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His Betrayal, My Beautiful Rebirth

His Betrayal, My Beautiful Rebirth

I was the secret girlfriend of rising political star Kellen Jefferson, and the sacrifice he made thirty-eight times to appease his manipulative sister, Cherrelle. Her cruelty escalated from ruining my career to pushing me off a stage, breaking my wrist. Kellen covered it up. He chose her again when she pushed me down a flight of stairs, covering up the attempted murder. He chose her when he publicly kissed her after she framed me for stalking. But the moment that truly killed my love was when I was abducted. I called him, begging for help. He never answered. Later, I saw the video: he watched my call come in and, at his sister' s urging, let it go to voicemail. He abandoned me to die. After escaping with my life, I disappeared. Two years later, he saw my face on the cover of a magazine-a celebrated artist with a new life and a new love. And he finally understood what he had lost.
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Chapter 3

The following weeks were a torment. My name was dragged through the mud, smeared across every tabloid and news outlet. "Blackmail Black," "Calculated Songstress," "Mentally Unstable Ex." Kellen' s PR machine worked overtime, painting me as the villain, Cherrelle as the fragile victim, and him as the selfless hero sacrificing his love for his troubled sister. My music career, already teetering, flatlined. No one wanted to work with the woman accused of fabricating mental illness and trying to destroy a rising political star. I retreated into my apartment, a gilded cage that now felt stifling. My broken wrist, still healing, was a constant reminder of Kellen' s betrayal. It wasn't just the physical injury; it was the symbolic silencing. How could I play my guitar? How could I write? Kellen, true to form, made intermittent appearances. Sometimes he'd bring flowers, sometimes takeout. He'd sit on the edge of the couch, offering empty apologies, swearing that "when this blows over," we'd get married, just as he'd promised countless times before. But his phone would buzz with Cherrelle's calls, always urgent, always demanding, and he'd always leave, his pleas to "understand" hanging in the air like a bitter perfume. Then came the texts. From Cherrelle. At first, they were subtle. "He' s with me now, where he belongs." "We' re so happy without you." Then they escalated, twisted and cruel. Pictures of Kellen and Cherrelle, cozy at dinner, laughing, sometimes even holding hands. "He never loved you, Hayden. He only loves me." "You were just a temporary distraction. I' m his forever." One text broke me. It was a photo. Kellen, his eyes closed, kissing Cherrelle on the forehead, a tender, intimate gesture. Her caption: "My hero. My everything." The accompanying message: "You really thought you had a chance? Look how he looks at me. That' s love, Hayden. Real love." My breath hitched. My vision blurred. All the numbness, all the carefully constructed walls, shattered. A primal scream tore through me, silent but deafening in the confines of the apartment. This wasn't just manipulation; this was pure, unadulterated cruelty. I felt a cold, hard rage replacing the numbness. This wasn't just about Kellen anymore. This was about her. I deleted the messages, cleared my phone, a futile gesture against the digital scars she' d left. But something had changed. The exhaustion was still there, but now it was laced with a chilling resolve. I was discharged from the hospital the next day, my cast still firmly in place. Kellen wasn't there to pick me up. Cherrelle had another "emergency." I took a cab back to the apartment, the one Kellen and I had shared for years. It was supposed to be our home. As I approached the building, a sickening premonition twisted my gut. There, on the doorstep, was Cherrelle, her face alight with a smug, triumphant smirk. And beside her, Kellen, his expression a familiar mix of helpless guilt and exasperation. "Hayden," Kellen began, stepping forward, his hands raised in a placating gesture. "Cherrelle's... she's not doing well. She insists on staying here. She feels safe here." "Safe?" I repeated, my voice dangerously low. "She tried to push me off a stage, Kellen. She ruined my reputation. And now she's taking over my home?" Cherrelle' s smirk widened. "It's our home now, Hayden. Kellen said so. He said I need the stability. And you," she waved a dismissive hand, "you're just not stable enough for Kellen right now." She pushed past him, heading straight for the door, her hand reaching for the knob. "Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to redecorate. Get rid of all her... things." "No!" Kellen suddenly said, his voice firm, startling both Cherrelle and me. "Cherrelle, you can stay here, but you will