
After My Husband Claimed a Fake Treasure, I Ended Us
Chapter 2
I left the house at six-thirty the next morning, same as always. Lennon was still asleep, sprawled across the bed with one arm flung over the space I used to occupy. The resin bead sat on his nightstand like a trophy. I didn't look back.
Work passed in a blur of spreadsheets and conference calls. My hands moved through the motions while my mind circled the same cold truth: five years of my life had been reduced to a transaction over a piece of flea-market trash. By noon, I had made my decision. I told my supervisor I was taking a personal day and left the office early.
The house was quiet when I pulled into the driveway at two in the afternoon. Lennon's car was gone—probably at his mother's, celebrating his imaginary windfall. I climbed the stairs to our bedroom, my footsteps muffled by the carpet I had paid to install. I would pack light. Essentials only. Everything else could rot here.
I pushed open the bedroom door.
Tatum Gonzalez was sitting cross-legged on my bed.
She wore one of Lennon's old college sweatshirts, the oversized fabric sliding off one bare shoulder. Her dark hair was piled in a messy knot, and her manicured toes flexed against my duvet as if she owned the place. A half-empty coffee mug sat on my nightstand. The air smelled faintly of her perfume—something expensive and cloying that had replaced the lavender sachets I kept in the dresser.
She looked up when I entered, her expression shifting from boredom to something sharper. Amused. Triumphant.
"Blair," she said, drawing out my name like a joke she had been waiting to tell. "You're home early."
My gaze swept the room. The closet door hung open, and I could see her clothes mingling with Lennon's on the hangers. A pair of her shoes sat beside the bed. She hadn't just visited. She had moved in.
Then I saw the jewelry box.
It sat open on the dresser, its delicate wooden lid propped back. My late adoptive mother's jewelry box. The one I kept locked in the back of my closet, wrapped in tissue paper, untouched except for the rare moments when I needed to feel close to her again.
Tatum held something between her fingers, dangling it lazily in the afternoon light.
My mother's necklace.
The silver chain caught the sun, and the small sapphire pendant—modest, but precious beyond measure—swung gently as Tatum twisted it back and forth. She examined it with the bored curiosity of someone appraising a garage sale find.
"This is cute," she said, her voice light and careless. "A little old-fashioned, but cute. Lennon said you had some jewelry stashed away. I was hoping for something with a little more... presence, you know?"
The heat in my chest was immediate and absolute. It spread through my ribs, up into my throat, behind my eyes. My mother's hands had fastened that necklace around my neck the night before she died. Her voice, soft and tired, had whispered, *This was my mother's, and now it's yours. Keep it close, Blair. It'll remind you that you're loved.*
And Tatum Gonzalez—my best friend, the woman I had trusted, the woman who had sat across from me at coffee shops and smiled while planning to destroy me—was holding it like a piece of junk.
I crossed the room in three strides.
Tatum's eyes widened as I reached out and snatched the necklace from her fingers. The chain pooled into my palm, warm from her skin, and I closed my fist around it so tightly the clasp bit into my palm.
"Hey—" Tatum started, her voice pitching upward in mock offense.
I said nothing. I turned to the dresser, carefully placed the necklace back into the jewelry box, and closed the lid with a soft, deliberate click. My hands were steady. My breathing was controlled. Beneath the surface, I was a live wire.
Tatum stood, crossing her arms over Lennon's sweatshirt. "You know, Blair, you really should be thanking me," she said, her tone turning saccharine and venomous all at once. "Lennon's been miserable for years. He just didn't know how to tell you. But now that he's finally got something going for him—now that he's with a real heiress from the Gonzalez family—he can actually build a life that matters."
A real heiress.
I pulled my suitcase from the closet and laid it open on the floor. I moved through the room with mechanical precision, folding clothes, gathering toiletries, ignoring Tatum's presence entirely.
"You're really just going to leave?" Tatum laughed, a sharp, ugly sound. "God, Blair, you're even more pathetic than I thought. No fight. No tears. Just... nothing."
I zipped the suitcase closed, lifted it from the floor, and turned toward the door. My mother's jewelry box was tucked under my other arm, held close to my chest.
Tatum stepped into my path, her eyes glittering with malice. "He never loved you, you know. He told me. You were just... convenient."
I met her gaze. My voice, when it finally came, was soft and cold as winter glass.
"Move."
Something in my tone made her step aside.
I walked out of the bedroom, down the stairs, and through the front door without looking back. The summer heat hit me like a wall, but I barely felt it. My hands were steady on the steering wheel as I pulled out of the driveway.
Behind me, the house—and everything I had given it—disappeared into the rearview mirror.
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