile montage they projected. The way they painted me as a cheap, desperate woman clinging to someone who never claimed me. My face, my body, my shame–on full display for the world to mock. And then… his voice. Cold. Sharp.
“She is not my wife… she’s the woman who seduced me. She’s a mistress. Nothing more.”
And Shania. God, Shania.
“Oh, I had no idea she was betraying me this whole time,” she gasped in front of everyone. “I treated her like a sister…
They crafted a perfect performance. But I didn’t scream, didn’t collapse, didn’t beg anyone to believe me.
No.
I walked away.
Outside, the air was colder than I expected. Or maybe it was just the final, crushing weight of everything that had happened pressing on my chest. My heels echoed across the pavement as I left the ballroom behind me, each step heavy but steady. I didn’t care who watched.
Once I reached the mansion, I headed straight to my room. My fingers trembled slightly as I packed my things–what little I owned, what little dignity I had left.
It was over.
My name had been cancelled–legally erased.
I was no on
no one now.
As I folded the last of my clothes into the suitcase, my phone buzzed.
A message. From Colton.
“Don’t mind what I said earlier, or the pictures. I just had to protect you… and the company. After the party, I’ll buy you something nice, maybe a trip–whatever you want. Let’s talk later, okay? I’m sorry.”
I stared at the screen.
Was he serious?
Another sorry. Another guilt–wrapped gift to buy my silence, my forgiveness. That was always his language: money, luxury, and hollow apologies.
I laughed–bitterly.
He really thinks I’m still that girl.
But I wasn’t. Not anymore.
I didn’t reply.
Chanter 5
2/2 20.01
Instead, I placed the phone down, opened the drawer where I had hidden the marriage contract, and pulled it out. I added the divorce papers–signed, stamped. And then… the ring.
The ring he gave me when he said, “I want you to be mine.”
Now it meant nothing.
I left it all neatly on the vanity table.
And I walked out without looking back.
Third–Person POV
Colton stirred from sleep, groggy but alert. His head ached faintly–not just from the champagne–but from the weight of everything that had unfolded. He remembered the night clearly, every calculated word he’d said, every cold lie delivered with a smile.
But he’d fix it. He always did..
He picked up his phone and immediately checked for messages. Nothing.
No response from Ellie. That was strange.
He tried to rationalize it. She must be tired. Probably sulking, maybe waiting for some grand gesture. So, he opened his chat and typed quickly.
“Pack my suits for the trip, will you? And text the driver. I bought you something last night. It’s on the way. Let’s talk when I get back.”
He hit send. Waited.
Nothing. Still nothing.
A sliver of unease slid into his chest.
He dialed her number.
It rang once.
Twice.
Three times.
Voicemail.
Frowning, he redialed–again and again, each time growing more agitated.
Still no answer.
His patience snapped.
He stood, slid on his watch, and stormed out of his room.
“Ellie!” he called loudly down the hallway. “Stop sulking and get ready! We leave in an hour!”
No response.
“Ellie?” he barked again, louder.
Still nothing. He walked faster now, the hollowness in the hallway beginning to press against him. The feeling in his gut worsened. He reached her room, pushed the door open -and stopped cold.
2/3 22.7%.
08:18 Sat, 24 May
Still nothing. He walked faster now, the hollowness in the hallway beginning to press
against him. The feeling in his gut worsened. He reached her room, pushed the door open -and stopped cold.
It was empty. Completely.
The bed was made. The closet was open, shelves bare. Her brushes, books, clothes, the soft scent of her perfume that always lingered near the curtains–gone.
He stepped inside slowly, his mind struggling to register what his eyes were seeing.
And then he saw it.
Sitting on the vanity table.
A white envelope.
He picked it up, slowly, hands trembling.
Inside: divorce papers. Signed. Final.
Next to it lay the wedding ring he had once slipped onto her finger with a promise he barely remembered anymore.
He stared at it. Blank. Silent. Then he snapped out of it.
“Jared!” he shouted, his voice echoing through the corridors. “Find her! Now! I want every camera checked, every staff member questioned! She couldn’t have gone far!”
The butler appeared quickly, already tense. “Yes, sir.”
Minutes passed–agonizing, crawling minutes.
Colton stood in the hallway, pacing like a man losing his grip on reality. His phone was clenched tightly in one hand, the other holding something far more fragile–Ellie’s wedding ring.
His mind raced through possibilities–maybe she was just angry, maybe she just needed air. Maybe she’d be back. She always came back.
The hallway stretched in silence until Jared returned.
Jared lowered his eyes before speaking. “Sir… she’s gone.”
06:18 Sat, 24 May
Chapter 7