
Six Years Trapped In A Broken Vow
Aliyah Pollard POV:
For six years, my husband, Chase, refused to divorce me, gaslighting me while he built a new family with his mistress, Faye. After 99 failed attempts, I was ready for my 100th try.
But the man I met in the park wasn't my cold, cheating husband. It was Chase from ten years ago-eighteen, idealistic, and still madly in love with me.
He didn't understand why I looked so sad, why I flinched from his touch. He didn't know about the affair, the miscarriage Faye caused, or the child they now had together.
He saw the divorce papers and his world shattered. "I would never hurt you, Aliyah," he cried, his young eyes filled with genuine anguish. "I love you."
His pain was a stark contrast to the cruelty of the man he would become. The older Chase had sneered, "You're mine, Aliyah. Who would want you?"
But this boy, this pure version of my husband, saw my suffering and didn't hesitate.
He took the pen, his hand shaking, and signed the papers his future self had refused for years. "If this is what you need," he whispered, "I'll do it."
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Chapter 3
The 28-year-old Chase stood in the doorway, his eyes darting between me and the young Chase. His face was a thundercloud, dark and menacing. The young Chase, still holding the medical report, bristled, a protective instinct flaring in his eyes.
"Who are you?" the older Chase demanded, his voice low and dangerous. He took another step, closing the distance between us.
The young Chase, despite his youth, didn't back down. "I'm her husband," he declared, his voice firm, though a tremor ran through it. He still believed it. He still believed in us.
The older Chase let out a harsh laugh, a sound devoid of humor. "Her husband? Don't make me laugh, kid. I'm her husband." He gestured between us, a sneer twisting his lips. "Or at least, I was. Until she decided to play games."
Before I could intervene, the young Chase lunged forward, pushing the older Chase back with surprising force. "You hurt her!" he yelled, his voice cracking with rage. "You betrayed her! You destroyed everything!"
The older Chase stumbled, caught off guard by the younger man's ferocity. His eyes widened in shock, then narrowed into slits of pure fury. "You have no idea what you're talking about, boy," he snarled, trying to regain his footing.
"I know enough!" the young Chase shot back, waving the medical report. "I know you were with her when Aliyah needed you most! I know you covered it up! I know you let her lose our baby!"
The older Chase' s face went ashen. He glanced at the report, then at me. A flicker of something, guilt or perhaps fear, crossed his eyes. He opened his mouth, but no words came out. He looked like he had been struck.
Just then, his phone buzzed, a shrill, insistent sound cutting through the tension. He fumbled for it, his hands shaking slightly. He looked at the screen, and his jaw tightened. Faye.
He hesitated for a moment, his gaze flicking between me, the furious young Chase, and the phone. The phone buzzed again, more urgently this time. The battle between his past and his present was playing out right before my eyes. And predictably, his present won.
He answered, his voice dropping to a soothing lull almost immediately. "Faye? What's wrong, baby?"
A high-pitched wail, unmistakably Faye's, pierced the air from the other end of the line. "Chase! She's... she's here! She's trying to... she's crazy!" Her voice was frantic, bordering on hysterical.
The older Chase's expression hardened. "Who? Aliyah? No, she's..." He looked at me, then back at the phone. "Faye, calm down. I'm on my way. Don't do anything rash." He ended the call, his face a mask of grim determination.
He pushed past the young Chase, who still stood frozen in disbelief. "This isn't over, Aliyah," he spat, his eyes burning with a cold fire. "You and I... we're going to talk about this. And you," he jabbed a finger at the young Chase, "stay out of this. You have no idea what you're meddling in."
Then he was gone, the front door slamming shut behind him, leaving a chilling echo in the silent house.
The young Chase stood rooted to the spot, his shoulders slumped, the medical report clutched forgotten in his hand. The fight had drained him. He looked at me, his eyes wide and bewildered. "He just... left. For her."
I nodded, the familiar sting of his choices a dull ache in my chest. "He always does."
He slowly folded the report, his movements precise, almost reverent. Then he walked over to the mantelpiece, picked up the framed picture of Faye and the baby, and without a word, walked out the front door. I heard the faint clang of the garbage can outside. When he returned, his face was pale, but a new resolve had settled in his eyes.
He continued clearing the house, systematically removing every trace of Faye, every oppressive layer that the older Chase had imposed. He cleaned with a quiet fury, wiping away the dust, arranging the furniture to bring back a semblance of the home we once envisioned. He even found a box of my old paintings in the storage room and carefully hung a few of them on the now-empty walls.
By evening, the living room felt different. Not entirely warm, but no longer cold. The starkness had softened. The air was cleaner, free of the choking presence of betrayal. He stood in the center of the room again, but this time, the golden light of the setting sun made him seem less like a ghost and more like a beacon.
"I'm ready," he said, his voice surprisingly firm. "Tomorrow, we finalize this. I'll go with you."
I looked at him, truly looked at him. His pure, uncorrupted love was a shield, a comfort I hadn't known I desperately needed. "Okay, Chase," I said, a genuine smile finally touching my lips. "Tomorrow."
I showed him to the guest room again, and this time, he settled in without a word. I went to my own bedroom, the one that had felt like a prison for so long. But tonight, it felt different. It felt like a space I could reclaim.
The thought of being officially divorced, of finally breaking free, washed over me. It was a liberation I hadn't dared to hope for. A new beginning, untainted by the past.
