
Lie's End, Love's Start
Chapter 3
The laughter echoed through the boutique, each titter and snicker slicing through me like tiny glass shards. My knockoff blouse suddenly felt like it was choking me, the synthetic fabric a damning reminder of the worlds that separated us.
"What is this?" I finally managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "Some kind of joke?"
Madison's perfectly glossed lips curved into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Oh honey, the joke started two years ago when Ryan decided to play house with the fitness girl from Phoenix."
She took a deliberate sip of champagne, her diamond tennis bracelet catching the light as she lowered her glass. "We've all been absolutely dying over your little budget spreadsheets and your Instagram stories about saving for that tragic apartment. It's been the most entertaining reality show."
The room tilted slightly. "Ryan... shares my spreadsheets with you?"
"Shares them? Darling, he presents them like comedy hour." Madison's laughter tinkled like expensive crystal. "The Walker heir, pretending to be broke, watching you count pennies while he has millions sitting in trust funds? Priceless entertainment."
One of the other women leaned forward, her voice a stage whisper. "He even showed us your texts about celebrating with tiramisu instead of proper champagne. We were howling."
The boutique staff exchanged knowing glances. One murmured to another, "These trust fund kids and their games."
Suddenly, everything clicked into place—Ryan's mysterious absences, the calls he'd take in private, how he never wanted me to meet his "business contacts." It wasn't a startup he was building; it was an elaborate lie. A game where I was the only one who didn't know the rules.
I straightened my spine, feeling something cold and hard crystallize inside me. "Thank you for the invitation, Madison. It was... illuminating."
Her perfect eyebrows arched in surprise. She'd expected tears, perhaps a scene. Instead, I turned on my heel and walked out, the heavy glass door closing behind me with a dignified thud.
The drive back to our—no, my—apartment passed in a blur. My hands trembled on the steering wheel, but not from sadness. From rage. Pure, clarifying rage that burned away any tears before they could form.
I'd given him everything—left my family, my hometown, sacrificed every comfort, worked myself to exhaustion. All for a man who was laughing at me behind my back. A man who had more money than I'd ever see in my lifetime, watching me scrimp and save for a future that was just a joke to him.
When I reached the apartment, I moved with mechanical precision. I took off the promise ring he'd given me last Christmas—silver, because "gold was out of our budget right now." I placed it on the kitchen counter, next to a note I wrote in steady handwriting:
"Game over. Goodbye."
I packed only what I could fit in my car—clothes, my laptop, the few mementos from home I couldn't bear to leave behind. Everything else—the furniture we'd scavenged together, the dishes we'd collected piece by piece, the dreams I'd built in this space—I left behind. They weren't real anyway.
As I pulled away from the curb, my phone buzzed with a text from Ryan: "Where are you? I thought we were meeting for lunch?"
I turned off my phone without responding and pointed my car east, toward the I-10 that would take me back to Phoenix. Back to the family who had tried to warn me.
The desert landscape blurred past my windows as I drove, the setting sun painting everything in shades of gold and red. Memories flashed through my mind with each mile marker—my father's concerned face when I'd announced my move, my mother's tight smile as she helped me pack, my brother's blunt assessment: "That guy's hiding something, Chloe."
I remembered my mother's last text before this whole charade came crashing down: "Be safe, honey. Remember you always have a home here."
Tears finally came then, hot and fast, streaming down my face as the city lights of Los Angeles disappeared in my rearview mirror. But they weren't tears of heartbreak—they were tears of liberation. The game was over, and I was finally free.
As night fell and the stars appeared above the desert highway, I realized that for the first time in two years, I was driving toward something real instead of chasing a beautiful lie.
What I didn't know then was that the game wasn't just over—it was about to change entirely, with new players and much higher stakes.
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