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Love is pain Novel Cover

Love is pain

When the man who promised forever is only playing for keeps, Maya learns the cruelest lesson of all: the deepest love can hide the darkest lies. Maya is twenty-three, an artist with a tender heart and a modest inheritance from her grandmother, her only safety net in a big, unforgiving city. She believes in second chances, in beauty that heals, in people who stay. Then comes Aaron. Charming. Attentive. Devastatingly perfect. He sees her soul, remembers every whispered dream, makes her feel truly seen for the first time. What starts as electric connection spirals into intoxicating devotion-or so she thinks. But Aaron is hiding more than secrets. He's a man who has mastered the art of deception, a gay man navigating a world that forced him to perform, now driven by cold ambition. Maya's inheritance isn't just money-it's the key to the security he's always craved. And he's willing to steal her heart to get it. As possessiveness masquerades as passion and every sweet gesture hides a calculation, Maya ignores the warnings, the cracks, the gathering storm. Until the mask shatters. In the wreckage of betrayal, Maya faces the hardest choice: cling to the illusion of love that nearly destroyed her, or rise from the ashes and paint a future that's finally hers. A haunting tale of manipulation, hidden truths, and the price of trusting too easily-where love isn't blind... it's a weapon.
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Chapter 3

They were two hours into a Tuesday that had already learned to be mean: sky the color of a bruise, the city coughing a slow, steady drizzle. Maya had been at the worktable, scraping excess gesso with the dull edge of a palette knife, when the phone buzzed hard enough to startle her. The museum's number. Her chest thinned with a small, delicious panic-maybe the curator had decided, finally, or maybe the private collector from the opening had changed his mind. She answered with paint under her nails and a smear of charcoal on her knuckle. "Hello?" There was a pause on the line like breath held too long. Then a woman's voice, flat and official. "We're calling about the piece you consigned last month to the Duvall Collection. There appears to be an issue with payment." For a second the world tilted on the axis of her ear. "An issue?" "Yes. The payment was made through an intermediary and hasn't cleared into the gallery's account. Our finance team is looking into it, but it could be several weeks. I'm sorry." Maya's mouth went dry. "But the collector said he'd paid." "We have a record of a payment from Rowe Creative Services," the woman said. "We can't release the work until the account clears." The phone clicked in her hand as if it had become an unfamiliar thing. Maya pressed the back of her palm to her mouth, feeling the way a sudden cold reaches through fabric. She stared at the work table where the teal woman waited, mid‑gesture, and for an instant she could only see the blank space where the money should be. She told the woman she'd be there at three. After she hung up she stood too quickly and the stool tipped; a jar of brushes clattered against the floor, scattering bristles like small, injured birds. Maya crouched, gathering them with slow hands, a ritual that steadied her. The studio felt suddenly smaller than it had all week, the windows framing rain as if the world beyond were a watercolor someone had left to run. She called Aaron first. She told herself she would be calm, that it would be an administrative thing-clerical, correctable. His voice when he answered was warm, immediate. "Everything okay?" "The gallery says the payment came from Rowe Creative Services," she said. "They won't release the piece." There was a silence long enough for a whole conversation to happen in it. "That's impossible," he said finally. "I...maybe I handled the transfer. The collector asked me to expedite it; I fronted it on his behalf because he's traveling. I can clear it-call the gallery, I'll straighten it out." Maya listened to the sound of the world rearranging itself into a plausible explanation. His words were smooth, the kind people use when they want to lower panic into something managerial. "Please," she said. "Please call them now." "I will," he said. "I'll sort it. Don't worry." But while she waited for his return call, worry had room to grow. She dialed Lina because worry without witness is appetite in the dark. Lina's voice was razor sharp with the kind of tenderness that makes no excuses. "Don't sign anything," Lina said as soon as Maya filled her in. "Don't let him move money around in your name. Get to the gallery. Ask for the wire confirmation. If it's in his name, make the bank show you the trail." "I know," Maya said. The words felt brittle; she put them on like thin