
After He Invited My Tormentor to Our Wedding
Chapter 2
Morning light streamed through the blinds of our apartment kitchen as I placed a steaming mug of coffee in front of Ryan. He barely looked up from his phone, his thumb scrolling relentlessly through news headlines. The silence between us felt heavier than the emerald pendant still hanging around my neck—the birthday gift that now seemed to belong to a different lifetime, though it had only been twelve hours since he'd fastened it there with loving hands.
"I made your favorite," I said, sliding a plate of avocado toast toward him. "With the chili flakes you like."
Ryan grunted in acknowledgment but didn't reach for the food. His eyes remained fixed on his screen, though I could tell he wasn't really reading anything.
"About last night," I began, my voice steadier than I felt. "Madison Harper is—"
"A liar?" He finally looked up, his expression unreadable. "That's what you were going to say, right?"
I nodded, relief washing over me. "Yes. Everything she said was a complete fabrication. She was the one who—"
"It's just..." Ryan interrupted, setting his phone down with deliberate care. "Some things don't add up, Cass."
The relief evaporated instantly. "What do you mean?"
He leaned back in his chair, studying me as if seeing me for the first time. "You told me you transferred schools junior year because of the bullying. But Madison said you both attended Westlake High through graduation."
My stomach twisted. "I said I switched to online classes after the incident. I was still technically enrolled at Westlake."
"And the hearing loss in your right ear—you said it happened during a swim meet accident."
I felt my face flush with anger and hurt. "I was pushed into the pool during a swim meet. By Madison and her friends. It wasn't an accident—it was assault. I hit my head on the edge."
Ryan's eyes narrowed slightly. "That's not exactly how you described it before."
"Because it's painful to talk about!" My voice cracked. "Ryan, why are you doing this? You've known me for two years. You know who I am."
He rubbed his face, suddenly looking tired. "I thought I did."
Those three words landed like a physical blow—one I couldn't feel in my body but that tore through my heart nonetheless. I stood there, paralyzed, as Ryan mumbled something about needing to get to work early and disappeared into our bedroom.
When he emerged ten minutes later, dressed for the office, he brushed past me with barely a glance. The door clicked shut behind him, and I sank onto the couch, trembling.
His phone lay forgotten on the kitchen counter.
I stared at it for a long moment, battling my conscience. We'd always had an open-phone policy—not because we snooped, but because we had nothing to hide. With shaking fingers, I picked it up.
The screen was still unlocked. I opened Instagram and went to his direct messages. There they were—a series of exchanges with Madison_Harper92, starting just minutes after she'd left our table last night.
*I'm so sorry to have disrupted your evening. I've been carrying this burden for so long...*
*I understand if you don't believe me. Cassie is very convincing. She always was.*
*Here's the newspaper article about my expulsion. Notice how there's no actual evidence presented? Just her word against mine.*
I scrolled through message after message, each one more poisonous than the last. Madison had worked quickly, methodically, painting me as calculating and manipulative. As a sociopath who had ruined her life for sport.
And Ryan had responded. Brief at first—*I need to hear Cassie's side*—but his messages grew longer, more engaged. More doubtful.
*I appreciate your honesty. Some things have never quite added up.*
I set the phone down, feeling sick. One dinner. One chance encounter. That was all it had taken for Madison to infiltrate my life again and for Ryan—my protector, my safe harbor—to start questioning everything about me.
Two hours later, I sat in Dr. Hayes's office, tears streaming down my face as I recounted the morning's events.
"He's known me for two years," I said, my voice hoarse. "We're supposed to get married in three weeks. How could he doubt me so quickly?"
Dr. Hayes leaned forward, her kind eyes studying me. "Cassie, we've talked about your congenital analgesia as a physical condition, but I wonder if you've considered how it might relate to your emotional experiences?"
I wiped my eyes. "What do you mean?"
"Those who can't feel physical pain often develop a heightened sensitivity to emotional pain," she explained gently. "The brain compensates. Your inability to feel a cut or a burn might be why betrayal feels so catastrophic to you. Your emotional nerve endings are, in a sense, more exposed."
I stared at her, a cold realization washing over me. "So I'm doubly cursed? I can't feel physical pain, but I feel emotional pain more intensely than normal people?"
"Not cursed," Dr. Hayes corrected. "Different. And understanding this difference might help you navigate what's happening with Ryan."
But as I left her office, stepping into the gray Seattle afternoon, I couldn't shake the feeling that Madison had found my most vulnerable point—not my inability to feel pain, but the one person whose betrayal would hurt more than any physical wound ever could.
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