The Chef's Lie, Her Scars
arpent
sage a fresh cut, a reminder of his indifference. My physical wound, the mangled flesh on my arm, was slowly, painfully knitting itself back toge
lla Luna,' where Collin had first proposed. The cozy corner table, the flickering candlelight, the shared tiramisu – it was all etched
tightening in my chest. I remembered the way he' d gotten down on one knee, the hesitant thrill
I sa
s on the table. Casey laughed, a bright, tinkling sound, and leaned into him, her head resting on his shoulder. They looked perfect, a pic
hispered to her husband, pointing to Bella Luna. "It's Collin Sweeney an
e. Not
his hand. "Darling," she purred, loud enough for me to hear from my car,
tered my fragile composure. "It is, sweetheart. It
ory, every tender moment we had shared. He
thought he wanted in me. The unquestioning adoration, the fresh ambition. And for him, that was enough. My indi
pping the steering wheel. I nee
out of the restaurant, talking on her phone. Casey.
t knowing I was within earshot. "Can you believe it? He caught him
mpletely over me after all. Or perhaps, he was just used to the
of hot food, bumped into Casey. The tray flew from his hands,
f pure outrage. "My dress! You clumsy
oked horrified. "I'm so sor
she screeched, already reaching for her phon
saw her ruined dress, the shattered plates, the distraught waiter. His eyes flickered to me, still in m
dress. He cared that I was there, that I had seen. "What are you still doing here? Are you following us?" His eyes were filled w
mediate turn to blame, to twist the narrative into my malice
is arm, her eyes wide and innocent, playing the victim. "She's been so... e
botage my happiness. My future." He pulled Casey closer, cradling her as if she were a wounded bird, his gaze da
th her, on the ruins of our shared life. He was rewriting history, painting me as the vill
ver bothers us again. She won't touch a hair on your head. Or our children's." He looked at me, a chi
blic shaming – it was too much. He hated me. He wanted me gone. H
sorrow. They were tears of pure, unadulterated rage. He had pushed me too far. He
I gasped, clutching my arm, the blood once again seeping through the bandage.
wed, a flicker of irritation, then a cold, hard calculation. "Look what you've done, Emma," he
ake, I no longer cared – seemed to melt him. He picked her up, bridal style,
ud enough for the onlookers, the waiter, the world to hear. "She's too dist
ain in my head. He had just publicly accused me, humiliated me, and left m
hind him, I heard the faint murmurs of the cro
l for Casey's distress and a minor scratch, while I, the
to the same emergency room, the same kind nurse, Maria, shaking her head sadly
sealed. What was the point? He
nurses whispering. "Did you see that Collin Sweeney again? Brought his
lood, did you hear? She nee
's was universal. He was always so proud of that. He
blood that flowed through my veins, that we had once hoped wou
holding her hand. He looked exhausted, but devoted. He had given his
e. He thought he could bury me? He thought he could erase me? No. I would disappear, yes.
notification: Your new passp
come a ghost, a myth, a legend. And he