not touch Hayden's belongings. This is still her apartment." A flicker of surprise, a tiny spark of hope, ignited in my chest. Had he finally drawn a line? Cherrelle' s face crumpled instantly. "Kellen! How can you say that? After everything I've been through? I'm having a panic attack! My chest is tight! I can't breathe! I feel like I'm going to hurt myself!" Her voice rose to a hysterical shriek. Kellen' s momentary resolve evaporated. His face contorted with agony, caught between her manufactured crisis and my silent, accusing gaze. He was a man caught in a self-made trap, and I was just another casualty. "Hayden," he pleaded, his eyes full of desperate entreaty. "Just... for a little while. I'll make sure she doesn't touch anything. I promise." I looked at him, then at Cherrelle, who was now clutching Kellen's arm, her sobs growing louder, her performance escalating. My face remained impassive. The spark of hope had died, replaced by a cold, hard certainty. I understood then. He would never choose me. He would always choose her. "Fine," I said, my voice eerily calm. "I'll pack my things." Kellen stared at me, his mouth slightly agape. My lack of fight, my serene acceptance, was more unsettling to him than any outburst. Cherrelle, sensing her victory, dropped her act. Her sobs ceased. She smiled, a truly evil smile, and swept into the apartment, her heels clicking triumphantly on the marble floor. "Perfect! I'll just be settling in. And Kellen, darling, make sure she doesn't take anything that belongs to us." I walked to the bedroom, the silence in my wake heavy with Kellen' s bewildered guilt. I started packing, methodically folding my clothes, placing my few cherished belongings into a single suitcase. My guitar, my songwriting notebooks, a worn copy of my favorite poetry collection. These were the only things that truly belonged to me. When I returned to the living room, Cherrelle was holding a framed photo of Kellen and me, from happier times. She looked at it, then at me, her eyes glittering with pure hatred. "You know, Hayden," she said, her voice a cruel sneer, "this picture is giving me a headache. It's so... you." With a flick of her wrist, she hurled the framed photo across the room. It shattered against the wall with a sickening crunch. Glass flew, scattering across the polished floor like shards of my broken past. "Cherrelle!" Kellen roared, rushing in, his face aghast. She ignored him, her gaze fixed on me. "Oh, did I break your little memory? My mistake." She picked up another item from the coffee table – a delicate ceramic bird, a gift from my grandmother. "This is ugly too. Just like all your songs." "Cherrelle, stop it!" Kellen grabbed her arm, but she twisted free, her eyes wild. "She deserves it!" Cherrelle shrieked. "She's trying to steal you from me! She's always trying to steal everything!" She picked up a heavy, ornate vase, a family heirloom Kellen had given me. "And this is just tacky!" With a violent swing, she brought it down on the coffee table, splitting it in two. The apartment was a war zone, a testament to her unbridled rage and Kellen's spineless inaction. "I need to go," I said, my voice devoid of any emotion. I gripped the handle of my small suitcase, my knuckles white. Cherrelle, seeing me head for the door, suddenly moved with surprising speed. She blocked my path, her eyes blazing. "Where do you think you're going, little bird? Your wings are broken, remember?" She picked up a heavy sculpture from a nearby pedestal, a bronze abstract piece that weighed a good ten pounds. "Leaving already? Without saying goodbye?" The sculpture swung, a blur of metal aimed at my head. I ducked, the cold bronze whistling past my ear. "You think you can just walk away from what you did to me?" she hissed, her face contorted with fury. "You tried to destroy my brother! You tried to steal my life!" She lunged again, the heavy sculpture a weapon in her hand. This time, I wasn' t quick enough. It connected with my shoulder, a dull, sickening thud. The pain exploded, sending a jolt through my already injured body. I cried out, stumbling backward. "Hayden!" Kellen finally moved, a frantic, belated attempt to intervene. But it was too late. Cherrelle, her face a mask of insane fury, pushed me with both hands, her full weight behind the shove. I lost my balance completely. My feet slipped on the scattered glass shards. I fell. Not forward, not onto the floor, but backward. Over the railing of the second-story landing. My body plunged through empty air, a scream tearing from my lungs. The last thing I saw was Kellen' s horrified face, frozen in a silent scream of his own, and Cherrelle, her eyes wide, a flicker of something close to terror, but mostly twisted satisfaction, as I plummeted towards the polished marble floor below. Then, darkness. Complete. Utter. Consuming.