
Escaping His Obsessive Love
Chapter 2
The California sun felt foreign against my skin as I stood outside Callan Roberts' tech company. Four years in New York had accustomed me to gray skies and constant rain—much like my relationship with Harrison. I smoothed down my simple blouse, wishing I'd chosen something more impressive for this meeting. But impressive to whom? The Claire Brown who had left New York no longer cared about appearances.
The receptionist smiled when I gave my name. "Mr. Roberts is expecting you. Fourteenth floor."
I nodded, my fingers unconsciously touching my wrist—that old habit from childhood that never quite faded. The elevator ride gave me time to rehearse what I'd say to Callan after all these years. We'd been academic rivals in college, constantly vying for the top position in our classes. Now I was... what? A runaway fiancée with nothing to show for four years of devotion.
The doors opened to a sleek, modern office space. And there he was—Callan Roberts, looking exactly as I remembered, except more confident, more successful. His dark hair was slightly longer now, his shoulders broader beneath his tailored shirt.
"Claire?" His eyes widened as he approached me. "I almost didn't recognize you."
I forced a smile. "Four years changes a person."
Something flickered in his eyes—concern, confusion. "You're not the same Claire I remember from Princeton."
"Is that a bad thing?" I asked, my voice smaller than I intended.
"It's like seeing a faded photograph of someone who used to be in full color." He gestured toward his office. "Come in. Tell me why you're really here."
I followed him, feeling my shoulders curve inward—a posture I'd developed to make myself smaller, less noticeable. Less targetable.
Inside his office, Callan offered me a seat. "Your email was... cryptic. You said you needed a fresh start?"
"I left New York," I said simply. "I left Harrison. The engagement is off."
Callan's eyebrows shot up. "Harrison Evans? The guy who—" He stopped himself. "Never mind. What do you need from me, Claire?"
"A job," I whispered. "And somewhere to stay until I find my own place."
He studied me for a long moment. "What happened to you?"
The question was so unexpected, so direct, that tears sprang to my eyes. "I don't know," I admitted. "I think I lost myself."
---
The restaurant Callan chose was small and intimate, with soft lighting that made everyone look kinder than they really were. Over wine—which I rarely drank around Harrison—I found myself telling Callan everything.
"He never loved me," I said, staring into my glass. "For four years, I tried to be everything he wanted. I gave up my art, my friends, my dreams. I thought if I just kept trying..."
"Did he hurt you?" Callan's voice was gentle but firm.
"Not with his hands," I replied. "But words can leave scars too."
Callan reached across the table, his fingers stopping just short of touching mine. "Claire, do you remember that paper you wrote on artificial intelligence ethics? Professor Harmon said it was the best work he'd seen in twenty years."
I blinked, surprised by the sudden change of subject. "That was a long time ago."
"It was brilliant," he insisted. "And so were you. Where's that woman now?"
"She died," I whispered, a tear sliding down my cheek. "She disappeared somewhere between trying to please my family and trying to please Harrison."
Callan's eyes held mine. "I don't believe that. I think she's still in there, waiting to come back."
For the first time in years, I felt something stir inside me—something that felt dangerously like hope.
---
Harrison's study in New York was dark except for the lamp on his desk. Rain lashed against the windows as he sat motionless, staring at the leather-bound journal in his hands.
Everly's journal.
He'd found it accidentally, searching for documents in her room after she'd left for a charity gala. The first few pages had seemed harmless enough—until he reached the entry dated four years ago.
*"Today I convinced Mother that Claire is too sensitive for the Evans merger. Poor Claire—always so fragile after that kidnapping. Harrison needs someone strong like me. I've already planted seeds about Claire's instability. Soon they'll see I'm the daughter they should be proud of."*
Harrison's hands trembled as he flipped through more pages, each one more damning than the last. Calculated manipulations. Lies about Claire's behavior. Plans to secure her position in both the family and Harrison's heart.
And then, tucked between two pages, a photograph fell out—a childhood photo of him and a young girl building a snowman during a blizzard.
The girl wasn't Everly.
It was Claire.
Harrison's world tilted as memories crashed together—Claire pulling him from the snowdrift when they were children, wrapping her scarf around his frozen fingers, leading him to safety.
Not Everly. Never Everly.
It had always been Claire.
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