
Finding Love in Paris
Chapter 1
I traced my finger along the delicate arch I'd sketched, losing myself in the graceful lines of the Parisian façade that existed only in my imagination and on this worn page. These quiet moments with my sketchbook were the only times I felt truly myself anymore—when Ryan was at work and our apartment held nothing but silence and the soft scratch of my pencil against paper.
Seven years. Seven years of my life poured into a relationship that had somehow morphed into a hundred days of cold silence, punctuated only by Ryan's critical remarks or dismissive grunts. How had we gotten here? The question haunted me as I shaded the intricate stonework of my imaginary building.
My phone buzzed beside me, shattering my concentration. Madison Clarke's name flashed across the screen. My stomach tightened. Madison had been our junior at UCLA—always hovering around Ryan with admiring eyes and cutting remarks disguised as compliments for me.
*Coffee? We need to talk. It's important. Blu Jam on Melrose, 2pm?*
I stared at the message, dread pooling in my stomach. Madison had never wanted to meet me alone before. Something was wrong.
---
The café buzzed with the typical West Hollywood crowd—influencers posing with elaborate lattes, industry types hunched over laptops. Madison sat at a corner table, sunglasses perched on her head, scrolling through her phone with manicured nails that matched her perfectly curated outfit.
"Sarah! You came!" Her voice carried that false sweetness that always set my teeth on edge. She air-kissed near my cheeks, her expensive perfume overwhelming me.
"You said it was important," I replied, sliding into the seat across from her.
Madison's smile widened, reminding me of a predator showing its teeth. "It is. I wanted you to be the first to know." She reached into her designer bag and pulled out a small black and white image, sliding it across the table with theatrical slowness. "I'm pregnant."
The world seemed to tilt beneath me. I stared at the ultrasound, my fingers gone numb against the cool surface of the table.
"Ryan's so excited," Madison continued, her voice dripping with satisfaction. "We've been talking about how this will work. He thinks you'll be such a wonderful stepmother."
I looked up, certain I'd misheard. "Stepmother?"
Madison nodded, taking a delicate sip of her green juice. "Ryan doesn't want to disrupt your... arrangement." She waved her hand dismissively. "He values how supportive you've always been. And now you can support both of us." Her smile never reached her eyes. "Isn't that perfect?"
I sat frozen, my mind struggling to process her words. Ryan expected me to stay. To raise his child with another woman. To watch them together in the home we shared.
"He said you'd understand," Madison added, studying my face with barely concealed triumph. "After all, it's been what—three months since you two have even slept together? He has needs, Sarah."
Something broke inside me then, but I couldn't let her see it. I nodded mechanically, my face a careful mask as Madison detailed how she would be moving in, how they'd take the master bedroom, how I could help with the nursery. Each word was another nail in the coffin of what I'd thought my life would be.
---
Three days later, I found myself in a trendy restaurant surrounded by Ryan's friends—the same people who had watched our relationship deteriorate and said nothing. Ryan sat beside Madison, his arm draped possessively around her shoulders. I'd been placed at the far end of the table, like an afterthought.
I reached for my water glass, my hand trembling slightly. As I lifted it, my elbow knocked against Madison's purse, sending it toppling. Water splashed across the table, droplets darkening the expensive leather.
"Oh my God!" Madison shrieked, leaping up. "That's a limited edition!"
Ryan's face hardened as he turned to me, his eyes cold. "What the hell, Sarah? Can't you be careful for once?"
"I'm sorry, it was an accident—" I began, already reaching for napkins.
"Sorry doesn't fix a three-thousand-dollar bag," he cut me off, his voice rising. The entire table fell silent, watching. "You need to apologize properly."
I stared at him, confused. "I just did."
His lips curled into a cruel smile that I'd never seen before. "No. Properly." He gestured to the floor. "On your knees."
I thought he was joking until I saw the deadly seriousness in his eyes, the anticipation on Madison's face, the uncomfortable but voyeuristic stares of his friends.
"Ryan, please—" I whispered.
"Now," he commanded, loud enough for nearby tables to turn and look. "Or you can find somewhere else to sleep tonight."
Slowly, feeling as though I was moving through molasses, I slid from my chair and knelt on the hard restaurant floor. Seven years of love, of sacrifice, of believing in us, had led to this moment of complete humiliation.
"I'm sorry, Madison," I said, my voice hollow.
Ryan smirked. "Now go get us all fresh drinks. And clean up this mess."
As I rose on shaking legs, something crystallized within me. The love I had nursed and protected for seven years didn't just die in that moment—it was murdered, executed publicly for the amusement of people who had never cared about me at all.
I walked to the bar, my back straight, my face composed. They couldn't see that inside, I was already planning my escape.
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