
Shattered Symphony: His Regret Came Too Late
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
*You will never hold a violin bow again.*
The doctor’s words echoed in the sterile silence of the hospital room long after he had left. I lay perfectly still, my eyes fixed on the ceiling tiles, counting the little perforations in the acoustic foam. One. Two. Three.
I had spent my entire life perfecting my art. My violin was my soul, my voice, my refuge when my secret inheritance felt like a gilded cage. Every blister, every callus, every agonizing hour of practice had been for the music. And in a matter of seconds, Julian’s choice had stolen it from me.
But as I lay there, I realized I wasn't crying.
In my past life, I would have wept. I would have begged Julian for comfort, desperately trying to prove my worth to a man who saw me as nothing more than a convenient, decorative placeholder. I would have torn myself apart, wondering why I wasn't enough.
Not anymore. The Clara who loved Julian Thorne had drowned in the freezing waters of the Thames. The woman lying in this hospital bed was someone else entirely.
With a slow, deliberate movement, I reached over with my uninjured right hand and pulled the thick hospital blanket up, carefully draping it over the heavy bandages on my left arm. I hid the ruin of my life beneath the soft cotton.
A sharp knock broke the silence, and the door swung open before I could speak.
Julian marched into the room, his presence instantly sucking the oxygen from the air. He had changed out of his tuxedo into a crisp, tailored charcoal suit, looking every inch the ruthless tech CEO he was. In one hand, he clutched his phone, his thumb aggressively swiping across the screen. In the other, he held a bouquet of wilted, garish carnations that looked like they had been purchased from a hospital gift shop five minutes ago.
He tossed the cheap flowers onto the foot of my bed without looking at me.
"Are you done causing a scene, Clara?" Julian demanded, his voice dripping with arrogant exhaustion. He finally looked up from his phone, his eyes narrowing as he took in my pale face. "The doctors said you were awake hours ago. You could have called."
"My apologies, Julian," I said smoothly, my voice devoid of any inflection. "I was a bit preoccupied."
Julian scoffed, pacing the small room like a caged tiger. "Preoccupied with what? Milking this for sympathy? Do you have any idea what a nightmare the press is right now? The charity gala is a disaster, the company's PR team is working overtime, and half the board is breathing down my neck."
He stopped at the foot of my bed, glaring at me with a hypocritical fury. "And do you know how embarrassing it is to have my wife carted out on a stretcher, holding up the emergency responders for a few bruises, while Chloe was literally having a trauma-induced collapse?"
I looked at him. Really looked at him.
He was standing there, a man who possessed the memories of an entire past life, a man who had watched me die once before. And yet, his only concern was the narrative. His only concern was Chloe.
"How is Chloe?" I asked, my tone so perfectly stoic and polite that it seemed to throw him off balance.
Julian blinked, clearly expecting me to scream, to cry, to demand his attention as I always had. When I didn't, his jaw tightened defensively.
"She's resting," he said, his voice softening just a fraction at the mention of her name. "She scraped her knee badly during the evacuation, and the shock of the earthquake has her completely traumatized. She can barely speak without crying. I had to hire a private nurse for her apartment."
A scraped knee.
Beneath the blanket, the severed nerves in my crushed hand pulsed with a phantom, agonizing fire.
"That sounds terrible," I said, offering him a serene, dead-eyed smile. "It's a good thing you were there to carry her out, Julian. The dust could have irritated her lungs."
Julian stared at me, his brow furrowing in deep suspicion. "What kind of game are you playing, Clara? You're being... weird. I expected you to be throwing a tantrum by now, accusing me of abandoning you or some other dramatic nonsense."
"No game," I replied gracefully. "The pillar was dangerous. You made a tactical decision to secure the most fragile asset first. I understand completely."
Julian's chest puffed out slightly, his arrogance quickly overriding his suspicion. He ran a hand through his perfectly styled hair, looking vindicated. "Well. I'm glad you're finally learning to be reasonable. Chloe is delicate. She doesn't have the privileges and the... the resilience that you do."
*Resilience.* That was his word for my suffering. I was a workhorse; Chloe was a glass doll.
"Speaking of PR and protecting Chloe," I said, shifting my weight against the pillows. I reached over to the bedside table with my right hand, my left remaining perfectly concealed beneath the blanket.
