My Ex-Fiancé Stole My Dreams

My Ex-Fiancé Stole My Dreams

Sutton Horsley

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For ten years, I was the indispensable right hand and fiancée to star architect Declan Sharp. I poured my life into his career, sacrificing my own ambitions for us. Our wedding was just weeks away. But my world shattered when I saw him with the new intern, Kisha. He was showing her my design, the one he called "competent," and proudly saying, "This is Kisha's idea." It got worse. He stole my groundbreaking research paper for her, then publicly dismissed me as a mere "drafting assistant." My own family attacked me, furious I had lost their meal ticket. I was just a tool. A convenient machine he used to build his empire. He never loved me; he loved what I did for him. So when he tried to kiss me to shut me up, I slapped him. I deleted every file, every blueprint, every trace of my work from his life. Then I blocked his number and bought a one-way ticket to Detroit. This time, I was building a life for myself.

Chapter 1

For ten years, I was the indispensable right hand and fiancée to star architect Declan Sharp. I poured my life into his career, sacrificing my own ambitions for us. Our wedding was just weeks away.

But my world shattered when I saw him with the new intern, Kisha. He was showing her my design, the one he called "competent," and proudly saying, "This is Kisha's idea."

It got worse. He stole my groundbreaking research paper for her, then publicly dismissed me as a mere "drafting assistant." My own family attacked me, furious I had lost their meal ticket.

I was just a tool. A convenient machine he used to build his empire. He never loved me; he loved what I did for him.

So when he tried to kiss me to shut me up, I slapped him. I deleted every file, every blueprint, every trace of my work from his life. Then I blocked his number and bought a one-way ticket to Detroit. This time, I was building a life for myself.

Chapter 1

My ten years with Declan Sharp, the man I loved, ended not with a bang, but with his careless disregard for my heart, exposed by an intern.

For a decade, I was Cayla Norris, the junior architect, but more importantly, Declan Sharp's indispensable right hand. I' d poured my life into his career, into us, sacrificing my own ambitions to be his partner, his fiancée. We were supposed to get married. The wedding invitations were already printed, elegant script on heavy cardstock. My future, once so clear, was a shimmering mirage, about to dissolve.

I sat in my small, sterile office, the fluorescent lights humming above, the air thick with unspoken truths. My fingers hovered over the keyboard, a simple form awaiting my confirmation. A transfer request. Detroit. It was a challenging, underfunded community revitalization project. A world away from the gleaming skyscrapers and high-stakes competitions of our firm in New York. My escape route.

"Cayla? Is everything alright?" Marcus, my direct superior, leaned against the doorframe, his brow furrowed with concern. "I saw your transfer request come through. Detroit? That's... a big change. Especially with the wedding so close."

My throat tightened. I swallowed past the sudden lump. "Everything' s fine, Marcus. I just need a change of pace. New challenges." The words tasted like ash. I forced a smile that felt brittle, like old glass.

He didn't look convinced. "Declan will be... surprised. Shocked, even. You two are inseparable. Everyone knows that." His voice was gentle, laced with genuine confusion.

Inseparable. That was the story we told. The story I told myself, every single day. The lie I clung to, even as it stripped away pieces of who I was. The truth was, I wasn't inseparable from Declan. I was attached to him, like a shadow. A shadow that faded when the light shifted.

I' d spent my entire adult life in his orbit. My talent, my resilience, my unwavering loyalty – all channeled into supporting his brilliance. Ten years. Ten years of late nights, early mornings, canceled weekends. Ten years of putting his needs, his deadlines, his vision before my own. I designed the initial concepts he sketched, refined the models he deemed crude, found the solutions to the complex problems he often overlooked in his grand vision. I was the silent engine behind the star architect, the quiet force that kept his chaotic genius grounded and functional.

