
From Love to Corporate Ruin
Chapter 2
I stared at the check in my hand, Carson's signature scrawled across the bottom. One hundred thousand dollars. The weight of it felt like a stone in my palm.
"You can't be serious," I whispered, looking up at him.
Carson's face remained impassive, his eyes cold in a way I'd never seen before. "Deadly serious, Lina. This is business."
"I won't do it," I said, my voice stronger than I expected. "I can't apologize for something I didn't do."
He snatched the check back, tearing it in half with deliberate precision. "Then you leave me no choice."
The threat hung in the air between us, vague but unmistakable. I clutched my paint-stained fingers into fists, nails digging into my palms.
"This is about more than just business," I said, searching his face for any trace of the man I loved. "This is about our relationship. About trust."
Carson's laugh was hollow. "Don't be naive. Everything is about business."
I left his office with my head held high, though inside I was crumbling. The man I loved was slipping away, replaced by someone I barely recognized.
---
That evening, I lit candles around my studio. The warm glow danced across the canvases stacked against the walls—years of my work, my soul poured onto each surface. I'd prepared Carson's favorite meal: herb-crusted lamb with roasted vegetables and a bottle of the Bordeaux we'd shared on our first anniversary.
I wanted to remind him of what we had built together. Of the nights he'd sit in that very chair, watching me paint until dawn. Of how he'd once called my hands "magic wands" when they created the masterpiece hanging above my workspace—the large abstract painting of us intertwined, which he'd lovingly framed with an expensive gold border.
"This is our future," he'd said then, kissing my forehead as I leaned against his chest.
I arranged the table with my best dishes, the ones with tiny chips on the edges that made them imperfectly perfect. Just like us.
"He'll understand," I whispered to myself, smoothing down my dress—the soft blue one he'd always said brought out my eyes. "He has to."
The clock ticked past eight, then nine. At nine-thirty, headlights swept across the studio windows. My heart leapt as I heard the crunch of tires on gravel.
"I made dinner," I called out, hurrying to the door. "Your favorite."
The door swung open. Carson stood there, his silhouette dark against the night. But he wasn't alone.
Harmoni stepped into the light, her lips curved in a smile that didn't reach her eyes. Behind them, I glimpsed the gleam of metal in Carson's hands.
"Carson?" My voice wavered as I noticed what he was holding—a crowbar, its surface catching the candlelight. Harmoni clutched a hammer, her knuckles white around the handle.
"You should have taken the money," Carson said, his voice flat.
Before I could respond, he stepped past me into the studio. His eyes swept over my work—over my life—with cold calculation.
"Carson, please," I begged, following him. "Let's talk about this."
"There's nothing to talk about." He moved toward my easel where a half-finished portrait waited. "You made your choice."
The crowbar swung. I heard the crack before I felt the pain in my chest.
"No!" I screamed, lunging forward as he struck again, tearing through canvas and frame.
Harmoni circled around me, her heels clicking on the wooden floor. "Such a shame," she murmured, lifting a smaller canvas—a study of wildflowers I'd painted last spring. "All this... clutter."
She smashed it against the edge of a table, glass shattering across the floor.
"Stop!" I cried, trying to grab her arm. "These are my children! My life!"
Carson laughed—a sound I'd never heard from him before. "Your children? These aren't even real."
He moved to the sculpture in the corner, my most recent work. A woman emerging from darkness into light, her face turned toward an unseen horizon.
"Please," I whispered, tears streaming down my face. "Not that one."
The crowbar rose again. I couldn't watch. I turned away as the sound of splintering wood and cracking stone filled the studio.
Behind me, Harmoni had discovered my paints. The tubes hissed as she squeezed them, colors bleeding across the floor in violent streaks.
"Waste of money," she said, grinding her heel into a tube of cadmium red.
I fell to my knees among the ruins of my work. The dinner I'd prepared sat untouched on the table, candles burning low as Carson and Harmoni systematically destroyed everything I'd built.
"You can't do this," I sobbed, reaching for a shattered canvas. "You can't just erase me."
Carson's shadow fell across me. I looked up to see him standing over me, crowbar in hand, his eyes no longer holding any trace of the man I'd loved.
"Oh, Lina," he said softly. "I already have."
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