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Memories have dried up my true feelings Novel Cover

Memories have dried up my true feelings

When Albert—Betty’s assistant—used some absurd wager as an excuse for the seventh time to make her cancel our wedding, I told myself it was just her peculiar way of holding on to top talent. Three years. Seven times. Then came the eighth. The emcee was launching his third enthusiastic warm-up from the stage, and the guests’ murmurs had already swelled into open chatter. My phone glowed. A message from Albert. A photo. Below it, a voice note—also from him, his tone soaked in undisguised amusement and spite: “Roger, sorry. Betty and I made another bet. She says if you can find us within the hour, she’ll marry you. Pity… you won’t.” I didn’t reply. I didn’t go looking. Instead, I slowly scrolled through my contacts, found the number I’d kept pinned at the top for three years but never called. “Kimberly. What you said to me three years ago… does it still stand?” ...... A pause on the other end, then a soft laugh, edged with something like pity. “Roger, when I give my word, it’s for life. Where are you? I’ll come get you.” “Starlight Hotel. The wedding venue.” I hung up. I looked out at the sea of guests, their eyes a mix of sympathy and mockery. For the first time, I didn’t cover for Betty. “Roger! Have you lost your mind? Do you want to make our family the city’s laughingstock?” Rebecca, my future mother-in-law, stood backstage jabbing a finger at me, her face flushed with fury. There wasn’t a trace of concern for her missing daughter—only panic over a crumbling alliance of fortunes. “Mom,” I said, meeting her gaze calmly. “Do I need to remind you? Right now, standing here alone, facing all this—the one being humiliated is me.” “You!” My uncharacteristic coldness choked her. Her voice sharpened. “Betty’s just being childish! Can’t you be more mature? She’s doing this for the company! To keep a genius like Albert! You’re a grown man—can’t you understand? It’s only the eighth time! What’s one more after seven?” *What’s one more after seven?* The words twisted like a poisoned blade. Right. Seven times already. The first time, she said Albert threatened to quit—betting she wouldn’t dare sign a contract in another city on our wedding day. She went. The wedding was postponed. I told myself it was for the company’s future. The third time, she said Albert was in a foul mood—betting she wouldn’t cut off her long hair because his dog was “depressed” and needed cheering up. She cut it. She came back with uneven short hair and cried in my arms. I held her, heart aching, and told myself she cared about her people. The sixth time, she said Albert’s first love was getting married and he was heartbroken—betting she wouldn’t dare go with him as his pretend girlfriend. She went. Wearing the dress I gave her, on another man’s arm, smiling brightly in a photo on someone else’s social media. I told myself she was just too kind to say no. ... Every time, there was a “bet” and the “company.” Every time, I chose to believe. To yield. Because I loved Betty. After my mother died—after my father and the whole family cast me out, left me scrabbling in the dirt in some dark corner—she was the light that pierced my gray world. She said, “Roger, don’t be afraid. From now on, I’ll protect you.” For that light, I would have given anything. Even when she had that “accident” three years ago, urgently needing a kidney, I didn’t hesitate to give her one of mine. And what did I get? The slow, draining weakness that follows, and wedding after wedding turned into someone else’s wager. “Understanding?” I repeated the word softly, then laughed—a bleak, hollow sound. “The understanding I bought with half my life… is it really worth so little to you?” “You—” Rebecca’s face paled. Her eyes darted away, as if remembering. “Why bring that up now? It was just a kidney! We’ll compensate you later! Right now, we have to fix this mess! Go out there and tell everyone the wedding is postponed—say you’re not feeling well!” She’d even prepared my excuse. Right. Me, the “sickly one.” Not feeling well. How perfectly convenient. Just then, the lounge door opened. Betty was back. On Albert’s arm. The hem of her white wedding gown was smudged with dirt and grass stains. Her hair was disheveled, cheeks flushed an unnatural pink, as if she’d just been running. Seeing her mother and me, she paused, slipped from Albert’s hold, and hurried over. That familiar, apologetic look settled onto her face. “Roger, I’m sorry. I lost again. We… let’s postpone the wedding again, okay?” Behind her, Albert stood with a faint, lingering smile, watching me. His eyes held a victor’s smugness. He even reached up and tucked a loose strand behind Betty’s ear—a gesture so intimate, so natural, it was as if we weren’t even there. Rebecca jumped in to smooth things over. “She’s back, she’s back! See, Roger? Betty came back! She cares about you!” I looked at the three of them as if watching some clumsily staged farce. Betty, seeing my silence, reached
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Chapter 4

The next day, seismic tremors rocked Riverbend's business community.

