
Finding Love in Paris
Chapter 2
I walked back to our apartment in a daze, the night air doing nothing to cool the burning humiliation that still scorched my cheeks. My fingers trembled as I unlocked the door, each movement mechanical, divorced from the storm raging inside me. The apartment was dark except for the blue glow of the television, illuminating Ryan's profile as he lounged on our sofa—the one I'd spent three months' salary on when we first moved in together.
He didn't look up when I entered, his attention fixed on the basketball game, a beer dangling from his fingers. The casual disregard after what he'd done at the restaurant made something twist painfully in my chest.
"You're late," he said finally, still not looking at me.
I swallowed hard, tasting bile. The Sarah from this morning might have apologized immediately, might have scrambled to explain. But that Sarah had died on her knees in that restaurant. What remained was a hollow shell, a puppet whose strings I was learning to pull in a performance of submission.
"I'm sorry," I whispered, my voice trembling just enough to sound genuine. I moved closer, perching on the edge of the sofa, my eyes downcast. "I've been thinking about everything, and... you're right."
That got his attention. Ryan turned, suspicion flickering across his features before settling into smug satisfaction. "About?"
"About Madison. About the baby." The words felt like glass in my throat. "I overreacted. I want to support you both. I want to be... a good stepmother."
Ryan studied me, searching for any sign of deception. I let my shoulders slump, my eyes fill with tears that weren't entirely fake. Seven years of love had twisted into something unrecognizable, but I could use that pain now, channel it into this performance of capitulation.
"I even thought," I continued, forcing enthusiasm into my voice, "that we could redecorate the apartment. Make it nicer for when the baby comes."
A slow smile spread across Ryan's face—the same cruel smile I'd seen at the restaurant. He reached out, patting my hand condescendingly.
"That's my girl. I knew you'd come around." He turned back to the game, dismissing me. "Madison's moving in tomorrow. We'll need the master bedroom, obviously."
I nodded, though he wasn't looking. "Obviously."
That night, I lay awake on the couch, staring at the ceiling, mentally cataloging every asset we shared, every account I had access to, every sacrifice I'd made. Each memory was a brick in the foundation of my resolve.
---
The invasion began at nine the next morning. Madison swept in with three designer suitcases and a smirk that said she'd already won. Ryan carried her things directly into our bedroom—my bedroom—while I stood in the hallway, clutching my coffee mug like a shield.
"The guest room's all yours now," Ryan informed me, not bothering to hide his amusement at my displacement. "We've cleared some space for your stuff."
'Some space' turned out to be a single drawer and a corner of the closet in the guest room. The rest of my clothes—carefully selected pieces I'd saved for over years—had been unceremoniously piled on the bed. My books were stacked haphazardly on the floor, my toiletries shoved into a plastic bag.
I stood in the doorway of what was now 'my' room, listening to Madison's laughter from the master bedroom as she explored what had once been mine. My fingers curled into fists at my sides, nails biting into my palms.
"Remember to hang up your stuff," Ryan called out as he passed. "Madison hates clutter."
I nodded mutely, the puppet strings holding me upright as I began to fold my life into smaller and smaller spaces.
---
Three days later, I returned from grocery shopping to find Madison posing for selfies in my cream cashmere coat—the one my mother had sent for my birthday two years ago, the only luxury item I'd allowed myself to keep when I left New York.
"That's my coat," I said quietly, setting down the grocery bags.
Madison's eyes flickered to mine in the mirror, challenging. "It looks better on me anyway."
"It's vintage Chanel," I explained, trying to keep my voice level. "It was a gift from my mother."
Ryan appeared from the kitchen, frowning. "Seriously, Sarah? You're being petty about clothes now?"
"I'm not being petty, I just—"
"God, you're so jealous," he cut me off, moving to stand behind Madison, his hands possessively on her shoulders. "It's not a good look on you."
Madison smirked, snapping another photo. "I'm posting this one. My followers will love it."
I watched as she tagged the photo with #vintagechanel and #parisianvibes, claiming my coat and my memories as her own. Something cold and calculating settled in my chest, replacing the last embers of what I'd once felt for Ryan.
That night, after they'd gone to bed, I pulled out my phone and typed a message I'd been composing in my mind for days: "Dad, it's me. I need your help. I'm ready to come home."
The response came almost immediately: "The jet will be ready whenever you are, sweetheart."
I stared at the screen, a bitter smile touching my lips. Seven years of independence ending with a text message. But as I listened to Ryan's soft snores from the master bedroom, I knew this wasn't surrender—it was the first move in a game they didn't even know we were playing.
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