
The Architect Who Rose From Ashes
Chapter 5
Harper Merritt POV:
I sat on the cold marble floor, the echoes of Kade' s accusations ringing in my ears, the phantom pain of his grip still lingering on my shoulders. Mr. Henderson. Dead. The unintended consequence of my actions twisted a fresh knot of guilt in my stomach. I had tried to change things for the better, but it seemed the universe had its own cruel way of balancing the scales.
In my past life, I would have chased after Kade, desperate to explain, to clear my name. I would have cried until my eyes were swollen, my voice hoarse. But that Harper was gone. This Harper, forged in the fires of a life unlived and a death unmourned, felt a strange, cold clarity. His rage, his accusations, his belief that I was a monster – it no longer held the power to shatter me. It simply confirmed what I already knew: there was nothing left between us. And perhaps, that was a kind of freedom. His hatred, misplaced as it was, was a clean break.
I was contemplating this chilling liberation when the door creaked open again. My head snapped up. Kade stood there, his hair disheveled, his eyes still red and swollen, but the furious blaze had dimmed, replaced by a haunting, desperate look. He wasn' t gone.
"Harper," he said, his voice rough, almost a whisper. He looked utterly wrecked, a stark contrast to the arrogant man who had just stormed out. "I... I remembered something."
My brow furrowed. What could he possibly have remembered that would bring him back after such venomous accusations?
He took a hesitant step inside, holding up his phone. "The Blue Moon meteor shower," he said, his voice strained. "Remember? You always wanted to see it from a boat, away from the city lights. You said it was your dream honeymoon." He looked at me, a flicker of something that looked like hope, or perhaps desperation, in his eyes. "I just booked tickets. We can go. Forget all this. Forget... everything. We can still have our honeymoon."
My heart, which had been numb moments ago, gave a strange, surprised lurch. He remembered. The "Blue Moon" trip, the one he had just offered to Kyla as a callous replacement, was something he now presented to me as an olive branch, a desperate plea for reconciliation. The irony was so potent, so tragically absurd, that a short, disbelieving laugh escaped me.
I shook my head, quickly, decisively. "No, Kade," I said, my voice flat. "Absolutely not."
He flinched, as if physicaly struck. The flicker of hope in his eyes wavered, then died down, replaced by confusion. He wasn't used to being refused, especially not by me.
"But... why not?" he stammered, looking genuinely bewildered. "You always wanted this. I know you're angry, but we can fix this. We can just... go. Leave everything behind for a few days. It'll be like old times." He held up his phone, showing me the booking confirmation. "See? First class, all arranged. It' s a gift, Harper. My apology."
A gift. An apology. A trip to forget everything. My mind flashed back to my past life, the endless apologies, the empty promises, the desperate attempts to patch up a relationship that was fundamentally broken. The idea of "starting over" with him, after everything, felt hollow, almost insulting. He thought a lavish trip could mend a heart he had systematically broken, a spirit he had slowly extinguished over a decade. He thought a plane ticket could fix a soul. The sheer naiveté was almost heartbreaking.
"Kade," I said, my voice calm, almost detached. "It's not about the trip. It's not about the Blue Moon. It's not even about Kyla anymore." I rose slowly, my body stiff but my resolve unshaken. "It's about us. And there is no 'us' anymore."
His confusion deepened. "What do you mean? We've had a fight, Harper, but we always get through them."
"This isn't a fight," I corrected him softly. "This is an ending. A definitive, irreversible end." I walked over to the window, gazing out at the waking city lights. "I'm not going with you, Kade. And I need you to cancel those tickets."
His face crumpled, a genuine look of hurt replacing his earlier anger. "Why are you being like this? You've never been so... cold. So unreasonable." He tried to approach me, but I took a step back, maintaining the distance. "I'm trying, Harper. I'm really trying. I'm offering you the honeymoon you always wanted. The one I promised you."
"The honeymoon you offered me as a consolation prize while you were pining for someone else," I countered, my voice devoid of emotion. "The one you were willing to give to Kyla moments ago because you thought it would spite me." I turned to face him, my gaze steady. "I don't need your compensatory gestures, Kade. I don't need your 'make-up' trip. My heart isn't an empty vessel that can be filled with lavish vacations as an apology for years of neglect."
He stared at me, his mouth slightly open, completely at a loss. He couldn't grasp the depth of my rejection, the finality of my words. He was used to me bending, breaking, crying, but never this quiet, unyielding strength.
"You're being absurd, Harper," he finally managed, his voice regaining a touch of its old arrogance, tinged with desperation. "Is this because of Kyla? You're just jealous. I get it. But we can work through it."
"No, Kade," I said, my voice rising slightly, a hint of steel in its tone. "I'm not jealous. I'm done. Done with being a placeholder, done with being second best, done with waiting for a love that was never truly mine." I took a deep breath, the words flowing freely, a cleansing torrent. "The girl who loved you, who dreamed of that honeymoon, who sacrificed her own ambitions for yours – she's dead, Kade. You killed her. Slowly, painfully, over ten years."
His eyes widened, shock giving way to a raw, wounded look. "Harper, you don't mean that."
"I do," I affirmed, my voice a whisper now, filled with a profound sadness. "I mean every word. And I'm leaving. Tomorrow. My flight is booked. My university acceptance is confirmed. My bags are packed." I gestured to the suitcase by the door. "I'm starting a new life. A life without you. A life where I am the priority. A life where I choose my own happiness."
He looked at the suitcase, then at me, then back at the phone still clutched in his hand with the flight confirmation. He looked like a man watching his entire world crumble, unable to comprehend the ruins.
"You're not serious," he whispered, a desperate plea in his eyes. "You think I'll let you go?"
"You have no choice," I said simply. "We're over, Kade. There's nothing left." My eyes fell on the vintage thermos his mother had left on the nightstand, filled with warm chicken soup for me. A small, kind gesture. I picked it up, intending to put it in my bag. But my hands were trembling, my focus fractured. It slipped.
The thermos hit the marble floor with a sickening crash. The glass lining shattered, and the warm, comforting soup splattered across the polished floor, forming a dark, oily stain, reflecting the chandelier lights like spilled blood.
Kade stared at the mess, his eyes wide, his mouth agape. The broken thermos, the spilled soup-it felt like a final, brutal symbol of everything that was now irrevocably broken between us. The silence was thick, heavy with the weight of shattered things.
Then, from somewhere deep within him, a low, guttural growl escaped. He looked from the shattered thermos to me, his confusion morphing into a fresh wave of blinding rage. The last vestiges of desperate pleading vanished, replaced by the familiar, cold fury I knew so well. He saw not the accident, but a deliberate act of spite. He saw not a woman breaking free, but a monster intent on destruction.
"You really are insane," he spat, his voice trembling with renewed hatred. "You're ruining everything. Everything!" He turned and stormed out of the suite, not slamming the door this time, but leaving it wide open, a gaping maw in the wall, exposing the empty, echoing corridor. His footsteps thundered away, diminishing into the distance.
I stood there, surrounded by the wreckage of spilled soup and shattered glass, a chilling premonition settling over me. He still didn' t understand. He thought I was destroying his life. He didn' t realize I was merely rebuilding my own, brick by painful brick. And he would pay for his blindness, just as I had paid for my devotion. He would pay a price far greater than he could ever imagine.
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