
Leaving Love for Freedom
Chapter 2
I needed air. After transferring my life savings to cover Mom's treatment and watching Romeo's casual indifference to nearly losing her, the studio walls felt like they were closing in. I mumbled something about getting coffee and fled before anyone could stop me.
The venue's backstage area buzzed with pre-show energy as I wandered aimlessly, my mind still reeling from the morning's revelations. Our wedding song—my wedding song—was going to launch Rosalia's career while I stood at the altar in two days, pretending everything was perfect.
I turned a corner and froze.
There they were, in one of the smaller rehearsal rooms. Romeo sat at the piano, his fingers moving across keys I'd taught him to play, while Rosalia leaned against the instrument, her body curved toward him in a way that made my stomach clench.
"Try it again from the bridge," Romeo was saying, his voice carrying that intimate tone I thought he reserved for me. "Feel the emotion behind the words."
Rosalia's laugh was soft, breathy. "It's so beautiful, Romeo. The way you write about love... it's like you're speaking directly to my heart."
My heart. Not our heart. Not the collective experience Romeo and I had lived through together. My heart.
I pressed myself against the doorframe, hidden in the shadows, watching as Rosalia's fingers traced along Romeo's shoulder. The gesture was casual, possessive—the kind of touch that spoke of familiarity, of boundaries already crossed.
"You bring out the best in my music," Romeo murmured, catching her hand and pressing it briefly to his cheek. "Emma writes the technical stuff, but you... you understand the soul of it."
The technical stuff. Eight years of pouring my soul onto paper, of staying up until dawn crafting melodies that would make people cry, of teaching him every vocal technique he knew—reduced to technical stuff.
Rosalia moved closer, her hip brushing against his arm as she leaned over the piano. "Maybe we should practice the duet version," she suggested, her voice dropping to a whisper. "The one where our voices blend together."
Romeo's hands found the opening chords, and they began to sing. My song. The melody I'd hummed while washing dishes in our tiny apartment, the lyrics I'd written about our first kiss, our first fight, our first promise of forever. But hearing it in their voices, seeing the way they looked at each other as they sang about eternal love, it became something else entirely.
Something that excluded me completely.
When the song ended, Rosalia's hand lingered on Romeo's chest. "Two more days," she said softly. "Are you ready?"
"Ready for what?" Romeo's voice was barely audible.
"For everything to change."
They were so close now I could see the rise and fall of Rosalia's breathing, could see Romeo's eyes fixed on her lips. Time seemed suspended, heavy with the weight of what I was about to witness.
I turned and ran.
The coffee shop three blocks away was nearly empty, just the way I needed it. I sat in the corner booth, staring at my untouched latte, trying to process what I'd seen. The intimacy between them wasn't new—it had the comfortable familiarity of something that had been building for months, maybe years.
How long had I been blind to it?
"Excuse me, are you Emma Barnes?"
I looked up to find a man in his forties, impeccably dressed in a way that suggested European sophistication. His dark hair was streaked with silver, and his eyes held the kind of intelligence that came from years in the music industry.
"I'm sorry, do we know each other?" I managed, wiping my eyes quickly.
"Philip Adams," he said, extending his hand. "I'm a producer based in Paris. I've been hoping to meet you for quite some time."
Philip Adams. Even in my emotional haze, the name registered. He'd worked with some of the most respected artists in Europe, known for his ability to spot authentic talent and nurture it without compromising artistic integrity.
"May I sit?" he asked gently. When I nodded, he settled across from me, his movements deliberate and respectful. "I have to ask—are you alright?"
I laughed, but it came out bitter. "Define alright."
"Fair enough." He studied me with kind eyes. "I've been tracking down the real songwriter behind Romeo Carter's hits for months. Your fingerprints are all over his music—the emotional complexity, the melodic sophistication, the way each song builds to something greater than its parts. That's not Romeo's style. That's yours."
My breath caught. "I don't know what you mean."
"Emma," he said softly, "I've been in this business for twenty years. I can hear the difference between manufactured pop and authentic artistry. Romeo Carter is a performer. You're a composer. And you're wasting your talent in his shadow."
The words hit me like a physical blow, not because they were cruel, but because they were true.
"I have an offer," Philip continued, pulling out a business card. "My studio in Paris. Full creative control, equal partnership, and the chance to write for artists who will credit your genius instead of stealing it. Think about it."
I stared at the card, my hands trembling. "I can't. Romeo and I... we're getting married in two days. We're a team."
Philip's expression grew gentle, almost pitying. "Are you? Because from where I'm sitting, it looks like you're the entire team, and he's just taking the credit."
After he left, I sat alone with his words echoing in my head. My phone buzzed with a text from Romeo: *Where are you? Need to discuss ceremony music.*
Ceremony music. More of my work for his moment.
I walked back to the venue in a daze, Philip's business card burning a hole in my pocket. Romeo was in his dressing room when I arrived, and I moved to hang up his jacket—a gesture so automatic after eight years that I didn't think twice about it.
That's when I felt the papers in his pocket.
My hands shook as I pulled them out. Letters, written in Rosalia's familiar handwriting. The first one was dated three months ago.
*My darling Romeo,*
*Last night was everything I dreamed it would be. The way you held me, the way you whispered my name—it felt like coming home. I know we have to be careful, but I can't stop thinking about our future together. After Saturday, everything will be different. Emma will finally be out of the way, and we can stop pretending.*
*All my love,*
*R*
The paper slipped from my numb fingers, fluttering to the floor like a dying bird. There were others—weeks of correspondence, months of planning, an entire relationship built in the shadows of mine.
I sank into the chair, Philip's business card still clutched in my other hand, as the full scope of my betrayal finally came into focus.
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