
He Saved Her, I Burned
Chapter 3
Aria's Point of View
The sound of splintering wood and groaning metal filled the air as the building's structure began to fail around me. I pressed myself against what remained of an overturned table, my silk gown now singed and torn, the midnight blue fabric blackened with soot and ash.
The heat was unbearable, pressing against my skin like a living thing. Every breath burned my lungs, and I could taste the acrid smoke on my tongue. Through the haze, I could see flames dancing across the ceiling, consuming everything in their path with terrifying hunger.
I had to move. Julian's words echoed in my mind—'You're strong, Aria. You'll find a way out.'—but they felt hollow now, a convenient excuse wrapped in false faith. He had chosen her. In the moment when it mattered most, when life and death hung in the balance, he had chosen Chloe.
Crawling on my hands and knees, I made my way toward where I thought the service exit should be. The floor was littered with debris—chunks of plaster, twisted metal, broken glass that cut through my palms as I moved. Each breath was a struggle, my chest tight with smoke and something deeper, more devastating than physical pain.
A thunderous crack split the air above me. I looked up just in time to see a massive beam breaking free from the ceiling, its metal supports glowing red-hot. Time seemed to slow as I watched it fall, knowing with crystal clarity that I couldn't move fast enough to escape its path.
The impact when it hit was like the world ending.
Darkness swallowed everything.
***
Outside, Julian paced frantically behind the police barricades, Chloe's weight still phantom-heavy in his arms though the paramedics had taken her away minutes ago. His white shirt was streaked with soot, his usually perfect hair disheveled and singed at the edges. But none of that mattered now.
Aria was still inside.
The realization had hit him the moment he'd carried Chloe to safety, the moment he'd set her down and turned back toward the burning building. She hadn't followed them out. She was still trapped in that inferno, and it was his fault.
"Sir, you need to stay back," a firefighter called out as Julian tried to push past the barriers. "The building's structure is compromised. It's not safe."
"My wife is in there!" Julian's voice cracked with desperation. "I have to go back for her!"
The firefighter's expression softened with professional sympathy. "We have teams inside, sir. If she's in there, we'll find her."
But even as he spoke, a deep rumble shook the ground beneath their feet. Julian watched in horror as the entire east wing of the building collapsed in on itself, sending up a massive cloud of dust and debris. The elegant ballroom where they'd been celebrating just an hour ago was now nothing but twisted metal and rubble.
"Aria!" Her name tore from his throat in a sound that was barely human.
He fell to his knees on the pavement, his hands pressed against the concrete as if he could somehow reach through it to find her. The weight of what he'd done—what he'd chosen—crashed over him like a physical blow.
He had left her. In the moment when she needed him most, when their marriage vows should have meant everything, he had abandoned his wife for another woman. The woman he'd never stopped loving, if he was honest with himself. But honesty felt like a luxury he could no longer afford.
"Julian?" Chloe's voice came from behind him, soft and uncertain. She was sitting in the back of an ambulance, her ankle wrapped in a temporary brace, but her eyes were fixed on his crumpled form. "Julian, I'm so sorry. I never meant for—"
"Don't." The word came out harsh, broken. He couldn't look at her. Couldn't bear to see the face that had cost him everything.
Minutes stretched into an eternity as the firefighters worked to clear the debris. Julian remained on his knees, his designer tuxedo ruined, his hands bleeding from where he'd clawed at the pavement in helpless rage. Around him, other survivors hugged their loved ones, grateful to be alive. But gratitude was a foreign concept now.
Then one of the rescue workers emerged from the wreckage, his face grim behind his protective mask. He was carrying something—a stretcher covered with a white sheet. The shape beneath it was small, delicate, unmistakably human.
Julian's world tilted on its axis.
"We found someone in the east wing," the firefighter called out to the paramedics. "Female, approximately five-foot-six, dark hair. The body is... it's badly burned. We'll need dental records for identification."
The words hit Julian like bullets. Five-foot-six. Dark hair. Aria's height. Aria's hair.
He watched in numb horror as they loaded the stretcher into a coroner's van, the white sheet stark against the black night. Somewhere in the distance, sirens wailed, but all he could hear was the thunderous silence of his own heartbeat.
"No." The word escaped him as a whisper, then grew stronger, more desperate. "No, no, no. That's not—she can't be—"
But the evidence was there, undeniable and final. The building had collapsed. They'd found a body matching Aria's description in the exact area where he'd left her. The mathematics of tragedy were brutally simple.
Julian collapsed completely then, his forehead pressed against the cold pavement as sobs wracked his body. Three years of marriage, and it had taken losing her forever to realize what he'd thrown away. Not just a wife, but a woman who had loved him with quiet, steady devotion. A woman who had arranged candlelit dinners and worn emerald dresses and tried so hard to be enough for him.
A woman who had died alone because he had chosen someone else.
The silver necklace he'd given her for their anniversary felt like lead in his pocket, the small diamond pendant a mockery of everything he'd failed to appreciate while he still had the chance. He pulled it out with shaking hands, the delicate chain catching the light from the emergency vehicles.
She had been wearing it tonight. He remembered seeing it at her throat during dinner, how her fingers had touched it absently when she'd thought he wasn't looking. Now it was all he had left of her, and the weight of that realization was crushing.
"I'm sorry," he whispered to the night, to the smoking ruins, to the ghost of a woman who would never hear his apology. "Aria, I'm so sorry."
But sorry was just another word now, as empty and meaningless as the promises he'd made three years ago at an altar, when forever had seemed like something he could count on.
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