I sacrificed my career as a violinist to save my fiancé, Graham, in a car crash that shattered my hand. For five years, I endured the pain and supported his political ambitions, believing in the future we planned to build around an old, historic theater. That future ended when I overheard him with his campaign manager, Kassidy. He was selling our theater to fund his campaign, dismissing my sacrifice as a mere "distraction." He called me a "drowned rat" one day, then posted a picture with Kassidy the next, captioned "#PowerCouple." He denied me money for a new physical therapy treatment, claiming the budget was tight, only to buy her an "exquisite" gift. He called her his "best asset." I was just a liability. My sacrifice wasn't an act of love to him; it was a "choice" I made that he now held over my head. So on the night of his career-defining gala, when he thought I was at home waiting for him, I prepared my own opening night. At the very theater he tried to steal from me.
I sacrificed my career as a violinist to save my fiancé, Graham, in a car crash that shattered my hand. For five years, I endured the pain and supported his political ambitions, believing in the future we planned to build around an old, historic theater.
That future ended when I overheard him with his campaign manager, Kassidy. He was selling our theater to fund his campaign, dismissing my sacrifice as a mere "distraction."
He called me a "drowned rat" one day, then posted a picture with Kassidy the next, captioned "#PowerCouple." He denied me money for a new physical therapy treatment, claiming the budget was tight, only to buy her an "exquisite" gift.
He called her his "best asset." I was just a liability.
My sacrifice wasn't an act of love to him; it was a "choice" I made that he now held over my head.
So on the night of his career-defining gala, when he thought I was at home waiting for him, I prepared my own opening night.
At the very theater he tried to steal from me.
Chapter 1
Ella Keith POV:
The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing the air from my lungs. "The theater is going to be sold, Graham. It's the only way to fund the campaign properly."
I stood frozen in the hallway, the sound of their voices bleeding through the thin office door. Kassidy' s voice, sharp and precise, cut through the quiet. Graham' s reply was a low murmur, but I didn't need to hear it clearly to understand. The theater, our theater. The one he promised we would restore, a symbol of our future, was being traded away for his ambition.
My hand started to tremble, the familiar ache in my wrist flaring up. It was a constant reminder, a ghost limb that screamed every time I tried to forget. I remembered the screech of tires, the blinding headlights, the split second I swerved the wheel to save him. My violin, my career, my entire future as I knew it, shattered in that instant. All for Graham.
Now, he was in there with Kassidy, the woman who always seemed to cling to his side, her laugh too close, her hand too often on his arm. I' d seen it, but I' d ignored it. I' d told myself it was just part of his political charm, part of his job. A cold dread seeped into my bones, chilling me far more than the evening air outside.
Kassidy's voice rose again, laced with a false sweetness that made my stomach churn. "Don't worry, darling. You'll make so much more than that in the Senate. A dusty old building isn't worth holding onto, especially not when it's just a reminder of... distractions."
Distractions. That was me. My sacrifice. My pain. It was all a distraction to him. My eyes burned, but no tears came. It was too cold for tears.
Graham finally spoke, his voice too casual, too easy. "Right. It's an asset, not a monument."
An asset. He was talking about the place where we'd promised to build a life, where I had dreamed of performing again, even with my shattered hand. He was talking about it like it was just another property on a balance sheet. The disrespect was a bitter taste in my mouth, metallic and raw.
"And Ella?" Kassidy asked, her tone shifting, sounding almost concerned. "Won't she be... upset?"
There was a silence, heavy and thick. I held my breath, waiting. Hoping. For what, I didn't know. A flicker of remorse? A shred of loyalty?
"She'll understand," Graham finally said, his voice flat. "She always does. She knows what this campaign means to me. She made her choice."
Her choice. He called it my choice. My sacrifice, the one that ended my ability to play, the one that left me with chronic pain and a future I hadn't planned, was reduced to a mere "choice." Like I had whimsically decided to throw away my life for him. My blood ran cold.
Then I heard the soft ring of a phone. It was Kassidy' s. She answered, her voice immediately dropping to a purr. "Yes, darling. Everything's going perfectly."
Darling. She called him darling. Right there, in our office, in our home. My vision blurred for a second, not with tears, but with a sudden, searing rage.
I heard the sound of tissue paper rustling, then Kassidy's delighted gasp. "Oh, Graham! You shouldn't have! It's exquisite."
A gift. Another gift. I remembered begging him for a new physical therapy treatment, the one that cost a little extra, the one that might actually give me some relief. He'd told me the campaign budget was tight. He'd looked at me like I was asking for the moon.
"Only the best for my best asset," Graham chuckled. His voice was warm, intimate, a tone I hadn't heard directed at me in months. Maybe years.
My own needs, my own pain, were an inconvenience. Kassidy was an asset. The distinction sliced through me. It wasn't just the theater, it wasn't just my hand. It was me. He saw me as a liability now. Someone to be managed, dismissed.
The reality of it hit me with the force of a tidal wave. He wasn't just having an emotional affair; he was building a new life with her, right under my nose, using my sacrifice as a flimsy excuse. I was nothing more than an inconvenient shadow. The realization was devastating, yet strangely liberating. It was the clarity that comes after a long, painful fog. My pain in my hand intensified, radiating up my arm, but it was nothing compared to the agony in my chest. This wasn't some minor disagreement. This was a complete and utter dismissal of everything we had.
I swallowed hard, the bitter taste in my mouth spreading. Used. Forgotten. That' s what I was. My role had been played, and he was ready for the next act, with a different leading lady. The anger was a slow burn, turning my insides to ash. This was the moment I stopped being a victim.
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