
Love Beyond the Lies
Chapter 2
I stumbled through my apartment door, my body moving on autopilot. The emerald gown that had once made me feel beautiful now clung to my skin like a lie. I kicked off my heels, not caring where they landed, and moved through the rooms in a daze.
Two years. Two years of my life handed over to a man who had never loved me.
My fingers trembled as I opened my dresser drawer, pulling out the first piece of lingerie Rex had ever complimented—a pale pink set with delicate embroidery. He had called it "captivating" and asked if he could keep it. The memory made bile rise in my throat.
"One trophy down," I whispered to myself, my voice hollow in the empty apartment.
I moved methodically through the rooms, gathering every gift he had ever given me. Perfume. Jewelry. Silk scarves. Each item represented a moment I had treasured, now poisoned by the truth. In the closet, I found the box where I'd stored the twenty-three pieces of lingerie he had collected—each one a piece of my trust, each one a step closer to my humiliation.
Outside, the night air was cool against my tear-stained face. I dragged everything to the small backyard of my apartment building, where a rusted fire pit sat unused. My hands worked mechanically, building a pyre of my shattered dreams.
The match flared bright in the darkness as I struck it against the box. The flame caught quickly, devouring the first piece of lace it touched. I added items one by one, watching as the fire grew higher.
"Goodbye," I whispered, unclasping the midnight blue set I was wearing—the twenty-fourth piece. I stepped out of it and tossed it into the flames, standing in my bathrobe as I watched two years of lies turn to ash.
The fire blazed higher, casting dancing shadows across my face. Neighbors' windows lit up one by one as smoke drifted upward. Someone shouted from a nearby balcony, and I heard the distant wail of fire trucks.
I didn't move. Let them come. Let them see. Nothing could hurt me more than what had already been done.
My phone felt heavy in my pocket. I pulled it out, scrolling through contacts until I found the number I'd been avoiding for months. My finger hovered over the screen before I finally pressed call.
"Hello?" My mother's voice—Margaret Wood—filled the line, thick with emotion.
"Mom," I choked out, the word feeling strange on my tongue after so many years apart. "It's Layne."
"Oh, sweetheart." The relief in her voice was palpable. "We've been so worried about you."
"I'm coming home," I said, the decision crystallizing as I spoke it aloud. "To Seattle. Tonight."
"Tonight? Are you sure? What about your apartment? Your job?"
"I don't care," I replied, watching the last of Rex's gifts curl into smoke. "None of it matters anymore."
"We'll be waiting," my father's voice joined the call. "You know where to find us."
I ended the call and went inside, pulling out a single suitcase from the closet. I packed only what mattered—clothes, toiletries, a few photos from before Rex. Everything else could burn.
The fire trucks arrived as I dragged my suitcase to the curb, their lights painting the street in flashes of red and blue. I slipped away before they could question me, disappearing into the night like smoke.
---
Rex's fists pounded against my door the next morning, each blow echoing through the empty apartment.
"Layne! Open this door right now!"
The neighbors had already called the police about the disturbance. Rex didn't care. He'd been calling her phone all night, each unanswered ring driving him closer to madness.
When the door finally opened, it wasn't Layne who stood there, but a uniformed officer.
"Sir, we've received multiple complaints about the noise," the officer said firmly.
"Where is she?" Rex demanded, trying to push past him.
The officer held his ground. "The tenant isn't here, sir. And you need to leave immediately."
Rex's eyes darted past him to the empty apartment. "This is impossible," he muttered. "She can't just disappear."
But she had.
He stumbled into the backyard, where the fire pit still held the cold ashes of his carefully laid plans. The gray remains of silk and lace and paper curled in the bottom of the pit like dead butterflies.
"No, no, no," he whispered, falling to his knees in the ashes. "You don't get to walk away from me."
His phone buzzed with a text from Vienna: "Did it work? Is she ruined?"
Rex didn't answer. Instead, he called his assistant.
"I need you to find someone," he said, his voice eerily calm now. "I don't care what it costs or who you have to hire. Find Layne Wood."
As he hung up, his reflection caught in the window of the empty apartment. For the first time in his life, Rex Thompson looked uncertain—a predator who had lost sight of his prey.
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