
Felix's Protection for Her
Chapter 2
My feet carried me through the maze of Manhattan streets without direction or purpose. The watch box felt like it was burning through my palm, its weight growing heavier with each step. Three hundred thousand dollars. The number echoed in my mind like a cruel joke.
I found myself standing outside the Meridian Hotel, its golden facade gleaming under the streetlights. Couples strolled past me, hand in hand, lost in their own romantic bubbles. The sight made my stomach churn. How naive they looked. How naive I had been.
A man emerged from the hotel's revolving doors, adjusting his charcoal suit jacket. He moved with quiet confidence, his dark hair catching the light as he paused to check his phone. Something about his stillness in the chaos of the city drew my attention.
"Excuse me," I heard myself say, my voice hollow and strange.
He looked up, and I was struck by his eyes—deep brown, intelligent, with a wariness that suggested he'd seen his share of the world's cruelties. For a moment, neither of us spoke.
"Are you alright?" His voice was gentle, concerned in a way that made my chest tighten.
I laughed, the sound bitter and broken. "Alright? No, I don't think I'll ever be alright again." I held up the blue box, its elegant ribbon mocking me. "Do you know what this is?"
He studied the distinctive Patek Philippe packaging, his expression unreadable. "An expensive watch, I'd imagine."
"Three hundred thousand dollars," I said, the words tasting like ash. "For someone who's been screwing my best friend behind my back for God knows how long." My hands trembled as I thrust the box toward him. "Here. Take it."
His eyebrows lifted in surprise. "I'm sorry?"
"Take it," I repeated, my voice growing stronger with each word. "Love means nothing. Loyalty means nothing. Five years of devotion, of believing in someone, of sacrificing everything—it all means nothing. So why should this watch mean anything either?"
He didn't reach for the box immediately. Instead, he stepped closer, his presence somehow calming despite my emotional storm. "You don't know me. Why would you give this to a stranger?"
"Because strangers can't betray you," I whispered, tears threatening again. "Because maybe someone who doesn't know me deserves something beautiful more than someone who's been lying to my face for years."
Something shifted in his expression—a flicker of understanding, of recognition for the pain I was drowning in. Slowly, carefully, he accepted the box.
"What's your name?" he asked softly.
"Does it matter?" I turned away, but his voice stopped me.
"It matters to me."
I looked back at him, this stranger who'd shown me more genuine concern in five minutes than Derek had in months. "Karina."
"Felix," he replied, tucking the box inside his jacket with surprising reverence. "Would you like to talk about it? There's a café around the corner that's usually quiet this time of night."
I should have said no. Should have gone home, confronted Derek, demanded answers. Instead, I found myself nodding, following this gentle stranger down the sidewalk.
The café was exactly as he'd described—dimly lit, nearly empty, with soft jazz playing in the background. Felix guided me to a corner booth, ordering two coffees without asking what I wanted. When the waitress left, the silence stretched between us.
"Five years," I began, my voice barely above a whisper. "I gave up everything for him. My family warned me, but I thought they just didn't understand. I thought love was supposed to be about sacrifice, about believing in someone even when the world doesn't."
Felix listened without interruption, his attention complete and unwavering. No judgment in his eyes, no impatience. Just... presence.
"I found out tonight," I continued, the words spilling out like water through a broken dam. "A video. Him and my best friend at some party, and they... they were..." I couldn't finish the sentence.
"I'm sorry," Felix said simply, and somehow those two words carried more weight than all of Derek's elaborate promises ever had.
My phone buzzed against the table. Derek's name flashed on the screen, followed immediately by another call. Then another.
"He's looking for me," I said, staring at the device like it might bite. "He probably thinks I'm getting ready for our anniversary dinner. He has no idea that I know."
Felix's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "What will you do?"
I turned off my phone, the screen going dark. "I don't know. For the first time in five years, I have absolutely no idea what comes next."
The coffee arrived, steam rising between us like incense. Felix wrapped his hands around his cup, studying me with those perceptive eyes.
"Sometimes not knowing is the first step toward finding out who you really are," he said quietly.
Somewhere across the city, Derek was probably pacing our apartment, wondering where I was. Alejandra might be there too, playing the concerned friend while her betrayal sat like poison between us.
But here, in this quiet corner with a stranger who'd accepted my broken gift without question, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years.
I felt seen.
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