Everyone in the office saw it. The way he' d call my name, a sharp command, and I' d appear, already anticipating his next need. The way he' d defer to my judgment on minor details, confident I' d handled it. The way he' d occasionally place an absentminded hand on my shoulder, a gesture of ownership, not affection. They saw the public façade, the brilliant architect and his dedicated, soon-to-be wife. A perfect match.

But it was a façade. His affection, a carefully constructed illusion. A convenient arrangement. And Kisha Fleming, the new intern, had just dismantled it without even trying.

Kisha. Her name echoed in my mind, a discordant note. She was the daughter of a major firm client, a bubbly, entitled whirlwind of charm and connections. She breezed in, a splash of vibrant color in our usually monochromatic world, and effortlessly breached Declan' s carefully constructed personal boundaries. Boundaries I had respected for a decade, believing them to be a sign of his unique, impenetrable nature.

I remembered the day he proposed. It wasn't a romantic moment, bathed in soft light and whispered promises. It was in a hospital room, the harsh white glare reflecting off the sterile equipment. My arm was heavily bandaged, my head throbbed. I' d been severely injured, protecting his designs from corporate spies. A desperate, foolish act born of loyalty and a desperate yearning for recognition. Not just professional, but personal. A yearning for his love.

He looked at me, his face pale, his eyes unfocused with a mix of guilt and something akin to fear. "Cayla," he'd said, his voice unusually soft, "Marry me." It wasn't a question, but an offering. A penance. A way to alleviate the crushing weight of responsibility he felt for my injury. He saw my sacrifice, not as an act of love, but as a debt he needed to repay. And I, battered and broken, still clinging to the hope that his gratitude would one day blossom into genuine affection, had said yes. A quiet, hopeful yes, that sealed my fate for another two years.

And then Kisha came along.

I watched him with her. The casual leaning in, the shared laughter that wasn't about work, the way he' d actually listen to her, not just hear her. He' d never done that with me. Not truly. He' d hear my advice, my ideas, my concerns, process them, and integrate them into his work. But he never listened to me, not to the person beneath the architect.

She was a catalyst, igniting a slow-burning realization within me. He was capable of genuine, unburdened affection. Just not for me. He spoke about her "fresh perspective," her "unconventional ideas." He' d never praised my ideas with such enthusiasm, even when they formed the very backbone of his award-winning projects. My groundbreaking design concept, the one I' d poured months of my life into, the one that won him the prestigious competition? He' d called it "competent."

Last week, I saw them. It was late, everyone else had left. The office was quiet, save for the distant hum of the city. I was finishing up a presentation for Declan, the one for the new waterfront development. I heard his voice, softer than I' d ever heard it, coming from his private office. I paused, a strange premonition twisting my gut. The door was ajar.

Kisha was laughing, a light, tinkling sound. Declan was smiling, a genuine, unguarded smile that reached his eyes. He had his arm casually draped around her shoulders, his thumb gently stroking her arm. He was showing her my design concept, the one I' d slaved over, the one he'd deemed "competent." "This is Kisha's idea," he said, his voice full of pride. "She's got a real knack for innovative urban planning." My breath caught. My stomach plummeted. My idea. Her credit.

My world tilted. The carefully constructed edifice of my life, built on his promises and my devotion, crumbled in an instant. It wasn't just the credit for the design. It was the way he looked at her. The way he touched her. It was the undeniable truth in his eyes: he loved her. Not me. He never had.

I finished the transfer request, my hands trembling. Detroit. A new life. A fresh start. An escape. I hit 'send' with a finality that echoed in the silent office.

Later that night, my phone buzzed. A text from Declan.

Hey, flight just landed. Can you pick me up?

I looked at the message, then at my packed bags by the door of the luxury condo we shared. Shared. Not ours. Never truly ours. My thumb hovered over the keyboard. My fingers, accustomed to typing out his demanding schedules and design notes, now felt a strange, liberating stiffness.

No. I can't.

I sent it. The tiny 'sent' notification on my screen felt like the beginning of an earthquake. The first tremor of my new, terrifyingly free existence.

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