I slept soundly, deeply, for the first time in years. No nightmares, no tossing and turning. Just profound, peaceful oblivion.
The next morning, I woke to the scent of freshly brewed coffee. I walked out into the living room, blinking in the morning light, and found young Chase waiting for me. He looked exhausted, as if he hadn't slept, but his eyes held an unwavering determination. He had two mugs of coffee ready, and in his hand, he held another document.
He extended it to me, his hand trembling slightly. "I found this in his study," he said, his voice hoarse. "Tucked away in a file marked 'confidential'."
My gaze fell on the document. It was a detailed report from the car accident. Not just the medical findings, but the police report. It described the circumstances, the witness statements. And it explicitly named Faye Williams as the driver, having swerved erratically in a moment of panic after seeing me. My heart ached as I reread the lines. It confirmed not only the accident' s cause, but also the older Chase' s deliberate cover-up. He had blamed me. He had allowed me to believe it was my fault.
"He told you it was your fault, didn't he?" the young Chase whispered, his eyes burning with a furious disbelief. "He let you carry that weight."
His raw anger, his pure sense of injustice, was overwhelming. "Aliyah, you don't understand," he continued, his voice rising, "this isn't just about us anymore. This is about what's right. This is about proving he's a monster. You can't just walk away and let him get away with this."
He was right. It wasn't just about me anymore. It was about everything. It was about justice.
"I can't believe I become him," he whispered, tears streaming down his face. "I can't let him hurt you like this. I won't."
He looked at me, his young eyes pleading. "Please, Aliyah. Tell me you're not going to let him win."
His raw pain, his fierce loyalty, was a mirror of the man I had first loved. The man who would have done anything to protect me. The man his future self had obliterated. My resolve hardened.
"No, Chase," I said, my voice steady, my gaze unwavering. "I'm not going to let him win."
It was a quiet morning in the city, but the air in our living room crackled with a different kind of energy. The young Chase nodded, his jaw set, and I felt a strange sense of peace. For the first time in a long time, I wasn't alone in this fight. This ghost of a boy was my unexpected ally, and with him, I felt an unfamiliar surge of strength.
The older Chase burst through the front door, his face flushed with anger and desperation. His eyes, wild and accusatory, landed on me.
"What have you done, Aliyah?" he roared, his voice echoing through the newly cleaned house. "What the hell did you do?"
He saw the crumpled papers in my hand, the official stamp clearly visible. His eyes narrowed, then widened in disbelief. "You actually... you actually filed them?" He staggered back a step, looking as if the air had been knocked out of him. "You wouldn't dare."
He looked at me, then at the young Chase standing beside me, his jaw set, his gaze defiant. A sneer twisted the older Chase's lips. "So this is your little game, isn't it? You found some boy to sign your papers, thinking you could trick me?" He pointed a trembling finger at the young Chase. "Who is this pathetic substitute, Aliyah? Your new boy toy?"
His words, usually so potent, bounced off me. His power over me was gone. He was just a man, a broken, angry man, lashing out.
"He's the one who cleaned your mess," I said, my voice calm, almost detached. "The one who cares."
The older Chase laughed, a derisive, hollow sound. "Cares? Oh, Aliyah, you're so naive. No one cares like that. He's just a pawn in your little revenge fantasy. You think this changes anything?" He took a step closer, his eyes burning into mine. "You think you can just replace me? Replace what we had?"
He gestured wildly around the room. "You think you can just erase everything? Take my house, my life, and just walk away?" He clenched his fists, his body radiating fury. "You can't. You're still mine. And you're nothing without me."
His words, meant to wound, felt empty. I looked past him, past the anger, past the betrayal. I looked at the young Chase, who stood firm beside me, his hand now subtly resting on my arm, a silent promise of protection.
"You're wrong, Chase," I said, my voice clear and steady. "I'm free."
The older Chase's eyes widened, a flicker of genuine shock replacing the anger. My serenity, my lack of reaction, seemed to unnerve him more than any fight. He hadn't expected this. He had expected tears, begging, a desperate clinging to the past. But all he found was an unshakeable resolve.
His fury flared anew. "Free?" he roared, his voice echoing through the house. "You think you're free? You think you can just leave me for some... some substitute?" He glared at the young Chase, then back at me. "You're a joke, Aliyah. A pathetic, barren joke. You can't even give anyone a child. What kind of future do you think you have?"
The words, flung with venom, were meant to shatter me, to remind me of my deepest wound. But this time, they didn't. This time, I had a shield. The young Chase' s hand tightened on my arm, his body tensing, ready to defend me.
"You're pathetic," I said evenly, the word tasting like justice. "And you're alone."
The older Chase took a step back, his face a mixture of shock and incomprehension. My words, delivered without emotion, had found their mark. He stared at me, then at the young Chase, who was still glaring at him, his protective stance unwavering.
"You won't get away with this, Aliyah," he snarled, his voice a desperate whisper. "You'll regret this. I swear, you will regret this."
He turned and stormed out of the house, leaving behind a silence that felt heavy, yet strangely cleansing. The young Chase looked at me, his eyes filled with a mixture of anger and concern.
"He's truly a monster," he whispered, his voice shaking. "He truly is."
I simply nodded, watching the door. The waiting period had begun. Thirty days of freedom, or so I hoped. And I knew, with a certainty that settled deep in my bones, that I wouldn't regret it. Not anymore.
Aliyah Pollard POV: