
Love After Years of Pain
Chapter 3
I returned to my suite that night, Isabella's laughter still ringing in my ears. My hands trembled as I placed the broken pieces of my father's watch on the nightstand. The shattered face, the bent hands, the torn photograph—all of it a perfect metaphor for what my life had become. Broken. Irreparable.
I stood in the center of the room, suddenly aware of how little of myself existed in this space. Three years in this marriage, and I had nothing to show for it but a collection of designer clothes I never wanted and a heart so fractured I wondered if it would ever beat properly again.
"No more," I whispered to the empty room.
I moved with a strange calm, pulling out my suitcase from the closet. I packed light—just essentials, a few photographs of Jake, and his medical files. Those files represented years of research, treatments, and ultimately, failure. But they also contained valuable data that might help someone else's brother, someone else's son.
I touched the divorce papers I'd prepared weeks ago, tracing the lines where Ryan would eventually sign. Strange how something so simple—just ink on paper—could represent such profound change.
My laptop glowed in the darkness as I opened it, the clock in the corner showing it was just past midnight. I navigated to the Boston Medical Research Institute's website, scanning their current openings. There it was: Research Assistant in Leukemia Studies. My fingers hovered over the keyboard for just a moment before I began typing my résumé.
Hours passed as I crafted my cover letter, pouring everything into it—my education, my experience helping with Jake's care, my determination to make a difference. Dawn was breaking when I finally hit send, the soft ping of the email confirmation sounding like a starting gun.
"This is for you, Jake," I murmured, touching the small framed photo of my brother I'd placed beside my computer.
I didn't sleep. There was too much to do, too much to plan. By early morning, I had booked a flight to Boston leaving that afternoon. I had transferred what little money I had in my personal account to a new one. I had severed the final threads tying me to this gilded cage.
The penthouse was quiet when I emerged from my room, suitcase in hand. Ryan would be at his office by now. Good. I didn't want a confrontation. I didn't want to see his cold eyes or hear his cutting remarks. I just wanted to be gone.
I placed the divorce papers on his desk, weighting them down with a small paperweight—a crystal globe that had been a wedding gift from someone whose name I couldn't even remember. How fitting that our marriage would end with something as impersonal as it had begun.
The ride to JFK was a blur. I kept expecting my phone to ring, for Ryan to realize I was gone and demand I return. But it remained silent. Of course it did. My leaving would be a relief to him, not a loss.
Only when I was seated on the plane, the safety demonstration playing on the screen before me, did the reality of what I was doing finally hit. I was leaving everything behind—the good and the bad, the memories and the nightmares. I was stepping into an unknown future with nothing but hope and determination.
As the plane lifted off, I pressed my forehead against the window, watching Manhattan's skyline grow smaller in the distance. Somewhere down there was the penthouse where I'd spent three years living as a ghost. Somewhere down there was Ryan, who would soon discover I was gone.
Tears slid down my cheeks, but they weren't tears of regret. They were tears of release. Of possibility.
The broken pieces of my father's watch were carefully wrapped in tissue paper in my carry-on. Maybe they couldn't be fixed. Maybe some things, once broken, stay that way.
But I was determined not to be one of them.
As the plane banked north toward Boston, I closed my eyes and allowed myself to imagine, for the first time in years, a future that belonged entirely to me.
What I didn't know then was that the past rarely stays where you leave it. And some people don't let go without a fight.
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