
Ethan's Costly Confession
Chapter 2
Morning light streamed through the windows of our Brooklyn loft, casting long shadows across the hardwood floors. I stood by the kitchen island, my fingers tracing the rim of my coffee mug as I watched Ethan move around the space with the casual confidence of a man who believed himself loved for who he was. The bitter taste in my mouth had nothing to do with the coffee.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
Ethan glanced up from his sketchbook, his dark hair falling across his forehead in that way that used to make my heart skip. "About what?"
"About Victoria." The name felt like glass in my mouth. "And about how I'm apparently just her replacement."
His pencil stilled. For a moment, something like panic flashed across his face before he masked it with a smile that didn't reach his eyes. "What are you talking about?"
"I heard you and Marcus yesterday." I clutched my silver locket, my mother's gift, drawing strength from its familiar weight. "At the gallery. Before the party."
Ethan set down his sketchbook and crossed the room, his movements deliberately slow. He took my hands in his, but they felt cold against my skin.
"Isabella, you misunderstood." His voice was soft, practiced. "Marcus was just being an ass. You know how he gets."
I pulled my hands away. "Don't lie to me. Not now."
"I'm not lying." But his eyes slid away from mine, focusing on a point over my shoulder. "What Marcus said—it's not that simple."
"Then explain it to me," I challenged, my voice breaking despite my efforts. "Explain how I'm not just a stand-in for your precious Victoria."
He sighed, running a hand through his hair—that familiar gesture that once seemed endearing but now felt calculated. "Look, we all have pasts. Yes, you and Victoria share certain... qualities. But that doesn't mean what we have isn't real."
"What qualities exactly?" I pressed. "My hair color? The way I play music? Or just my willingness to put your needs before my own?"
"You're being dramatic." His tone shifted to dismissive. "I'm sorry if you overheard something that upset you, but we have that dinner with the Guggenheim curator tonight. Can we just move past this?"
I stared at him, truly seeing him perhaps for the first time. The distance in his eyes wasn't new—it had always been there, a glacial coolness I'd mistaken for artistic depth. He wasn't sorry I was hurt; he was sorry I had discovered the truth.
"Sure," I whispered, the fight draining from me. "We'll talk about it later."
His smile returned, relieved. He kissed my forehead—a perfunctory gesture—before returning to his sketches. "I promise tonight will be perfect."
But the promise rang hollow, and the space between us stretched wide as an ocean.
---
One week later, I stood in the corner of Ethan's newest gallery opening, a champagne flute clutched in my hand like a lifeline. The space buzzed with New York's art elite, their conversations a dull roar in my ears. Ethan had been distant all week, our conversation about Victoria buried under layers of work commitments and polite avoidance.
I watched him across the room, animated and charming as he described his latest collection to a group of critics. This was the Ethan everyone else saw—passionate, magnetic, alive. When had he last looked at me with that intensity?
"To Ethan Cross," announced the gallery owner, raising his glass. "Whose vision continues to challenge and inspire us all."
Ethan smiled, nodding graciously as he moved to stand beside me, his arm settling around my waist for the toast. I leaned into him, desperate for connection, for reassurance that I wasn't losing my mind—or him.
"And to Isabella," Ethan added, squeezing my hip. "My muse and support through it all."
The crowd murmured appreciatively, glasses raised. I forced a smile, the word 'muse' echoing hollowly. Not partner. Not love. Muse—interchangeable, replaceable.
Then the gallery door opened, and everything changed.
She entered like a force of nature—tall, elegant, wrapped in a black Chanel slip dress that clung to her body like water. Her dark hair fell in perfect waves around a face that was hauntingly, terrifyingly familiar. It was like looking into a mirror that reflected a more polished, confident version of myself.
Victoria Sterling.
Ethan's glass froze halfway to his lips. I felt his body tense against mine, felt the sudden electric current that seemed to run through him. His eyes locked with hers across the crowded room, and in that moment, I became invisible.
"Excuse me," he murmured, not even looking at me as he extracted himself from my side.
I stood alone, champagne warming in my hand, as Ethan crossed the gallery floor with purposeful strides. The crowd parted for him like the Red Sea, all eyes tracking his movement toward Victoria. Her ruby lips curved into a smile that held secrets and promises.
From my abandoned corner, I watched as Ethan took Victoria's hand, bringing it to his lips in a gesture that seemed both practiced and genuine. She laughed—a musical sound that carried across the room—and touched his face with familiar intimacy.
I made my way to the bar, ordering something stronger than champagne. From this new vantage point, I could see them clearly: Victoria twirling a lock of hair around her finger as she examined Ethan's newest painting, her body angled toward his, creating a private universe that excluded everyone else.
Ethan was transformed—animated, vibrant, his hands gesturing expressively as he explained his work. He laughed at something she said, the sound genuine in a way I hadn't heard in months. Perhaps ever.
I raised my glass to my lips, the whiskey burning a path down my throat that matched the fire of humiliation spreading across my cheeks. In the reflection of the bar mirror, I caught Marcus watching me, his expression a mixture of pity and guilt.
I turned away from both sights, focusing instead on the painting before me—a woman with her back turned, faceless and undefined, fading into shadow while brilliant light illuminated the empty space beside her.
I wondered if Ethan even realized what he had revealed in his art—that I had never truly been seen at all.
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