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The One He Didn't Save

When a kidnapper forces Maverick to choose between saving his wife or his former flame, he leaves his spouse behind without a second thought. This heart-wrenching modern romance turns into a grim horror story as the abandoned wife endures fatal torture. Years later, a regretful Maverick initiates a search to recover the woman he discarded, only to find a shallow grave. The One He Didn't Save explores the brutal consequences of betrayal and the dark mystery surrounding a life lost to indifference.
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Chapter 3

I swallowed the sting in my chest and drifted after Maverick and Quincey to her troupe's studio.

The second Quincey—the star ballerina—walked in, every dancer stopped and greeted her.

"Quincey, is that your boyfriend? He's so hot."

"Duh. Why else would he be carrying her around?"

Quincey flashed that smug little smile, pretending to scold them. Told them to get back to practice like she wasn't eating up every word.

They just laughed, totally buying the 'shy and humble' act. Please.

Maverick stared at the stage, stone-faced. No denial. No reaction. Just enough silence to look like agreement.

I followed his gaze—and bam, flashback.

Back in school, he'd shown interest in Quincey, the dance academy girl. Even asked why I never tried ballet.

That was the first time my crush on him felt... threatened.

One dumb comment. That's all it took for me to sign up for ballet.

I was way too old to be starting ballet, and my teacher didn't sugarcoat it. Said it'd be brutal. She wasn't wrong.

I kept dancing 'til my feet were wrecked—swollen, raw. Didn't care.

Connor, my godbrother, would pick me up after class and lose it every time. Scolded me for pushing too hard, said I was ruining my body over a guy who didn't deserve it.

He was my mom's best friend's son. Always looked out for me—like a real brother. Always said Maverick wasn't worth the pain.

But I was stubborn. Classic me.

"Come on," he sighed once, "I'll buy you dinner. I'm heading out of Elencia next week, so this is it for a while."

He didn't agree with me, but he never disrespected my choice.

I was about to change when Maverick and Quincey walked into the studio.

She was wearing the same color leotard as me. Standing next to Maverick, they looked... right. Like they belonged together.

"So ugly."

One sentence. That was all it took.

I never forgot the look in Maverick's eyes—or how fast that word crushed me. In that second, I didn't feel like a dancer anymore. I felt like a knockoff. A bad copy.

The leotard stuck to my skin like something foul I couldn't scrub off.

After that day, I never went near ballet again.

Years later, after we got married, Maverick asked why I gave up dancing. Even wanted me to wear that leotard again.

He forgot. Forgot what he said that day. Instead, he called me flaky—said I never stuck with anything.

Every memory just screamed the truth—he never loved me.

"Stella still hasn't called?"

Quincey's voice yanked me back. Maverick was staring at his phone, jaw tight.

"It's work," he muttered, jamming it into his pocket. "Stella? Who cares. If she doesn't want to come back, she can stay gone forever."

He always gave Quincey the best parts of him. Me? I got the scraps.

Didn't he realize—even someone who loves that hard breaks eventually?

Well, congrats, Maverick. You got your wish.

I'm not coming back.

***

Three days flew by. Maverick buried himself in work and barely showed up at home.

I figured he couldn't wait to cozy up with Quincey in our bed.

But nope. Right after we got back from the ballet, he had her moved to the guest room and ordered the master sheets changed. Put everything back like I'd never died.

I didn't get him. Maybe I never did. Even Quincey broke down over the sudden switch.

Lucinda's face soured. "Still no word from Stella?"

Maverick hummed in response. He stared at his phone, screen black, completely zoned out.

"This is absurd," Lucinda snapped, slamming the table. "She's even skipping your grandmother's memorial now?

"That ungrateful brat. After everything your grandmother did for her—taking her in when her parents died, honoring that silly childhood engagement. And you, my poor boy, had to give up the girl you actually loved."

"Please don't be mad, Mrs. Falkner. It's all my fault," Quincey said, all sad eyes and trembling voice. "If I hadn't come back and needed Maverick's help, Stella wouldn't have snapped and hired someone to kidnap me. My leg wouldn't be injured.

"I swear, if I'd known, I never would've shown up."

She glanced at Maverick with a tearful look, all delicate and broken—just tragic enough to sway anyone.

"I've cut off Stella's cards," Maverick said coldly, grabbing his phone and heading upstairs. "She's been spoiled her whole life. She won't last. She'll come crawling back. And when she does, she's apologizing to you."

He holed up in the study, unlocked his phone, and dialed.

"The number you have dialed is powered off."

The second that robotic voice kicked in, he slammed the phone into the couch. His eyes burned.

"Stella Sorra."

I flinched. Then remembered—he couldn't see me.

"If you don't show up soon, don't expect me to come looking."

He'd believe anyone but me. Never once thought maybe I was in danger.

Just like Lucinda, he decided I was ungrateful. Hopeless. The kind of person who wouldn't even show up for Grandma Rosalee's memorial.

But how was I supposed to come back?

If anyone in that family ever gave a damn about me, it was her. Grandma Rosalee was terrified I'd drown in grief after my parents died. She tried everything to lift me up. Never made me feel like a burden. Never once cruel.

And now? I couldn't even stand by her grave.

Yeah, I let her down.

All I want now is to finally leave this world. When I see her again, I'll say sorry the right way.