gloves. She jammed her coat on over paint‑spattered sleeves and ran, shoes slapping the pavement, rain making a percussive pattern on the hood of her coat. The gallery smelled like lemon oil and old paper, a place that tended to the practical religion of objects. The curator, a man whose taste was quieter than his suit, met her with a hand extended and a ledger opened like a verdict. "We can't release the work without cleared payment," he said. He slid a printout toward her, the bank's stamp glaring like a truth. The payment, it reported, originated from an account under the Rowe name. The transfer reference matched the correspondence the gallery had received. Maya's throat tightened until sound felt impossible. The curator's eyes flicked to her hands, to the paint on her nails, as if those marks were evidence of naivety. "I'm sorry," he said. "We followed protocol." Outside, a city bus hissed and went on. Inside the gallery, the light felt thinner. Maya's first impulse was to call Aaron and demand explanation-but Lina's voice in her head stopped her. She remembered the caution. Instead she asked to see the email chain. The curator opened his laptop and scrolled through messages; the collector's note was courteous, the gallery's reply professional. Then there was a forwarded message from an address she did not recognize-Rowe Creative Services-with the attachment of a receipt. A small, steady violence takes shape when bureaucracy is weaponized: the redirection of funds, the reauthorizing of ownership through the thin membrane of documentation. It does not look like dramatic theft; it looks like a sequence of helpfulness converted into jurisdiction. In the lobby, while the curator made a few more calls, Maya's hands shook. She could feel the burn of that slow, small betrayal under her skin, where anger begins as a quiet heat and then blooms. She finally confronted him in the stairwell outside the gallery. Aaron stood with the rain crusting his coat and his hair wet at the temples, smiling a smile that had always felt like shelter. When he saw the printout weaved from the curator's desk he paled, a quick, almost imperceptible blanching that opened the first crack in his composure. "This is bad," he said, voice low. "I told you-I helped expedite payment because the collector was abroad. I only wanted to smooth it." "They won't release it because it came from your account," Maya said. Her voice held firm now, the sound of someone who has learned to name things. "You didn't ask me. You didn't tell me." Aaron ran his fingers through his hair once, a gesture that made him look momentarily unmade. "You were busy. I did it for you." "For me?" Maya laughed then, a short, brittle sound. "You did it in your name. You put your account between me and my work." "I can fix it," he said. "I'll transfer it now. I'll send a confirmation." "You'll have to prove it," she said. "And I need to know why you thought you could put your name on it. Why you thought making these decisions for me was okay." He looked at her for a long time; the rain stitched itself to his eyelashes. The thing that made Aaron dangerous was not that he raised his voice or struck a bargain-he lowered the stakes of his authority with a soft voice and an offered hand. He said, "I just thought-this is how you make things happen. Let me make things happen." Maya felt, in that stairwell, the exact geometry of the life she was trying to keep: a small orbit of work and payments and plain, stubborn rules. She had let someone she trusted into that orbit and, in a few polite gestures, the orbit had faltered. "You can't keep deciding for me," she said. "Not anymore." He took a step closer as if to close the distance between a mistake and forgiveness. "I'm trying to help," he said. "Why can't you see that?" "Because you're making decisions I can't undo," she said. "Because you didn't ask." There was a kind of pleading in his eyes that had been disorienting from the start. To look at him was to see both the man who had been kind and the man who had placed himself between her and her livelihood. It was infuriating and heartbreaking in the same breath. "I'll get you the wire confirmation," he promised again, and then, because some people return to their craft when all else is uncertain, he did what he had always done-he produced. He called the collector, his voice smooth and sure, and then he walked her-slowly, methodically-through a series of online receipts that he produced from his phone like a magician revealing a trick. For a sliver of a moment, the spiral of panic undone. The receipts matched the amount; a transfer had been made; the gallery's finance department would accept the bank's trace. She felt the crisis clamp loosen. Relief rose in her like a dizzying flare. But then the curator called from the desk and said the gallery needed a written authorization from the account holder releasing the funds to be re‑assigned. Aaron offered to do it himself: a signed letter, an email from his account. Maya asked, quietly, why he hadn't asked her permission before using his name. His answer, when it came, did not hold malice so much as a peculiar, entitled conviction. "You were painting. I made a decision so you wouldn't be stressed," he said. "I thought you'd be grateful." Her hands closed around the printout until the paper creased under her fingers. "Gratitude doesn't allow you to take my agency," she said. The stairwell hummed with the sound of the city. For an instant Aaron was incandescent with shame and apology; then, in that quick, human way of someone who knows how to salvage face, he asked if they could make a plan-contracts, clear accounts, perhaps even a joint account administered transparently. He suggested mediation, the language of someone who wanted to turn a crisis into a partnership. Maya stepped back. The offer smelled, suddenly, like varnish over a crack. She realized that what she wanted was not a promise wrapped in managerial terms but a recognition of the boundary he had crossed and the trust he had broken. "I don't want a plan with you," she said. The words surprised her: they were harder and truer than anything she had expected to say. "I want my control back." He looked at her then with an expression that was almost the old tenderness, but dulled by the knowledge of what had been done. "Then I'll sign whatever you need me to sign," he said. "I'll make it right." "Make it right," she echoed. "Start by not making decisions for me." He nodded, the way someone nods when they cannot unmake a thing but can begin to tidy. He produced, with a steadiness that was maddening, the authorization the gallery required. He signed and forwarded it; the curator accepted it with the professional exhaustion of someone used to midwives of poor men's paperwork. As the gallery returned to normal and the teal woman was boxed and labeled and handed back to Maya, the city outside kept its indifferent business. The relief was not the bright untroubled kind; it had corners. The authorization fixed the immediate crisis, but the ledger of her life had been marked, and numbers counted where feelings once sufficed. On the walk home the rain peeled off her coat and she watched her reflection ripple in a puddle. For the first time since Aaron had arrived with his roses, she saw the fracture: a line that ran from the delicate petals on her windowsill through the middle of her life, a seam she could not smooth with a promise. At home she set the teal painting against the wall and sat across from it, as if the work might tell her what to do next. The city outside roared; inside, the studio hummed with the small electric of surviving a storm. She understood, with a clarity that was almost cruel, that kindness could be a veneer over something more controlling. She called Lina and, when the first words came, they were not angry so much as practical. "He did it," she told her. "He signed the authorization. The gallery accepted it." Lina's voice was brief. "Good. Now get copies of everything. Go to the bank. Make them show you the trail." Maya looked at the painting and then at the jar of roses on the windowsill. She had them, still-slightly bruised petals that smelled faintly of rain. The cost of having them, she realized, had been more than the money Aaron had temporarily controlled. It had been the implicit concession that someone else could decide what was best for her life. She arranged the roses again, carefully, as if she could press that decision back into the stems. It was a dramatic moment in a young person's life-an abrupt, sharp lesson that the world's gentleness often had a price. But dramas teach; they do not end the story. Maya set a small, stubborn plan: receipts on paper, statements in hand, a meeting at the bank the next morning. She would keep painting, but she would do so behind the armor of account numbers and signatures. Somewhere beyond the steady rain, Aaron walked alone through the city. His collar was wet, his steps measured. He had fixed the immediate problem and produced the necessary paperwork, but the way Maya looked at him in the stairwell would not be undone merely by forms. In his pocket was a small, apologetic note he'd meant to give her-something clumsy and sincere about wanting to be useful. He never gave it to her. He walked on, and the city kept taking and giving in ways that felt indifferent and inevitable. Maya slept that night with the teal painting facing the window and the roses tucked into a jar. The roses stayed, even though the price had been high. They smelled faintly of rain and of the quiet lessons that come when someone learns to translate a favor into a boundary.

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