Earlier, my personal attorney, Mr. Sterling—a man paid by my family's secret trust, completely untethered from Julian's tech empire—had visited while I was in recovery. He had left a manila folder precisely where I asked him to.
I pulled a thick stack of stapled papers from the folder and held them out to Julian.
"What's this?" Julian asked, making no move to take them.
"The press is circling," I lied smoothly, looking him dead in the eye. "There are already whispers online about you carrying Chloe out of the ballroom while leaving your wife inside. If the media spins this, they will paint Chloe as a homewrecker. They will tear her apart."
Julian's face darkened instantly at the thought of Chloe being scrutinized. "The media won't touch her. I'll bury any outlet that tries."
"You don't have to," I countered softly, my tone calculating and reasonable. "Sign this NDA. It’s a blanket non-disclosure and liability waiver. It legally gags the gala staff, the hospital personnel, and our internal PR teams from discussing the exact timeline of the evacuation. It creates a legal firewall around Chloe."
Julian stepped forward, snatching the papers from my right hand. He flipped to the first page. The header, which Mr. Sterling had brilliantly disguised under layers of dense corporate legal jargon, looked exactly like a standard tech-industry NDA.
"You had your lawyers draft this?" Julian asked, a hint of genuine surprise in his voice. "From your hospital bed?"
"I had plenty of time while they were checking my... bruises," I said, my voice steady as stone. "I know how much you care about her reputation, Julian. I just want peace."
Julian looked at me, a smug, satisfied smirk playing on his lips. "Finally. You're actually using your brain instead of letting your petty jealousy run the show. If you had acted this maturely from the beginning, our marriage would be a lot easier."
He didn't read it. Of course he didn't read it. Julian Thorne was a man so consumed by his own arrogance, so utterly convinced of his absolute dominance over me, that he didn't believe I possessed the teeth to bite back. He thought I was a broken, obedient dog, desperate to please him by protecting his precious childhood friend.
He reached into his breast pocket, pulled out his silver Montblanc pen, and flipped directly to the last page.
He didn't notice the clause on page three outlining the total liquidation of our joint assets. He didn't see the paragraph on page five waiving his right to contest any legal filings. And he certainly didn't read the bold print beneath the signature line.
With a few sharp, aggressive strokes, Julian signed his name.
"There," he said, tossing the signed document back onto the bed. "I'll have my team file it immediately."
"I'll handle the filing," I said, slipping the papers back into the manila folder. "Rest assured, Julian. It’s ironclad."
Before he could respond, the sharp trill of a custom ringtone echoed from his hand. Julian's phone was ringing. The caller ID flashed brightly: *Chloe.*
His demeanor changed instantly. The arrogant CEO vanished, replaced by the panicked, possessive savior. He answered it on the first ring.
"Chloe? What's wrong?" he asked, his voice dripping with a sickeningly sweet anxiety.
I couldn't hear her exact words, but the high-pitched, pathetic whine of her voice carried across the room. *"...Julian, it hurts... the nurse doesn't know what she's doing... please come back..."*
"I'm on my way," Julian said immediately. "Don't cry, sweetheart. I'm leaving right now."
He hung up the phone and shoved it into his pocket, already turning toward the door. He didn't look at me. He didn't ask if I needed anything. He didn't even say goodbye.
"Julian," I called out, my voice stopping him just as his hand touched the doorknob.
He paused, glancing over his shoulder with visible irritation. "What, Clara? Make it quick. Chloe is in pain."
I looked at the man who had let me drown in one life and let me be crushed in another. I felt absolutely nothing.
"Drive safely," I said.
Julian rolled his eyes, muttered something under his breath about me being dramatic, and yanked the door open. The heavy wooden door clicked shut behind him, plunging the room back into the quiet, sterile hum of the hospital.
I sat alone for a long moment. Then, with agonizing slowness, I pulled the blanket back, exposing the ruined, heavily bandaged stump of my left hand. I couldn't move my fingers to open the folder, so I used my right hand to clumsily slide the papers out, letting them fan across my lap.
I stared at his dark, arrogant signature on the final page.
It wasn't an NDA.
It was an irrevocable asset-separation and divorce agreement.
A cold, genuine smile touched my lips for the first time in two lifetimes. The trap was set. By the time Julian realized what he had shattered, the cage would be locked, and I would be long gone.
You may also like





