
Love Lost to Memory Loss
Chapter 2
Two months had passed since that devastating conversation in Rebecca's office, two months of morning sickness that felt like my body's cruel reminder of everything I'd lost. The charity gala invitation had arrived three weeks ago—the annual Porter Foundation fundraiser that Luca and I were supposed to attend together, where he was supposed to announce our engagement to his business associates.
Now I stood in the gilded ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton, my black evening dress carefully chosen to hide the slight curve of my belly, watching the man I'd planned to marry smile at another woman.
Luca looked devastatingly handsome in his tailored tuxedo, his dark hair perfectly styled, that familiar confident posture that had always made my heart skip. But the arm wrapped around the blonde woman beside him might as well have been a dagger through my chest.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Luca's voice carried across the room as he clinked his champagne glass, drawing the attention of the gathered crowd. "I'd like you all to meet someone very special to me—Maria Stevens."
The woman beside him beamed with practiced perfection, her red dress stunning against her porcelain skin. She looked like everything I wasn't—polished, untouchable, unmarked by the messy complications of real love and loss.
"Maria's been instrumental in helping me through my recovery," Luca continued, his hand resting possessively on her lower back. "She's reminded me that sometimes the best thing we can do is embrace new beginnings."
New beginnings. The words felt like acid in my throat.
I should have left then. Should have slipped out the back exit and preserved what little dignity I had left. Instead, I found myself frozen as Luca's eyes swept the crowd and landed on me. For one heart-stopping moment, I thought I saw a flicker of something—recognition, maybe even pain—cross his features.
But then his expression smoothed into polite indifference, and he was walking toward me with Maria's hand tucked into the crook of his arm.
"Thea," he said when they reached me, his voice carrying that same clinical distance I'd grown to hate. "I'm glad you could make it tonight."
The casual way he said my name, like I was just another acquaintance, made my hands tremble around my untouched wine glass.
"Maria," Luca continued, turning to the woman beside him, "I'd like you to meet Thea Vasquez. She's my former fiancée."
Former fiancée. The words hung in the air like a slap, and I watched as several nearby guests turned to stare, their expressions ranging from shock to pity to barely concealed curiosity. Mrs. Henderson from the hospital board looked like she might choke on her canapé.
Maria's perfectly glossed smile never wavered, but I caught the way her grip tightened slightly on Luca's arm. "Oh! How... nice to meet you, Thea. Luca's mentioned you."
Mentioned me. Like I was a footnote in his history rather than the woman who'd spent five years building a life with him.
"Has he?" I managed, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears. "All good things, I hope."
Luca's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "Thea was very supportive during my recovery. We're... grateful for that chapter of our lives."
Chapter. Past tense. Closed book.
The baby in my belly—his baby, though he'd never know it now—seemed to flutter as if sensing my distress. I pressed my free hand against my stomach, the gesture hidden by the drape of my dress.
"Well," I said, forcing my lips into what I hoped resembled a smile, "I should let you get back to your guests. Congratulations on your recovery, Luca. And Maria, it was... enlightening to meet you."
I turned to leave, but Maria's voice stopped me.
"Actually, Thea, I hope you don't mind me saying, but Luca mentioned you work in marketing? I'm trying to transition from acting to more corporate consulting work. Maybe we could grab coffee sometime? I'd love to pick your brain about career strategy."
The request was so innocently delivered, so genuinely enthusiastic, that it took me a moment to process the full cruelty of it. She wanted career advice from the woman she'd replaced. She wanted to use my professional expertise while wearing my life like a costume.
Luca said nothing, just watched our exchange with those unreadable brown eyes.
"Of course," I heard myself say, the words coming from some automated part of my brain that still functioned on politeness and social conditioning. "I'm sure we can arrange something."
"Wonderful! I'll find you on social media and we can set something up."
I nodded and walked away on unsteady legs, the sound of their laughter following me across the ballroom like the echo of everything I'd lost.
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