Without warning, Kimberly's multinational conglomerate, Genesis Capital, announced a comprehensive assault on every one of Betty's Family Group's operations.

The news sent the Betty family's stock into a nosedive, erasing nearly three billion in market value before the closing bell.

Every company with an eye on partnering with the Betty family chose to wait and see; those with existing contracts began scrambling for excuses to tear them up.

The Betty family was in chaos.

I watched it all unfold from my hospital bed, the financial news flashing across the screen.

Beside me, Kimberly peeled an apple with serene detachment. "Consider this just the appetizer," she said. "The Betty family's foundation was hollowed out long ago. They're a rotten shell now. One good shove, and the whole structure comes down. Within a month, there will be no Betty family left in Riverbend."

Her tone was as casual as if she were discussing the weather, yet the absolute confidence in her control of the situation filled me with a profound sense of security.

"Thank you, Kimberly," I said, and meant it.

She handed me the peeled apple. My own reflection was clear in her cool eyes. "Don't thank me. I'm just helping you take back what was always yours."

I was about to say more when the hospital room door burst open violently.

Betty stormed in like a whirlwind. She looked haggard—hair a mess, eyes bloodshot—a far cry from the untouchable goddess she pretended to be.

"Roger!" She rushed to my bedside, grabbing my arm, her voice a hysterical shriek. "It was you, wasn't it? You told Kimberly to destroy my family! How could you be so heartless? Were all those years between us just a lie?"

I watched her coldly, not pulling my arm away, letting her nails dig into my skin.

"Feelings?" I echoed. "Betty, are you even qualified to talk to me about feelings? Did you think of feelings when you tricked me out of a kidney? Or when you killed my mother?"

My words hit like a knockout punch.

All the color drained from her face. She swayed, staring at me in disbelief, her lips trembling. "You... how could you know..."

"What's done in the dark always comes to light."

Kimberly, silent until now, stood up. She stepped in front of me, shielding me, and looked down at Betty with ice-cold eyes. "Miss Betty, I suggest you leave. Now. Otherwise, I can't guarantee my security won't throw you out the window."

"Kimberly! You bitch!" Betty, provoked beyond reason, lunged at her like a madwoman. "This is all you! You seduced Roger! You ruined everything!"

Kimberly sidestepped neatly and delivered a stinging slap across Betty's face.

*Smack!*

The sound cracked through the sterile room.

Betty stumbled from the force, collapsing to the floor. Clutching her cheek, she looked utterly stunned.

"That slap," Kimberly said, shaking out her hand, her voice frosty, "was for Roger. The game has only just begun, Betty. Enjoy the ride."

Looking utterly broken, Betty was hauled away by security who had arrived at the commotion.

Silence settled back over the room.

Kimberly returned to the seat beside me. Noticing the red marks Betty's nails had left on my arm, her brow furrowed slightly. She took a tube of ointment from the bedside table and began applying it in silence.

Her movements were gentle, almost careful.

Watching her focused profile, a tumult of emotions churned inside me.

Kimberly and I had been engaged once.

It was arranged by my mother when she was still alive.

But back then, my heart and eyes held only Betty. I'd resented that business-alliance marriage with every fiber of my being.

At the engagement party, I’d even publicly humiliated Kimberly and her family, calling off the engagement on the spot to run after Betty.

Yet she never blamed me.

Three years ago, when I was at my lowest—kicked out of my own family's company—she found me. "Roger," she’d said, "if you just say the word, I'll marry you anytime."

I refused.

I took Betty and left for another city, determined to prove my choice had been right.

I couldn't have been more wrong.

"Kimberly," I said, my throat tight. "I'm sorry."

That apology was years too late.

Her hand, applying the ointment, paused for a fraction of a second before resuming. She didn't look at me, her voice quiet. "Let's not talk about the past. We have to look forward now."

The more detached and unbothered she seemed, the heavier the guilt weighed on me.

Just then, another knock sounded at the door.

This time, two police officers entered.

"Mr. Roger," the lead officer said in an official tone. "Regarding the assault case from the night before last, we've apprehended the suspects. They've confessed they were hired."

My heart jumped. "By who?"

"Albert."

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