
After Ninety-Nine Confessions, I Ruined His Empire
Chapter 3
I remained on my knees, clutching the broken pieces of my mother's teacup as heavy footsteps thundered down the stairs. Ethan appeared in the hallway, his face contorted with anger as he took in the scene—Victoria whimpering dramatically, her hand still bleeding, and me, surrounded by shattered crystal.
"What the hell is wrong with you?" he demanded, his voice sharp enough to cut glass. "First you disappear for days, and now you attack Victoria?"
I stared up at him, disbelief washing over me. "I didn't—"
"I don't want to hear it," he snapped, wrapping a protective arm around Victoria's shoulders. "You need to apologize. Now."
My hands trembled as I gathered the largest fragments of the teacup. "Apologize?" My voice was barely above a whisper. "She deliberately broke my mother's teacup. The only thing I have left of her."
"It was an accident," Victoria insisted, her eyes wide with feigned innocence. "I was just trying to admire it."
Ethan's gaze hardened. "Olivia, you're being irrational. Clearly, you're still emotional about your mother, but that doesn't give you the right to lash out."
Something inside me cracked—not like the teacup, which had shattered instantly, but like ice breaking on a frozen river. Slow, deliberate fractures spreading beneath the surface.
"No," I said, surprising myself with the steadiness in my voice.
"Excuse me?" Ethan's eyebrows shot up.
"I said no. I won't apologize."
Victoria's lips curled into the faintest smirk before she buried her face against Ethan's chest, her shoulders shaking with manufactured sobs.
"I think you should leave," Ethan said coldly. "Take some time to cool off. When you're ready to behave like an adult, we can talk."
I gathered the remaining pieces of the teacup and stood, my legs unsteady but my resolve growing firmer with each breath. Without another word, I walked to the guest bedroom and locked the door behind me.
Hours later, when the apartment had fallen silent, I crept back to the display shelf where my teacup had stood. Running my fingers along the underside of the shelf, I felt something—a small envelope taped to the wood. I carefully peeled it free and retreated to the guest room.
Under the dim bedside lamp, I opened the envelope with trembling fingers. Inside was a letter in my mother's elegant handwriting.
"My dearest Olivia,
If you're reading this, I've either finally worked up the courage to give it to you, or something has happened to me. I've watched for years as you've diminished yourself for a man who doesn't deserve even a fraction of your love. You are brilliant, kind, and stronger than you know. You deserve someone who sees your light, not someone who dims it to make himself shine brighter.
Remember what I've always told you: love shouldn't hurt. It shouldn't require ninety-nine confessions or constant proof. Real love uplifts. It doesn't demand that you make yourself smaller.
Stand up, my darling. Stand up for yourself. I believe in you, even when you don't believe in yourself.
All my love,
Mom"
Tears streamed down my face as I read and reread her words. I pressed the letter to my chest, feeling something shift inside me—a spark igniting where there had been only cold ashes.
I slept with the letter under my pillow, my mother's words seeping into my dreams.
The next morning, I entered the kitchen to find Victoria already there, sipping coffee from my favorite mug. Her injured hand was wrapped in gauze, displayed prominently on the table like a war medal.
"Good morning," she said sweetly. "Sleep well? You look terrible."
I said nothing as I poured myself coffee.
"You know," she continued, examining her manicure, "I never understood what Ethan saw in you. You're so... ordinary. Did you really think those pathetic confessions would make him love you?"
I turned slowly to face her. "What did you say?"
"Oh, he told me all about your little game." She laughed lightly. "Ninety-nine confessions? Did you know that was our thing first? He recycled it for you. How sad."
Something snapped inside me. Before I could think, my hand flew through the air, connecting with her cheek in a sharp crack that echoed through the kitchen.
Victoria's head whipped to the side, her eyes wide with shock. Before she could scream for Ethan, I pulled out my phone and snapped a photo of her stunned expression, the red imprint of my hand blooming on her cheek.
"Delete that!" she hissed, lunging for my phone.
I stepped back, my voice eerily calm. "Cross me again, and everyone will see the real you. Every manipulation, every lie—all of it exposed. This is just the beginning."
For the first time, I saw fear flicker in Victoria's eyes. And in that moment, I felt something I hadn't experienced in seven years—power.
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