
Love After Years of Pain
Love After Years of Pain Chapter 1
I stood frozen in the doorway of our Manhattan penthouse master bedroom, my fingers gripping the frame so tightly my knuckles turned white. The sight before me wasn't new—Ryan entangled with another woman—but it never hurt any less.
He saw me. I know he did. His steel-gray eyes locked with mine over Isabella Walsh's bare shoulder, and his lips curved into that cruel smirk I'd grown to dread. Instead of stopping, he pulled her closer, his hands tracing possessive patterns across her skin.
"Ryan," Isabella purred, her voice carrying deliberately across the room, "don't stop."
She turned her head, noticing me with feigned surprise before her crimson lips spread into a triumphant smile. Her laugh echoed through the room—musical, mocking, meant for me to hear.
I backed away silently, my chest tight with a familiar ache. Three years of this. Three years of calculated humiliation. Three years of hoping the boy I once loved would somehow remember what we had been before my mother's desperate scheme destroyed us both.
In the guest bedroom—my bedroom now—I curled onto the pristine sheets, hugging my knees to my chest. The penthouse was silent except for the occasional burst of Isabella's laughter floating down the hallway like poisoned wind chimes.
My phone vibrated on the nightstand. Boston Medical Center. My heart stuttered as I answered.
"Ms. Matthews?" The voice was gentle, professional. I already knew. "I'm very sorry to inform you..."
The words blurred together after that. Jake was gone. My sweet brother, the reason I'd endured this living hell, had lost his battle with leukemia. I'd visited him yesterday, held his thin hand, promised I'd come back tomorrow with his favorite books.
There would be no tomorrow for Jake.
The phone slipped from my fingers as a sob tore from my throat. I collapsed onto the bed that had once, briefly, symbolized love between Ryan and me. Now it was just another cold, empty space in a house that had never been a home.
I don't know how long I lay there, tears soaking the pillow, my body convulsing with silent grief. The sounds of Ryan and Isabella's pleasure had long since stopped. The penthouse settled into its typical midnight silence—expensive, hollow, and indifferent to human suffering.
Jake was the last thread tethering me to this life. With him gone, what reason did I have to stay?
---
Three days after Jake's death, I stood outside Ryan's home office, divorce papers clutched in my trembling hand. The funeral had been yesterday—a small, quiet affair. Ryan hadn't attended. He'd sent flowers with a card signed by his assistant.
I knocked, two soft taps against the mahogany door.
"Enter," came his cold command.
I stepped inside, my heart hammering against my ribs. Ryan sat behind his massive desk, his attention fixed on his laptop screen. He didn't look up.
"I need to speak with you," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
"Make it quick. I have a meeting in twenty minutes."
I placed the papers on his desk. "I want a divorce."
That got his attention. His eyes flicked up, narrowing as they assessed me. For a moment, I caught a glimpse of something—surprise, perhaps—before his expression hardened again.
"Your brother's dead, so you're done playing the dutiful wife?" His words were designed to cut, and they did.
"Jake has nothing to do with this decision," I lied. "I can't do this anymore, Ryan. We both know this marriage was never real."
He leaned back in his chair, studying me with cold calculation. Then he reached for his phone.
"Isabella? Come to my office. Bring that bottle of Krug we've been saving." He hung up without waiting for a response, his eyes never leaving mine. "If you want a divorce, Chloe, we should celebrate properly, don't you think?"
Isabella arrived minutes later, champagne in hand, her red dress clinging to every curve. Her eyes lit up when she saw the papers on the desk.
"Are those what I think they are?" she asked, barely containing her excitement.
Ryan pulled her onto his lap, his hand sliding possessively up her thigh. "My wife has decided to set me free."
Isabella popped the champagne, the cork hitting the ceiling with a dull thud. Ryan took the bottle, filling two glasses—not three.
"To freedom," he toasted, clinking his glass against Isabella's.
They drank deeply, laughing, while I stood there, invisible in my grief. Something inside me—something that had been bending for three long years—finally snapped.
I turned and walked out, their laughter following me down the hallway. But this time, I wasn't retreating to cry in solitude. This time, my tears had crystallized into something harder, something colder.
This time, I was done.
Love After Years of Pain of Contents
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