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Love's Betrayal, Architecture's Triumph

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 549    |    Released on: 09/07/2025

tle, but the sand was too dry and it kept collapsing. I was on the verge of

little plastic bucket, ran to the water fountain, and came back

astle our kindergarten playground had eve

f honor. He was David, and I was his Sarah. He protected me from playground b

going over to the Chens' again? You' re going t

David is so much calmer when Sarah is around. It' s the

ng him the pieces he asked for. He was always building things, creating worlds. It wa

could ever want, but not a lot of direct supervision. My family was middle-class, warm and ever-present. He

r own daughter, a girl with frilly pink ribbons in

nt of his creation. "No. I don'

"What about Sara

with the dead-serious logic of a six-year-

some girl; I was his person. That feeling, of being chos

mpletely naive. My biggest problem was what to wear to school or whether I' d finishe

y walking in his footsteps. I never imagined a future that didn' t have

de me feel so safe was the beginning of a

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Love's Betrayal, Architecture's Triumph
Love's Betrayal, Architecture's Triumph
“The acceptance letters for NYU, side-by-side on my desk, symbolized four years of high school effort and a shared dream with David: studying architecture in New York City. Our entire lives were perfectly planned. Then, I overheard David on the phone, his voice low and excited, revealing a horrifying truth: "California is going to be insane. No, she has no idea. I can't do it anymore. The clinginess... I need to be free." My world shattered. The boy I'd loved since childhood, who held our future, was crushing it without a thought. He admitted he was going to UCLA to study film, and when I asked about our plans, he flatly said, "I' m tired of you. I need space to be my own person." His words hit harder than any blow. I realized my devotion had been seen as a cage. All those years I' d put his needs first, sacrificing my own friendships and passions to support him, believing it was love. Now, I saw it was all to make him feel bigger while I made myself smaller. He' d left me feeling like the villain in our story. I couldn't understand. How could the boy who once declared, "Sarah's not a girl. She's Sarah," now call me clingy and dismiss me like trash? Why did he always pull me back with sweet gestures, only to lash out and abandon me when I tried to look out for him? But a tiny, hard kernel of anger began to form. He thought I couldn't survive without him. I would go to NYU, I would study architecture, and I would prove him wrong. Even if it killed me.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 1012 Chapter 1113 Chapter 1214 Chapter 1315 Chapter 1416 Chapter 1517 Chapter 1618 Chapter 17