
Anniversary Day of Betrayal
Chapter 3
The hotel room smelled like antiseptic and stale air conditioning. I lay on top of the covers fully clothed, my eye patch pressing uncomfortably against the pillow, scrolling through my phone with my good eye until the screen blurred.
Oaklynn's Instagram lit up my screen like a beacon of my own destruction. Sunrise over the Rockies, golden light painting snow-capped peaks. David's profile in silhouette, his arm draped casually around her shoulders. "Heaven on earth with my forever person," the caption read, followed by a string of heart emojis.
Five hundred likes already. Six hundred. The number climbed as I watched, each notification a knife twist.
I scrolled to the comments. "You two are GOALS!" "Finally found your happiness!" "So beautiful together!"
Then I saw my name.
"Good riddance to that crazy ex," someone had written. "David deserves better than that stalker," another agreed.
Stalker?
My hands went numb. I sat up too quickly, pain spiking through my injured eye as I searched my own name. The results made my stomach drop.
Oaklynn had posted a video compilation to her main feed—one million followers strong. The thumbnail showed my face contorted in anger, mid-shout, looking completely unhinged. I clicked play with trembling fingers.
My voice filled the quiet hotel room: "Three years of my life, David!" The video cut abruptly, eliminating all context. Another clip showed me gesturing wildly, but you couldn't hear David's words, couldn't see Oaklynn throwing my cake in the trash. Just me, looking furious and unstable.
The caption made my blood run cold: "Finally free from toxic people who can't let go. Starting fresh with my love! 🙏💕"
The comments section was a cesspool. Hundreds of people calling me obsessed, psychotic, a homewrecker trying to destroy true love. Someone had found my LinkedIn profile and posted screenshots. Another person claimed to know me from college, inventing stories about my "jealous" behavior.
I read until the words stopped making sense, until the hotel room spun around me, until I had to run to the bathroom and vomit everything I hadn't eaten that day.
I didn't sleep.
---
Morning came gray and cold. I needed clothes, documents, my laptop—everything was still at the apartment. Our apartment. My apartment. I couldn't think clearly enough to parse the ownership anymore.
The building lobby usually felt like sanctuary, all marble floors and potted ferns. Today it felt like walking into an ambush.
Marcus Thompson, the security manager, intercepted me before I reached the elevators. He'd always been friendly—we'd chatted about his daughter's college applications just last week. Now he wouldn't meet my eyes.
"Ms. Richardson," he said, his voice carefully neutral. "I need to speak with you."
"I just need to get upstairs, Marcus. I'm not feeling well."
"That's the thing." He shifted his weight, distinctly uncomfortable. "Mr. Elliott filed a complaint. He says you've been harassing him and his girlfriend, and he's requested that you not have unescorted access to his property."
The words took a moment to penetrate. "His property?"
"Yes, ma'am. Unit 4C is registered to David Elliott."
"No." My voice came out too loud. Several people in the lobby turned to stare. "No, I own that apartment. I bought it three years ago. My name is on the deed."
Marcus's expression shifted from discomfort to confusion. "May I see your ID?"
I fumbled for my wallet, hands shaking so badly I dropped it. My driver's license scattered across the marble. Marcus picked it up with careful courtesy and returned to his desk computer.
His frown deepened as he clicked through screens. "Ms. Richardson, according to our records, David Elliott has been listed as the sole owner since purchase. He's signed all maintenance agreements, paid all HOA fees from his account, registered all guest parking passes."
"That's impossible. I bought the apartment. I wrote the check."
But even as I said it, memories flickered through my mind like a corrupted film reel. David insisting he handle the closing paperwork because I was too stressed with work. David saying he'd set up the utilities and HOA payments to "take one thing off my plate." David who always signed for packages, who always dealt with building management, who always introduced himself to neighbors as "the owner of 4C."
How many years had I been erased from my own home?
"I need to find my purchase documents," I whispered.
Marcus's expression had shifted to concern. "Ms. Richardson, I think you should—"
Shouting erupted from outside, cutting him off. Through the lobby's glass doors, I saw them: a mob of young women, maybe twenty strong, all holding phones high. They were filming, screaming, their faces twisted with righteous fury.
"There she is!" someone shrieked.
They surged toward the entrance. Marcus moved to intercept, but they were too fast, too many. The doors burst open and suddenly I was surrounded by a wall of bodies and phone cameras, all pointed at me like weapons.
"Homewrecker!"
"Leave them alone!"
"Obsessed stalker!"
Their voices merged into a roar. I backed away, hands raised, but there was nowhere to go. The marble wall hit my spine.
"Please," I tried to say, but my voice disappeared under their chanting.
Something cold and wet exploded across my coat. Red paint, thick and viscous, splattered across my chest, my neck, my face. The crowd cheered. Another projectile hit me—an egg this time, shell fragments cutting my cheek as yolk dripped down my collar.
Marcus was shouting into his radio. "We need police! Now!"
More paint. More eggs. They were filming everything, capturing my humiliation in high definition, and I knew these videos would be everywhere within hours. More proof of my instability. More ammunition for Oaklynn's narrative.
"Leave them alone! Leave them alone!"
The chant hammered into my skull. I couldn't breathe. My eye injury throbbed with each heartbeat, pain radiating through my face.
Marcus grabbed my arm and yanked me toward the service corridor. I stumbled after him, paint-slicked and shaking, as he pulled me through an employee-only door. The metal clanged shut behind us, muffling the crowd's fury to a dull roar.
I collapsed against the concrete wall, sliding down until I sat on the cold floor. Red paint pooled around me. My hands wouldn't stop shaking.
Marcus crouched beside me, his radio crackling with incoming units. "Police are three minutes out," he said quietly. "Ms. Richardson, you need to file a report. About everything."
I stared at the paint on my trembling hands and wondered if there was enough of me left to file.
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