
He Left Me for the Woman Who Ruined Us
Chapter 4
The machine's hum intensified around me, its probes digging deeper into the recesses of my mind. I felt a sharp tug as it latched onto something I'd buried beneath years of careful reconstruction.
"Strong emotional signature detected," the computerized voice announced. "Playback initializing."
The screen above flickered, then stabilized into a vivid recreation of our apartment five years ago. I watched my younger self pacing nervously by the window, phone clutched in my hand.
"Come on," I whispered to myself, checking the time again. "Answer, Dad."
The call went straight to voicemail. My father's condition had worsened suddenly, and the hospital needed decisions I couldn't make alone.
With trembling fingers, I typed out a text message: "Beau, I need you. My dad's sick. Please come home."
I hit send and watched the message status change to "Delivered." Then I paced some more, waiting for the dots that would indicate he was typing a response.
Nothing came.
Hours later, I watched myself check Beau's phone while he slept beside me. The memory captured my hesitation, my internal struggle between trust and suspicion.
"Just one look," my past self whispered. "Just to make sure he saw it."
I scrolled through his messages, finding our conversation thread. My heart stopped when I saw it—my desperate plea for help, marked with a small trashcan icon.
"Deleted."
The observation deck fell silent. I could feel Beau's eyes on me through the glass, but I couldn't look up. The memory was too raw, too real.
"Someone deleted it," Dr. Chen murmured, her voice carrying through the intercom. "But it wasn't Ms. Gardner."
I heard a sharp intake of breath from above. Nova's heels clicked rapidly across the floor.
"That's—that's impossible," she stammered. "The system must be malfunctioning."
"It's not," Dr. Chen replied coolly. "The neural mapping is displaying memories with 99.8% accuracy."
---
"Next emotional anchor identified," the machine announced as the image shifted.
Now I was in our bedroom again, this time searching through Beau's suit jacket before sending it to the dry cleaner. My fingers brushed against something stiff in the inner pocket.
I pulled out a hotel receipt from the Grand Hyatt—a place we'd never stayed together.
"Strange," my past self muttered, examining it closer.
The date jumped out at me—last Tuesday, when Beau had texted that he'd be pulling an all-nighter at the office.
"Working late again," he'd written. "Don't wait up."
The memory zoomed in on the receipt, highlighting a detail I'd noticed then but tried to ignore: "Room for two."
I watched myself stand frozen, the receipt trembling in my hand. The silence in the observation deck was deafening.
"You suspected," Beau's voice cracked through the intercom.
"I didn't want to know," I replied softly, still unable to meet his eyes through the glass.
The memory continued, showing me carefully folding the receipt and returning it to his pocket. I didn't confront him. I couldn't bear to lose him, even though I was already losing him.
---
"Final significant emotional anchor," the machine announced.
The screen now displayed our dining room, where we'd once hosted dinner parties for Beau's investors. This time, we were alone, plates pushed aside as we argued.
"How could you embarrass me like that?" Beau shouted, his face flushed with anger.
"What are you talking about?" My voice was small, confused.
"Flirting with the waiter right in front of me!" He slammed his hand on the table. "Everyone saw it!"
"I didn't—" I began, but he cut me off.
"You've always been jealous of Nova," he accused. "Always trying to undermine what we have."
The memory shifted perspective, showing Beau's back as he continued his tirade. Over his shoulder, in the doorway to our kitchen, stood Nova Adams.
She wore a subtle, triumphant smirk that made my blood run cold. As Beau turned to pour himself another drink, she caught my eye and raised her glass in a mock toast.
The observation deck erupted in shocked murmurs. Beau's face had gone ashen, his eyes wide with dawning horror.
"She was there?" he whispered. "All this time..."
I finally looked up at him through the glass, meeting his gaze for the first time since the demonstration began.
"You never saw her," I said quietly. "Not once."
The machine hummed again, preparing to delve deeper into my memories. But I didn't need to see more—the truth was already laid bare between us, raw and undeniable.
Nova's heels clicked frantically across the observation deck as she backed toward the exit.
"This is ridiculous," she hissed. "These memories are clearly distorted—"
"Are they?" I asked, my voice steady despite the storm inside me. "Or did you think no one would ever know?"
Beau turned slowly toward Nova, his expression shifting from shock to something darker, more dangerous.
"What have you done?" he asked her, his voice barely audible through the intercom.
The machine beeped again, ready to continue its relentless excavation of my past. But the truth had already begun to unravel everything Nova had built.
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