
After Leaving My Fiancé, I Found True Love
Chapter 3
As Jake led me next door to his mother's house, I felt like a shipwreck survivor being guided to shore. My legs moved automatically while my mind remained adrift in the wreckage of my former life.
"Mom's been cooking all morning," Jake said, his voice a gentle anchor in my storm. "And fair warning—she's probably going to try to feed you until you burst."
The moment we stepped through the door, the rich aroma of clam chowder enveloped me. It was so different from the sterile, professionally catered scents of Ryan's penthouse that tears sprang to my eyes again.
"Madison Cole!" Mrs. Harrison appeared in the hallway, wiping her hands on a faded floral apron. Her silver-streaked hair was pulled back in a loose bun, and her face—lined now but still bright with warmth—broke into a smile that crinkled the corners of her eyes. "Oh, sweetheart, come here."
Before I could respond, I was wrapped in a hug that smelled of vanilla and home-baked bread. Something cracked inside me—the brittle shell I'd built around myself over the past decade—and I found myself clinging to her like a child.
"There now," she soothed, patting my back. "Whatever it is, it'll look better after some food."
She ushered me into her kitchen—a cozy space with yellow curtains and mismatched chairs that couldn't have been more different from the sleek, untouched kitchen in Ryan's penthouse. She gestured for me to sit at the worn wooden table while Jake quietly took a seat across from me.
"Here we are," Mrs. Harrison announced, placing steaming bowls of clam chowder before us. The bowls were slightly chipped around the edges, imperfect in the most comforting way. "My mother's recipe. Fixes everything from colds to broken hearts."
I took a spoonful, and the rich, creamy flavor transported me instantly to childhood summers. Mrs. Harrison didn't press me for explanations. Instead, she filled the silence with stories—funny anecdotes about Jake's childhood mishaps, neighborhood gossip, and memories of my parents that made me both laugh and cry.
"Remember when you and Jake tried to build that treehouse?" she chuckled, refilling my bowl without asking. "Your father nearly had a heart attack when he saw you balanced on that top branch."
"I was the architect," Jake added with a grin. "Madison was the fearless construction crew."
"I'd forgotten about that," I admitted, surprised by the memory. It had been buried beneath years of galas and business dinners and Ryan's disapproving glances whenever I spoke too loudly or laughed too freely.
After lunch, Jake suggested we check on my house's piano. "Mom mentioned it might need tuning after sitting unused for so long."
The sunlight streamed through the dusty windows of my childhood home's parlor as Jake and I approached the baby grand piano. It stood like a silent sentinel, its once-gleaming surface now dulled with neglect. My heart ached at the sight—this instrument had been my voice, my refuge, my joy.
"Let's see what we're working with," Jake said, opening the fallboard with careful hands.
We spent the next hour wrestling the old piano back to life. Jake had brought a basic tuning kit, and I watched his strong, capable hands work with surprising delicacy on the instrument's inner mechanisms. This was a different Jake than I remembered—more confident, more present, yet still with that underlying gentleness I'd always associated with him.
"Try it now," he suggested, stepping back.
I hesitated, then placed my fingers on the ivory keys. The first note I pressed rang out hollow and slightly flat, a wounded sound that matched the emptiness inside me. Tears sprang to my eyes before I could stop them.
"I'm sorry," I whispered, not sure if I was apologizing to Jake or to the piano itself for abandoning it for so long.
"Don't be," Jake said softly. "It just needs time and care. Like most things worth saving."
That evening, back at the Harrisons', Mrs. Harrison bustled around her living room, suddenly flustered. "Now where did I put those reading glasses? Jake, be a dear and check upstairs for me?"
As Jake disappeared upstairs, I caught the faintest hint of a smile on Mrs. Harrison's face before she excused herself to the kitchen. Moments later, Jake returned with a bowl of popcorn instead of glasses.
"Couldn't find them," he said with a shrug that suggested this was a regular occurrence. "Thought we might watch something instead?"
We settled on the worn sofa, the bowl between us. The familiar comfort of this house, so different from the cold perfection I'd grown accustomed to, loosened something in my chest.
"I used to play piano for hours," I said quietly, surprising myself with the admission. "I even composed my own pieces."
"I remember," Jake replied, his eyes warm in the soft lamplight. "I used to open my window just to hear you play."
I stared at him, wondering what else I had forgotten—and what else he had remembered—during the years I'd been trying to become someone I was never meant to be.
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