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Rejecting Ryan Novel Cover

Rejecting Ryan

I stood in the corner of our Manhattan penthouse, my camera hanging from my neck like armor. Through its lens, the world became manageable—distant, framed, controlled. I raised it now, focusing on Ryan across the room, laughing with his investment banker friends, champagne flute in hand. The birthday boy in his element, golden and untouchable. Click. I captured him mid-laugh, head thrown back, revealing the strong line of his jaw. Even after seven years of living under the same roof, the sight of him still made my heart contract painfully. "Quite the photographer, aren't you, Grace?" I lowered my camera to find Eleanor, our housekeeper, beside me. Her eyes, kind and knowing, had witnessed too much in this house. "Just a hobby," I murmured, fingers automatically reaching for the folded medical report in my pocket.
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Chapter 2

I woke before dawn, the memory of Ryan's betrayal still raw in my throat. Three days had passed since the party, since I'd collapsed on the marble floor gasping for air while he walked away. Since then, I'd made my decision.

The penthouse was silent as I moved through it like a ghost, placing a single folded note on the kitchen counter. 'I need some time alone. Please don't worry.' A lie wrapped in truth—they wouldn't worry anyway.

My suitcase was light. What does one pack for their final days? A few warm clothes, my camera equipment, and the medications that would ease my symptoms but couldn't save me. I left my phone on my nightstand, disconnecting from the life I was abandoning.

I paused at Ryan's door, my fingers hovering over the polished wood. For seven years, I'd lived with this door between us, imagining what might have been. Now, I pressed my palm flat against it, a silent goodbye to the love that had consumed me for so long.

'Goodbye, Ryan,' I whispered, then turned away for the last time.

The taxi driver didn't speak as we drove through the awakening city. New York had always felt too loud, too demanding. Now, watching the skyline recede in the rearview mirror, I felt the first flicker of peace I'd known in months.

At JFK, I boarded a flight to Reykjavik. Iceland—a place of fire and ice, of endings and beginnings. A fitting place to spend my remaining days. The irony wasn't lost on me that I'd chosen the most alive place I could imagine to die.

The flight attendant's smile faltered when she saw me. 'Are you feeling alright, miss?'

I wondered what she saw—the pallor of my skin, the shadows beneath my eyes, or something deeper, the mark of someone already half in the next world.

'Just tired,' I replied, another small lie in a growing collection.

Seven hours later, I stepped into another world. Iceland greeted me with wind that cut through my coat and scenery that stole what little breath I had left. Mountains rose like sentinels against a sky so vast it made me dizzy. For the first time in years, I felt small in a way that comforted rather than diminished me.

The rental car agent raised his eyebrows when I requested directions to my remote cottage. 'Traveling alone?' he asked, concern evident in his voice.

'Yes,' I said, surprising myself with the firmness in my tone. 'Just me.'

The cottage perched on the edge of a fjord, isolated and perfect. Inside was simple—a bed, a small kitchen, a writing desk positioned before a window that framed the water like a living photograph. I unpacked my camera equipment first, arranging it carefully on the desk. If these were to be my last images, they would be worth leaving behind.

That night, I slept dreamlessly for the first time in months.

The next morning, I set out early for Reykjadalur, the 'steam valley' known for its hot springs. The hiking trail stretched before me, winding through hills that steamed with geothermal activity. The earth here felt alive beneath my feet, pulsing with an energy I envied.

I photographed everything—the steam rising like spirits from the ground, the startling green of moss against black volcanic rock, a lone bird wheeling against the endless sky. Through my lens, the world became both more immediate and more distant, exactly what I needed.

I didn't notice the weather changing until it was too late. One moment, the sky was clear; the next, fog rolled in like a living thing, swallowing the landscape around me. The temperature dropped suddenly, and the wind picked up, carrying moisture that clung to my skin.

I turned back toward what I thought was the trail, but the fog had erased all landmarks. My breath quickened, panic rising in my chest. The irony struck me—I'd come here to die on my own terms, yet now faced death in a form I hadn't chosen.

As darkness began to fall, the fog thickened until I couldn't see more than a few feet ahead. My lungs burned with each breath, the cancer making itself known. I stumbled, catching myself against a rock, and realized with sudden clarity that I was completely, utterly lost.

The wind carried a sound—was it a voice? Or just another trick of this otherworldly landscape, calling me deeper into its embrace?

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