
Antarctic Triumph over Love
Chapter 2
The morning after the lakeside disaster, I woke to find Ethan already gone, his side of the bed cold. No note, no text—just absence. I'd spent half the night trying to explain what really happened at the dock, but Ethan had dismissed my every word with a wave of his hand. 'Victoria wouldn't do something like that,' he'd said with absolute certainty, as if he knew her better than the woman he'd asked to marry him.
I traced the empty space on my finger where my grandmother's vintage ring usually sat. I'd taken it off last night to apply lotion—a ritual before bed—and now it wasn't on my nightstand. Panic fluttered in my chest as I searched the bedroom, checking every surface, even crawling on my hands and knees to look under the furniture.
It wasn't just any ring. It was the last piece of my grandmother I had—a woman who'd taught me that passion and independence weren't things to apologize for. The delicate silver band with its modest emerald had been in my family for generations.
'Ethan,' I called his voicemail after my third unanswered call. 'Have you seen Grandma's ring? It's missing from the nightstand.'
He didn't call back until late afternoon, his voice distracted. 'Oh, that. I took it to be cleaned.'
Something in his tone made my stomach knot. 'Without telling me?'
'It's just a ring, Sarah. I'll be home late tonight.'
The Seattle Emerald Foundation Charity Gala was a sea of designer gowns and strategic networking. I stood alone near a column, feeling like a ghost in my own life as Ethan worked the room without me. Then I saw her—Victoria, radiant in a midnight blue gown, her neck adorned with diamonds. But it was the glint on her right hand that stopped my heart.
My grandmother's ring. The emerald catching the light as she gestured animatedly to a circle of captivated listeners.
I pushed through the crowd, a strange buzzing in my ears. 'Victoria,' I said, my voice steadier than I felt. 'That's my ring.'
She turned, surprise melting into something colder. 'Oh, Sarah. No, this was a gift from Ethan.' She twisted it on her finger. 'A token of renewal, he called it. So sweet.'
I felt Ethan's presence before I saw him, his hand coming to rest on the small of Victoria's back with easy familiarity.
'Ethan,' I said quietly. 'Why does Victoria have my grandmother's ring?'
His expression hardened. 'It looks better on her, don't you think? And it matches her eyes.'
'It's a family heirloom,' I said, my voice beginning to shake. 'It was my grandmother's.'
'You're being irrational,' he said dismissively. 'It's just a piece of jewelry. Victoria appreciates beautiful things.'
The implication hung in the air—that I didn't, that I wasn't. Victoria's smile widened, her fingers deliberately stroking the emerald.
'And I appreciate Sarah letting me borrow it,' she said sweetly, though we both knew there had been no permission asked or given.
I walked away before either could see the tears threatening to spill. That night, I slept in the guest room, the space between Ethan and me growing wider than just a hallway.
Two weeks later, I sat silently in the executive boardroom of Brooks Technologies, watching as Ethan introduced Marcus Chen as the new Chief Operating Officer. Marcus, Victoria's brother, with his smug smile and empty resume, would now be making twice what I'd sacrificed my research career to support.
'Marcus brings fresh perspectives to our team,' Ethan announced to the board, though everyone knew the only perspective Marcus brought was being Victoria's brother.
Afterward, in Ethan's office, I reminded him of my brother Leo's situation—how he'd interned all summer, working twelve-hour days, hoping for just an entry-level position.
'Leo doesn't have the right fit for our culture,' Ethan said without looking up from his computer.
'And Marcus does?' I asked incredulously. 'He has no experience in tech. Leo has a computer science degree.'
'Your brother can find a job somewhere else,' Ethan snapped. 'I'm not running a charity.'
Except for the Chens, apparently.
That evening, I returned home to find our dining room transformed—candles flickering, expensive wine breathing, delicate roses arranged in crystal. My heart lifted for a moment. Had Ethan remembered our anniversary after all?
'Surprise!' Victoria's voice shattered the illusion as she emerged from our kitchen, wearing an apron over her designer clothes. 'Ethan wanted to celebrate my one-month back in Seattle.'
Ethan appeared behind her, looking more animated than I'd seen him in months. He handed Victoria a small velvet box. 'A little welcome home gift.'
She opened it to reveal a platinum necklace with a sapphire pendant that must have cost thousands. Her squeal of delight echoed through the room as Ethan fastened it around her neck, his fingers lingering on her skin.
I stood frozen, remembering how our own anniversary two weeks ago had passed with nothing but a company smartwatch—the same one Ethan had given to all his executives, still in its corporate packaging.
'Isn't it beautiful, Sarah?' Victoria turned to me, her hand touching the sapphire with reverence. 'Ethan has such exquisite taste.'
In that moment, watching them together in the home I shared with my fiancé, I realized with stark clarity that I was losing more than just material possessions to Victoria Chen. I was losing pieces of myself—my past, my present, and what I had once believed would be my future.
You may also like





