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Canvas of a New Life

After saving Joe Tanner from a river and childhood bullies, I dedicated a decade to his success. I sacrificed my own university dreams, worked grueling labor until my body bled, and sold my mother’s last memento to fund his education. Now a prestigious professor, Joe has abandoned the woman who built his world. In this young adult romance, I must finally choose myself. If he can discard our history so easily, I will leave him behind and find my own path forward.
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Chapter 2

I stepped into the beauty salon near campus, resignation letter ready in my bag.

The moment the manager, Lily, spotted me, she grabbed my hand with a warm smile.

"Belle, you can't quit! Where am I ever going to find another makeup artist as good as you? Just stay a little longer—please, just a little while more!"

Her enthusiasm made it difficult to refuse.

"Actually," she went on quickly, "there's a big job today. It's a high-paying group booking from a Great Eastern University student, a house call service. Do this one for me, I'm begging you."

In the end, I agreed.

Carrying my kit, I walked into the most luxurious four-person dormitory on campus, the one everyone whispered about.

The air was heavy with expensive perfume.

My eyes landed immediately on the ornate photo frame displayed on a desk.

In the picture, Joe stood with Ivy, smiling brightly, standing close together like the perfect couple.

A handsome man, and a beautiful woman—they looked like they belonged on the cover of a magazine.

"Wow, Ivy! This photo of you and Professor Joe is so sweet!" one girl exclaimed while fixing her eyebrows in the mirror.

Another chimed in, "Of course. Ivy's the daughter of a board director, and Professor Joe is her father's favorite. They're the campus dream couple!"

"I heard the families are already talking about an engagement. A perfect match."

I kept my head lowered, pretending I had not heard, focusing on laying out my tools.

"Wait a second, aren't you—"

The girl who had spoken earlier leaned closer, scrutinizing me. Recognition flickered across her face, followed by open disdain.

She turned to her friends and sneered, "It's her. I've seen her before—she used to bring Joe lunch all the time. Always dressed so plain, like some country bumpkin."

"I really don't get how someone like that could ever be with him. Totally drags down his image."

Their sharp words pierced through the air, every syllable striking my chest.

My hands froze for a moment. My face turned pale.

However, I did not look up, did not argue. I only worked faster, desperate to finish.

An hour later, the job was done.

I collected my pay and left the dorm as if fleeing a battlefield.

All I wanted was to get back to my little apartment—my one corner of the world.

However, at the campus gate, I stumbled upon the scene I dreaded most.

Joe and Ivy stood together by the roadside.

Ivy was on tiptoe, delicately straightening the gray scarf around his neck. Her fingertips brushed against his throat with intimate familiarity.

They were deep in conversation.

"Regarding the nonlinear solutions of the Schrödinger equation in quantum tunneling, I believe…"

"But the perturbation of the Planck constant could introduce uncertainty in the wave function collapse…"

Their voices blended with a string of academic jargon—words I could not even begin to understand.

I looked at them. I looked at him–the man who spoke with such grace and confidence, who seemed to belong to another world entirely.

In that instant, I realized we were already from two different worlds.

Joe noticed me. His smile faltered, expression tightening as if he wanted to say something.

However, I turned away first, quickening my steps, losing myself in the crowd, disappearing around the corner.

Like an outsider, I ran–clumsy and ashamed–away from their perfect picture.

When I finally got home, exhaustion dropped me onto the sofa.

Joe returned a little later.

The moment he walked in, his eyes fell on the untouched birthday cake still sitting on the table.

It hit him then—yesterday had been my birthday.

A flicker of guilt crossed his face.

"Belle, I'm sorry. I forgot… I'll make it up to you tomorrow with a gift."

His voice was cautious, almost pleading.

"No need," I replied coolly, not even looking at him.

The silence between us was heavy, suffocating. Then his phone rang.

It was Ivy.

The moment he answered, her frail, pitiful voice came through the line.

"Joe, I'm in so much pain… I tripped on the stairs just now. I twisted my ankle. I can't move."

Joe's expression changed instantly.

"Don't move. I'll be right there!"

Without a second thought, he grabbed his car keys. He did not even bother with a coat before rushing out the door.

The door slammed shut with a violent thud, a sound that seemed to draw a final line between our two worlds.

I stared at the empty apartment, knowing this time, he might not come back for a long while.

Slowly, I walked to the dining table and opened the cake box.

I picked up a spoon and, expressionless, began eating the cold, forgotten cake bite by bite.

The cream melted on my tongue with cloying sweetness. All I tasted was endless bitterness.