
After Leaving My Fiancé, I Found True Love
Chapter 2
The red-eye flight to Portland hummed around me, most passengers dozing as we cut through the night sky. I sat rigid in my window seat, clutching the worn leather portfolio of music scores to my chest like a shield. The cabin lights dimmed, casting everyone in shadow—fitting for how I felt, half-invisible after years of trying to be what Ryan wanted.
'If it weren't for repaying a debt of gratitude, I would never marry her.'
His words replayed in my mind, each syllable a knife twisting deeper. Ten years. Ten years of silencing my own dreams, of arranging my life around his, of believing that if I just loved him enough, he would eventually love me back.
I unzipped the portfolio with trembling fingers. Sheet music I hadn't touched in years—Chopin, Debussy, and my own compositions, abandoned when Ryan mentioned once, casually, that my 'little hobby' took too much time away from attending his business functions.
'Anyone can wear it appropriately, except Madison.'
My fingertips rubbed against each other, playing phantom notes on keys that weren't there. The woman across the aisle glanced at me curiously, and I realized I was crying, silent tears tracking down my cheeks.
'Pull yourself together, Madison,' I whispered to myself, wiping my face with the back of my hand. This wasn't just heartbreak—it was liberation. For the first time in a decade, I was making a choice for myself.
The plane landed with a jolt that matched the lurch in my stomach. Dawn was breaking over Portland, painting the sky in watercolors of pink and gold. I hadn't told anyone I was coming. There was no one left to tell—my parents were long gone, and I'd let most of my old friendships wither while trying to fit into Ryan's world.
The taxi wound through familiar streets that somehow looked both exactly the same and completely different. When we pulled up to my childhood home, I paid the driver and stood on the sidewalk, suddenly paralyzed.
The modest two-story Victorian had once been pristine, my mother's pride and joy with its cheerful yellow paint and white trim. Now it looked tired—paint peeling, garden overgrown, the wooden railing on the front porch visibly rotted on one side. I'd kept the house after my parents died, unable to part with it despite Ryan's insistence that it was 'impractical' to maintain a property I never visited.
I dragged my suitcase up the walkway, each step stirring dust and memories. The key stuck in the lock, protesting after years of disuse. When the door finally swung open, the musty scent of abandonment hit me first, then the sight of what had once been my sanctuary.
Sheet music lay scattered across the floor near the baby grand piano in the living room, yellowed and curling at the edges—the last pieces I'd been working on before leaving for New York. A thin layer of dust coated everything, transforming the home into a strange museum of my former life.
I dropped my suitcase and sank down onto the creaking front steps, overwhelmed. Grief washed over me—not just for Ryan and the decade I'd wasted, but for my parents, for my music, for the Madison who used to play until her fingers ached with the pure joy of it.
'I'm going to find her again,' I promised the empty house, my voice breaking. 'I'm going to remember who I was before him.'
The sound of footsteps on gravel made me look up, hastily wiping my tears. A tall figure approached, toolbox in hand, concern etched across features that seemed vaguely familiar yet transformed.
'Madison?' The man's voice was deep and warm. 'I thought that might be you. Mom said she saw a taxi pull up.'
I stared, recognition dawning slowly. 'Jake? Jake Harrison?'
The shy, lanky boy from next door had grown into a broad-shouldered man with kind eyes and confident posture. He gestured to the broken porch railing.
'I noticed that was about to give way last month. Thought I'd come fix it before someone got hurt.' His eyes met mine, searching. 'Are you okay?'
Something in his genuine concern—so different from the calculated social niceties I'd grown accustomed to in New York—broke through my carefully constructed walls. For the first time since leaving the engagement party, I felt a warmth that had nothing to do with shame or anger.
'No,' I answered honestly. 'But I think I might be, eventually.'
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