
Maya's Fight for Freedom
Chapter 3
I retreated to our flat—Ethan's Manhattan apartment that had once felt like a second home. Now it felt like foreign territory, hostile and unsafe. I paced the living room, my mind replaying the confrontation in his office like a horror film on loop. The look on his face when he'd restrained me, defending Sarah. The patronizing tone in his voice. *I did it because I love you. Because I want you to be whole again.*
Whole again. As if I was broken. As if my refusal to forgive my abuser was a defect he needed to fix.
My phone buzzed incessantly with his calls and texts, but I couldn't bear to hear his voice. Each message notification felt like another betrayal. I finally texted back a single line: *Don't come home tonight.*
The response was immediate: *We need to talk about this. Please.*
I threw the phone onto the couch and pressed my palms against my eyes until I saw stars. How could he possibly explain this away? What words could possibly justify months of secret meetings with the woman who had systematically destroyed my childhood?
When the doorbell rang an hour later, I knew it was him despite my warning. I opened the door but blocked the entrance, my body rigid with anger.
"I told you not to come," I said, my voice surprisingly steady.
Ethan stood there, his face haggard, tie loosened. "Maya, please. I know I handled this badly, but you have to understand—"
"I don't *have* to understand anything," I cut him off. "You betrayed me in the most fundamental way possible."
"That's not fair," he said, his tone shifting to that new, condescending one I was growing to hate. "I was trying to help both of you heal."
"It wasn't your decision to make!" My voice cracked. "You had no right to decide when or how I should confront my abuser."
He ran his hand through his hair, frustration evident in every line of his body. "I'm going to fix this, Maya. I promise. I have something planned that will show you how much you mean to me. How committed I am to us."
A chill ran through me. "Don't. Whatever grand gesture you're planning, just don't. I need space, Ethan. I need you to stay away."
"You don't mean that," he said softly, reaching for my hand.
I stepped back, out of his reach. "I do mean it. For once in our relationship, please respect what I'm asking for."
Something flashed in his eyes—determination, maybe, or that stubborn certainty that he knew what was best for me. "I'll give you tonight. But this isn't over, Maya. What we have is worth fighting for."
I closed the door in his face, leaning against it as my legs threatened to give way. The man on the other side of that door was a stranger to me now.
* * *
The next morning, I was awakened by my phone ringing. It was Chloe.
"Did you talk to him?" she asked without preamble.
"Yes," I sighed, sitting up in bed. "He thinks he can fix this with some grand gesture. He doesn't understand that this isn't about winning me back—it's about a fundamental breach of trust."
"What are you going to do?"
"I don't know," I admitted. "But I know I can't be with someone who invalidates my trauma."
After we hung up, I noticed a text from an unknown number. When I opened it, my blood ran cold.
*He's planning to propose, you know. In Central Park. With the most beautiful white lilies. Your favorite. Oh wait, that's MY favorite. Easy mistake to make. —S*
My hands trembled as I deleted the message. Sarah. Of course she'd find a way to twist the knife deeper.
* * *
Later that afternoon, I watched from the window as Ethan exited a florist shop across the street. In his hands was a sample arrangement of pristine white lilies—Sarah's favorites. Not my beloved red roses, which he had given me every anniversary for five years.
The florist was gesturing enthusiastically, clearly explaining the details of what must be the grand proposal Ethan was planning. He nodded, smiling, completely oblivious to the fact that he was trampling over one more piece of me. One more detail of who I was, replaced by Sarah's preference.
I turned away from the window, my eyes falling on the vase of red roses Ethan had sent to my desk just last week, before everything fell apart. In a sudden burst of rage, I grabbed the vase and hurled it against the wall. It shattered, water and crimson petals exploding across the hardwood floor.
I sank to my knees among the scattered petals, their velvety texture a cruel reminder of happier times. My fingers closed around a single intact bloom, its deep red color like blood against my pale skin.
"Is love ever safe?" I whispered to the empty room, crushing the rose in my fist. The thorns bit into my palm, drawing pinpricks of blood that mingled with the broken petals at my feet.
Somewhere in the city, Ethan was planning to ask me to marry him, surrounded by the favorite flowers of the woman who had tortured me. And he thought this would fix everything.
I looked down at my bleeding hand, at the destroyed roses scattered like casualties around me.
Some things, once broken, can never be made whole again.
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