
Ending Engagement over Lies
Ending Engagement over Lies Chapter 1
The crystal chandeliers cast warm amber light across the hotel ballroom, their glow reflecting off the polished marble floors where my company's annual Thanksgiving team-building gala was in full swing. I stood at the front of the room, champagne flute in hand, watching my employees mingle and laugh—a sight that should have filled me with pride. After all, I'd built this company from nothing, and tonight's celebration in this upscale venue was a testament to our success.
"Ladies and gentlemen," I called out, tapping my glass with a silver spoon. The conversations gradually died down as faces turned toward me. "I want to thank you all for making this year our most successful yet. This beautiful venue"—I gestured around the opulent ballroom with its floor-to-ceiling windows and elaborate floral arrangements—"represents not just where we are tonight, but how far we've come together."
Applause rippled through the crowd, and I caught sight of Damien near the bar. My childhood sweetheart, my fiancé, the man who was supposed to be my partner in everything. I expected to see pride in his eyes, maybe that familiar warm smile that had captured my heart all those years ago. Instead, his face was a mask of barely contained fury.
The applause faded, but I continued, trying to ignore the cold knot forming in my stomach. "The eighty thousand we invested in tonight's venue rental shows our commitment to celebrating the people who make our success possible—"
"Eighty thousand?" Damien's voice cut through the ballroom like a blade. Conversations stopped mid-sentence. Champagne glasses paused halfway to lips. The entire room seemed to hold its breath as my fiancé pushed through the crowd toward me, his face flushed with anger.
My heart hammered against my ribs. "Damien, what—"
"You spent eighty thousand dollars on this?" His voice rose with each word, carrying across the silent ballroom. Every eye was on us now—my employees, our colleagues, people I worked with every day witnessing my personal humiliation. "Are you completely out of your mind?"
The champagne flute trembled in my hand. In all our years together, Damien had never spoken to me like this, especially not in public. "It's an investment in our team, in our company culture—"
"It's a waste!" He was close enough now that I could see the veins pulsing in his neck, smell the alcohol on his breath. "Do you know what that money could have done? What it should have been used for?"
I glanced around the room, seeing my assistant director's shocked expression, the uncomfortable shuffling of my marketing team, the way conversations had died into whispered murmurs. This was my company, my gala, my moment—and he was destroying it.
"Damien, please, let's discuss this privately—"
"No." His hand slammed down on the nearest table, making the silverware jump. "You want to make grand announcements? Let's make one. That eighty thousand should go to Ellianna Meyer instead."
The name hit me like a physical blow. Ellianna—our twenty-two-year-old intern with her glossy blonde hair and wide innocent eyes. The girl who'd been working at our company for barely three months.
"What?" The word came out as barely a whisper.
"You heard me. Transfer that money to Ellianna. She'd use it better than throwing it away on some overpriced party." Damien's eyes were wild now, completely focused on me with an intensity that felt more like hatred than love. "She deserves it more than this... this ridiculous display."
The ballroom had become a tomb. I could hear my own heartbeat, the distant clink of ice in someone's glass, the soft rustle of fabric as people shifted uncomfortably. My employees—people who respected me, looked up to me—were watching their CEO being publicly berated by her own fiancé.
"I... I don't understand." My voice sounded foreign to my own ears, small and broken. "Why would you want me to give company money to an intern?"
But even as I asked, pieces were clicking into place. The way Damien's eyes lit up when Ellianna entered a room. How he always seemed to know her schedule, her projects, her needs. The protective way he'd just spoken about her, as if she were precious to him.
As if she mattered more than I did.
The silence stretched on, heavy and suffocating, while Damien stared at me with those cold, unfamiliar eyes. Somewhere in the crowd, I heard the soft sound of someone setting down their glass and heading for the exit.
My gala—my celebration of everything I'd built—was crumbling around me, one whispered conversation and uncomfortable glance at a time.
Hours later, I sat alone in my office, the building empty except for the night security guard making his rounds. The childhood photo of Damien and me still sat on my desk—two kids with gap-toothed grins and their arms around each other, believing in forever.
I picked up the frame with shaking hands, studying the boy who'd grown into a man I no longer recognized. The boy who'd promised to love me always had just humiliated me in front of my entire company. For an intern.
The pieces of the evening replayed in my mind like a broken record. Damien's fury over the venue cost. His demand that I give the money to Ellianna instead. The protective, almost possessive way he'd spoken about her.
And suddenly, I was questioning everything. Every late night he'd claimed to be working. Every text message he'd hidden from me. Every time he'd mentioned Ellianna's name with just a little too much interest.
I set the photo face-down on my desk and stared out the window at the city lights below, wondering how long I'd been blind to what was happening right in front of me.
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