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Amelia's POV
The divorce papers sat on the marble counter like a death sentence.
My fingers trembled as I traced the edge of the document, unable to focus on the words that blurred behind my tears. Rain hammered against the floor-to-ceiling windows of the penthouse, each drop a gunshot in the suffocating silence. The city sprawled below us, indifferent and glittering, a thousand lives continuing while mine shattered.
"Sign it." Daniel's voice cut through the storm, cold and final.
I looked up at him, this man I'd loved with every broken piece of myself. He stood across the kitchen island, perfectly pressed in his charcoal suit, checking his watch like I was just another appointment running long. The watch I'd given him for our first anniversary-engraved with words that now felt like mockery. Forever yours.
"Daniel, please." My voice cracked. "Can't we just talk about this?"
"There's nothing to talk about." He didn't meet my eyes. "The marriage isn't working, Amelia. You have to see that."
I pressed my palms flat against the counter to stop them from shaking. The cold marble bit into my skin, grounding me when everything else felt like quicksand. "I don't see that. I see a husband who stopped coming home. Who stopped looking at me. Who..."
"You're holding me back."
The words landed like a punch. My breath caught in my chest, sharp and painful. I could taste copper on my tongue, as if I'd bitten through something vital.
"Holding you back?" I repeated, my voice barely a whisper. "I've done nothing but support you. Every late night, every cancelled dinner, every time you chose work over us-I understood. I waited."
I thought of the dinners that had gone cold, the birthday he'd forgotten, the anniversary he'd spent in Tokyo. I'd told myself it was temporary, that building his empire required sacrifices. I'd been so willing to be the sacrifice.
Daniel finally looked at me, and the emptiness in his steel-gray eyes was worse than anger. Those eyes that used to find me across crowded rooms, that used to light up when I entered. Now they looked through me like I was already gone. "That's exactly the problem. You wait. You accept. You never challenge anything. I need a partner, not a..."
He stopped himself, but I heard it anyway. The unspoken word hung between us like poison.
"Not what?" I straightened, something fierce flickering beneath my pain. "Not what, Daniel?"
He turned away, staring out at the rain-soaked city. His reflection in the glass was distorted, unfamiliar. "This isn't productive."
A memory crashed over me-three years ago, this same penthouse, Daniel spinning me around the empty living room before our furniture arrived. The space had echoed with our laughter, bright with possibility. "This is ours," he'd said, kissing my forehead. "Our beginning." His hands had been gentle then, reverent. He'd looked at me like I was the answer to every question he'd never known to ask.
I'd believed him. God, I'd believed every word.
"You proposed to me in a garden," I said softly. "Do you remember? You said I made you feel human again. That before me, you were just going through the motions." The memory was so vivid it hurt-the way he'd knelt in the roses, hands shaking as he opened the velvet box. He'd been nervous, vulnerable, real. Where had that man gone?
Daniel's jaw tightened, a muscle jumping beneath his skin. At least I could still provoke some reaction, even if it was just irritation.
"What changed?" I moved around the island, desperate to make him see me. To be more than a ghost in my own life. "Tell me what I did wrong. I'll fix it. Whatever it is, I'll..."
"You can't fix this." He stepped back, maintaining the distance between us like a fortress wall. The physical space between us felt like miles, like continents. "I made a mistake. We both did. It's better to end it now before we waste more time."
Waste more time. Three years of my life, reduced to wasted time.
My legs felt unsteady as I gripped the edge of the counter. The room tilted slightly, or maybe that was just me, my entire world knocked off its axis. "You don't mean that."
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