
From Rejection to Deception
From Rejection to Deception Chapter 1
The penthouse door crashed open, startling me from my half-sleep on the living room sofa. I'd been waiting for Dylan to return from the Monaco Grand Prix after-party, though I knew better than to expect him sober. Three years of this routine had taught me exactly what to anticipate after his victories—the stench of expensive champagne, the slurred words, and the cold indifference that had replaced what once was love.
I struggled to my feet, my left leg stiff and aching as it always was late at night. The familiar pain shot through my hip as I steadied myself against the arm of the sofa.
"Dylan, congratulations on the win," I said softly, limping toward him as he stumbled into our marble foyer. The lights of Los Angeles glittered through the floor-to-ceiling windows behind me, casting long shadows across the room.
He didn't answer, didn't even look at me. Instead, he shoved past, his shoulder connecting with mine hard enough to make me stumble. My bad leg buckled, and I caught myself against the wall, the impact sending a fresh wave of pain through my damaged limb.
"God, do you have to do that?" he slurred, glaring at me as if my near-fall was a performance put on solely to inconvenience him.
"Do what?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
"That..." he gestured vaguely toward my leg, his handsome face twisted with disgust. "That limping thing. You know how it looks when you're hobbling around at events? Everyone stares. It's fucking embarrassing."
The words cut deeper than they should have. After three years, I should have developed immunity to his cruelty, but each barb still found fresh flesh.
"I didn't attend tonight's event," I reminded him quietly, following him toward the bedroom. My fingers automatically went to my left thigh, rubbing the scarred muscle beneath my silk pajama pants—a nervous habit I'd developed since the accident.
"Thank God for small mercies," he muttered, yanking at his bow tie.
I moved to help him, an old instinct from the days when my touch was welcome. He recoiled as if burned.
"I don't need your help," he snapped, stumbling toward the bedroom. I followed anyway, watching as he wrestled with his tuxedo jacket, finally ripping it off and throwing it to the floor.
He turned to face me then, his blue eyes—once warm with love—now cold and distant as arctic ice. Something in his expression made my stomach clench. There was a finality there I hadn't seen before.
Dylan reached into his discarded jacket, pulled out his wallet, and extracted a platinum credit card. With a flick of his wrist, he sent it spinning across the room toward me. It hit my chest and clattered to the hardwood floor.
"We're done," he said, his voice suddenly, terrifyingly sober. "I want you gone by morning. The card has enough to set you up somewhere else. I don't care where."
The world tilted beneath my feet. Despite years of his coldness, despite knowing our relationship had become a hollow shell, I'd never truly believed he would end it. Foolishly, I'd clung to the memory of what we once had, to the man who had once looked at me with adoration instead of contempt.
"Dylan, please," I whispered, but he had already turned away, dismissing me as easily as he might a disappointing race result.
"I've given you three years out of guilt," he said, his back to me as he pulled off his cufflinks. "That's enough. It's over."
I bent slowly, painfully, to pick up the credit card, clutching it in my trembling hand. Without another word, I retreated to the bathroom, locking the door behind me. The fluorescent light flickered on automatically, harsh and unforgiving, highlighting every line of exhaustion on my face.
With mechanical movements, I opened the medicine cabinet and removed the envelope I'd hidden there earlier today. Inside were the test results I'd been too afraid to look at while alone. Now, with my world already crumbling, what was one more blow?
I unfolded the clinical pages, my engineering mind automatically scanning for the critical data points. Blood clots. Progressive. Spreading throughout major vessels. Estimated survival without aggressive intervention: three to six months.
The bathroom spun around me. My knees hit the cold tile floor first, then my palms. The pain in my leg seemed distant now, insignificant compared to the death sentence in my hands and the knowledge that I would face it completely alone.
Through the door, I could hear Dylan moving around the bedroom, the sounds of his life continuing while mine had just been given an expiration date.
From Rejection to Deception of Contents
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