
From Rejection to Deception
Chapter 2
Morning light filtered through the penthouse windows, highlighting the dust motes dancing in the air. I hadn't slept. How could I? Between Dylan's ultimatum and my medical death sentence, unconsciousness had remained elusive, a luxury I couldn't afford.
My fingers trembled as I folded what little clothing I could call my own into a worn suitcase. Three years in this penthouse, and I had so little to show for it. The designer dresses Dylan had once loved seeing me in remained untouched in the closet—they belonged to a different Maya, one who could walk without a limp, one whose body wasn't betraying her with every heartbeat.
The click of the front door opening made me freeze. Dylan had left hours ago, muttering something about meeting his agent. I wasn't expecting him back so soon.
But it wasn't Dylan who appeared in the bedroom doorway.
"You must be Maya," said a statuesque blonde, her voice dripping with honeyed venom. She wore a cream designer suit that probably cost more than six months of the rent I'd soon need to pay. "I'm Victoria Hayes. Dylan's fiancée."
The word 'fiancée' hit me like a physical blow. I steadied myself against the dresser, my bad leg threatening to buckle.
"That was... fast," I managed, hating how weak my voice sounded.
Victoria's perfectly painted lips curved into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Not really. We've been seeing each other for months. Dylan just needed to... clear out some old baggage."
She glanced pointedly at my suitcase, then at me. The message couldn't have been clearer if she'd shouted it: I was the baggage.
"I see," I said, turning back to my packing to hide the tears threatening to spill. Months. He'd been with her for months while sleeping in the bed next to me, while I'd been silently enduring his cruelty, hoping for a miracle that would never come.
"Dylan asked me to make sure you're out by noon," Victoria continued, examining her manicured nails. "He has some associates coming over, and it would be... awkward."
I heard the front door open again, and Dylan's voice called out, "Vic? You here?"
"In the bedroom, darling!" she called back, her entire demeanor transforming. The ice queen melted into a warm, loving woman before my eyes—a performance so convincing that for a moment, I doubted what I'd just witnessed.
Dylan appeared behind her, his arm automatically sliding around her waist. He barely glanced at me, as if I were already a ghost.
"Maya's just finishing up," Victoria told him, leaning into his embrace. "I was helping her."
"Good," Dylan said curtly. "I need to grab some documents from my office. We're running late."
As soon as he disappeared down the hall, Victoria's mask slipped again. She stepped closer to me, close enough that I could smell her expensive perfume.
"Let me give you some advice," she whispered, though there was nothing kind in her tone. "Don't embarrass yourself by trying to contact him. It's over. He's moved on to someone... whole."
Her gaze flicked deliberately to my left leg, and I felt my cheeks burn with humiliation.
"I understand perfectly," I replied, summoning what little dignity I had left.
My phone rang, saving me from further conversation. Victoria smirked and sauntered out, leaving me alone with my ringing phone and shattered life.
The caller ID displayed my mother's number. I closed my eyes briefly before answering, already knowing what was coming.
"Maya, baby, I'm in trouble," my mother's voice was frantic, the casino noise blaring in the background. "Those men I told you about, they're serious. They're saying they'll break my fingers if I don't pay by tonight."
"Mom, I can't—" I started, then stopped. What was I going to say? That I couldn't help because I'd just been thrown out by my fiancé? That I was dying? That I had nothing?
"Please, Maya," she begged, her voice cracking. "Just this once. I promise I'll get help after this."
It was the same promise she'd made countless times before, but what choice did I have? She was my mother, the only family I had left.
"How much?" I asked, already opening my banking app.
"Eight thousand," she whispered. "I'm so sorry, baby."
I stared at my account balance: $8,743.21. Everything I had managed to save while living under Dylan's roof. With trembling fingers, I authorized the transfer, watching my safety net disappear in an instant.
"It's done," I said, my voice hollow. "Please be safe, Mom."
Three hours later, I stood outside Horizon Racing Garage, clutching a newspaper classified ad in my hand. The small repair shop was nothing like the high-tech F1 facilities I was used to, but beggars couldn't be choosers. Not when they had terminal illnesses, no home, and exactly $743.21 to their name.
"You the engineer?" asked a gruff man wiping grease from his hands. "Don't look like much."
I straightened my spine, ignoring the pain that radiated from my hip. "I can take apart and rebuild any engine you have in this shop, blindfolded if necessary."
He raised an eyebrow, then tossed me a rag. "Prove it. Bay three. Transmission's shot."
As I limped toward the indicated workstation, I felt the weight of my medical results in my pocket. Three to six months. Perhaps less now, with the stress of homelessness added to my condition.
I picked up a wrench, its familiar weight somehow comforting in my palm. As I slid beneath the car, I let the smell of oil and metal envelop me. This, at least, I understood. This, I could fix.
Unlike my broken body. Unlike my shattered heart.
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