
Love's Late Revelation
Chapter 3
The startup's monthly celebration was in full swing, the conference room transformed with streamers and platters of catered food. I stood against the wall, nursing a glass of water while watching colleagues laugh and mingle. Three weeks had passed since Nathan's engagement announcement, and the office had become a minefield—Isabella's whispers had done their work efficiently.
"Emily! There you are!" Mark, Nathan's co-founder, approached with a genuine smile that felt like a rare gift these days. "I was hoping to catch you. That climate impact model you mentioned last month—I'd love to see the preliminary data."
For a moment, I felt visible again. "I can send it over tomorrow morning. I've actually made some interesting progress on—"
"Mark, darling!" Isabella materialized beside us, slipping her arm through his. "The investors are asking for you." She turned to me with practiced politeness. "Emily, I hope you're enjoying yourself. Such a shame about your presentation disaster last week."
Mark's eyebrows rose slightly. "Disaster?"
"Oh, you didn't hear?" Isabella's voice dripped with false sympathy. "Emily's slides were completely unprofessional. Red wine stains everywhere." She shook her head. "So unfortunate."
The humiliation burned fresh. "If you'll excuse me," I murmured, slipping away before Mark could see the flush creeping up my neck.
I needed air. The hallway leading to the balcony was crowded with small clusters of people. I spotted a narrow path through them and made my way forward, keeping my eyes down. Just as I was squeezing past the last group, I sensed movement to my right.
Isabella stepped directly into my path, then dramatically stumbled backward, her wine glass flying from her hand. She hit the ground with a theatrical cry that silenced every conversation in the hallway.
"You pushed me!" she gasped, loud enough for everyone to hear. "I can't believe you pushed me!"
I stood frozen in shock. "I didn't—I was just walking past—"
"She's been hostile for weeks," Isabella continued, her voice trembling perfectly as a security guard appeared. "Ever since Nathan and I got engaged. I've tried to be understanding, but this is too much."
The security guard looked at me with suspicion. "Ma'am, I need you to come with me."
"This is ridiculous," I protested, but my voice sounded weak even to my own ears. "I didn't touch her."
Around us, colleagues whispered and stared. I caught fragments of their conversations: "...always been obsessed with him..." "...can't accept he chose someone else..." "...unstable..."
Isabella's eyes met mine as the security guard took my elbow. Behind the mask of distress, I saw triumph.
I was escorted from the building like a criminal, my employee badge temporarily confiscated pending an "investigation." The humiliation was complete.
* * *
Back in my apartment, I dropped my keys on the counter and slumped onto the couch, emotionally drained. My phone had been buzzing with texts from Nathan—not asking if I was okay, but demanding to know what had happened with Isabella. I couldn't bring myself to read them fully.
The day's mail sat in a neat pile where I'd left it this morning. I flipped through it mechanically—bill, advertisement, alumni newsletter—until a thick cream envelope with the MIT logo caught my eye.
I tore it open, my hands suddenly unsteady.
*Dear Dr. Parker,*
*Following our previous correspondence, the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences is pleased to formally re-extend our offer of the tenure-track research position we discussed last fall...*
I remembered declining this position six months ago. Nathan had just secured his first major funding round, and I couldn't imagine leaving California—leaving him—when he needed my support most. The irony tasted bitter now.
The letter continued, explaining that the previous candidate had accepted a position elsewhere, and they were still impressed with my research portfolio. They needed an answer within two weeks.
Boston. Three thousand miles away from Nathan. From Isabella. From this suffocating web of humiliation.
I ran my fingers over the embossed letterhead, feeling something I hadn't felt in weeks—possibility.
My phone buzzed again. Nathan's name flashed on the screen.
*Coffee tomorrow? Need your opinion on invitation designs. 10am at our usual spot.*
Our usual spot. As if nothing had changed. As if he hadn't shattered my world and then stood by while his fiancée systematically destroyed what remained.
I looked back at the MIT letter, then at Nathan's text.
For the first time in ten years, I wondered what would happen if I chose myself instead of him.
* * *
"What do you think of the burgundy?" Nathan spread invitation samples across the café table, completely oblivious to the dark circles under my eyes or the way my hands trembled slightly around my coffee cup.
I stared at the elegant cardstock. Isabella Chen and Nathan Brooks request the honor of your presence... The words blurred before my eyes.
"They're fine," I said flatly.
Nathan frowned, finally looking up at me. "Just fine? Em, this is important. Isabella says the invitations set the tone for the entire wedding."
I took a deep breath. This was it—the moment to finally tell him everything. How I'd loved him for a decade. How Isabella was systematically isolating me. How I was dying inside watching him plan a future with someone else.
"Nathan, I need to tell you something," I began, my voice barely above a whisper. "For years, I've—"
His phone buzzed. He glanced down, his face lighting up instantly. "Sorry, it's Isabella. She's at the florist." He was already standing, gathering the invitation samples. "Can we finish this later? She needs me to make a decision about centerpieces."
And just like that, he was gone, leaving me mid-sentence with the weight of unspoken truths still heavy on my tongue.
I watched him hurry away, oblivious that he'd just interrupted the most important thing I'd ever tried to tell him. The MIT letter seemed to burn in my bag, a beacon pointing toward a different future—one where I wasn't constantly reaching for someone who couldn't see me at all.
Maybe it was time to stop reaching.
You may also like





