
After His Fiancée Lied, He Destroyed Me Completely
Chapter 2
The contract lay on the mahogany desk, a single sheet of paper that weighed more than my entire life. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the New York skyline bled into a bruised purple twilight, indifferent to the fact that my world was ending.
"Sign it," Cassius said. He didn't sit. He stood by the window, a silhouette cut from ice and darkness. "Or I call the bank. Henderson Logistics files for bankruptcy by noon tomorrow. Your parents lose everything—the house in Vienna, the pension, the legacy."
I stared at the terms. *Housekeeper.* He wasn't asking for an apology for the scene at The Pierre; he was demanding my subjugation. He wanted to break the "stalker" by forcing her to scrub the floors of the life she was never meant to have.
"Why?" I asked, my voice barely a tremor in the sterile air of the penthouse. "If you hate me this much, why keep me here?"
He turned, the movement sharp. "To teach you your place, Maya. You think you know me? You think you own some part of my history? Fine. You can clean it."
I picked up the pen. The ink flowed like black blood. I wasn't signing because of the threat to my parents, though that was real enough. I was signing because this was the only way back in. Proximity was my last weapon. If I could just be near him, without the noise of the world, maybe the static in his head would clear.
"Done," I whispered.
"Good," he said, not looking at the paper. "Start with the library. It smells like desperation."
***
For three days, I became a ghost in the house I had helped design. I polished surfaces that were already gleaming and folded linens that smelled of Liana’s cloying jasmine perfume. I wore the gray uniform they provided, a shapeless thing meant to erase me.
On the fourth afternoon, while dusting the high shelves of the study, my cloth snagged on a loose panel in the wainscoting. My heart hammered against my ribs. *He hadn’t found it.*
I pried the wood back with trembling fingers. There, nestled in the dark recess, was the tin box. The time capsule we’d hidden the night before we left for Switzerland.
I opened it. The scent of old paper and dried lavender drifted up—a scent of *us*. On top lay the antique brass compass I had given him for his twenty-first birthday. Engraved on the back: *So you can always find your way back to me.*
"Cassius!" The name tore out of me before I could stop it. hope, irrational and blinding, surged in my chest.
I ran to the living room. Cassius was pouring a drink, Liana lounging on the sofa like a satisfied cat. They both looked up. Liana’s eyes narrowed instantly, recognizing the danger of a tangible memory.
"Look," I said, breathless, holding the compass out like a holy relic. "You hid this. We hid this. Behind the panel in the study. You remember, don't you? You said—"
Cassius set his glass down. The *clink* against the coaster was deafening. He walked toward me, but his eyes were void of recognition. They were filled with a cold, exhausted fury.
"How long?" he asked softly.
"What?"
"How long did you spend planting this?" He snatched the compass from my hand. His grip was bruising. "Did you slip in while I was at the office? Did you pry open my walls just to stage a moment?"
"No! Cassius, look at the engraving!"
"It’s a cheap trick, Maya!" His voice rose, cracking like thunder. "You are a disease. You infect everything."
"Cassius, honey," Liana purred, standing up and sliding her hand down his arm. "She's unstable. Don't let her upset you. Just get rid of it."
He looked at the compass, then at me. For a second, I saw hesitation—a flicker of the boy who used to hold my hand in the dark. Then Liana whispered something in his ear, and the boy vanished.
Cassius turned and hurled the compass against the stone fireplace.
The sound of the glass face shattering was sharper than a gunshot. The brass casing dented, spinning wildly on the hearth. Before I could scream, he grabbed the handful of letters from the box—pages filled with our dreams, our vows, our history—and tossed them onto the burning logs.
"No!" I lunged forward, falling to my knees on the hard stone. The heat seared my face as the flames licked the edges of the paper. Ink curled and blackened. Our past turned to ash in seconds.
"Let it burn," Cassius commanded, staring down at me with terrifying apathy. "Clean up the mess when you're done crying."
***
That evening, the silence in the penthouse was suffocating. I was relegated to the kitchen, tasked with preparing dinner. Risotto with truffle oil—his favorite. I stirred the pot, the rhythmic motion a poor sedative for the grief hollowing out my chest.
I served them in the dining room. I didn't look at Cassius. I couldn't. I placed the bowls down and retreated to the shadows by the kitchen door.
Liana took a bite. She chewed slowly, her eyes locking onto mine. Then, she dropped her spoon.
It clattered loudly against the china. Liana gasped, her hands flying to her throat. Her face flushed a violent, blotchy red.
"Cassius..." she wheezed, sliding out of her chair. "My throat... it burns..."
Cassius was on his feet instantly, catching her before she hit the floor. "Liana? What is it?"
"She..." Liana pointed a trembling finger at me, choking out a sob. "She knows... about the oil... she put something in it..."
Cassius turned to me. The look on his face wasn't just anger anymore. It was the look of a man staring at a monster.
"What did you do?" he roared, his voice shaking the walls. "What did you put in her food?"
"Nothing!" I stammered, backing away until my spine hit the doorframe. "It's just truffle oil and rice! I swear!"
"You're trying to kill her," he said, the realization settling over him with terrifying certainty. He scooped Liana up, her "gasps" echoing in the high ceilings. "You're trying to take her place."
"Cassius, please—"
"Don't move," he snarled. "If she doesn't make it, you won't leave this building alive."
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