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The Toxic Love That Almost Destroyed Me

The Toxic Love That Almost Destroyed Me

For five years, I was Broadway's golden girl, and my powerful CEO boyfriend, Brennan, was my anchor. Our love felt invincible, a modern fairytale written across city marquees. Then he met Aimee, a struggling musician he claimed saved his life in a car crash. He gave her the vintage guitar he'd promised me. He stole my private journal so she could turn my pain into a hit song, making me a national laughingstock. He even used my dying mother's medical bills to keep me trapped. But the night my mother was dying, the night she needed an emergency helicopter, he diverted it. He sent her only hope to Aimee, who was having a "panic attack." My mother died alone. At her funeral, a reporter asked about his engagement to Aimee. He thought he had broken me, but he had just started a war. He didn't know the separation papers he'd already signed weren't for a payout-they were for a divorce, and I was about to disappear.
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Chapter 3

In the two final days, a quiet defiance settled over me. Brennan tried to speak to me, but I offered only clipped, monosyllabic answers, my gaze distant, fixed on a future he wasn't a part of. He seemed unsettled by my new demeanor, a flicker of confusion in his eyes, as if he expected me to still fight, to beg for his affection. "Garnet, we need to talk about your mother's arrangements," he said one morning, breaking the tense silence over breakfast. "I've handled everything. The funeral is tomorrow." I looked at him, my brow furrowed. "The funeral? Without me?" His words were like a cold slap. My mother. My only family. He stood up, walking to my side. He placed a hand on my shoulder, a gesture that once would have comforted me, but now felt like a violation. He started to smooth my hair, his touch sending shivers of revulsion down my spine. "I wanted to spare you the details, darling. You've been through so much. I just want this to be a clean, dignified end to... everything." His voice was unnaturally soft, too gentle. It set off alarm bells in my mind. "A dignified end to what, Brennan?" I asked, pulling away from his touch. "My mother's life? Or our relationship?" He sighed, a practiced display of weary patience. "Both, in a way. It's time to move on, Garnet. For both of us. I'll drive you there myself. We'll present a united front for the public. For appearances." He handed me a simple black dress. "Wear this. It's appropriate." I stared at the dress, then at him. Something felt wrong. Deeply wrong. But what choice did I have? I nodded slowly, my mind racing. I changed, the black fabric feeling heavy and suffocating. As I walked out, Brennan was already waiting by the car, a sleek black sedan. He opened the door for me, his expression unreadable. I slid inside, a knot of unease tightening in my stomach. The car pulled away, but the route was unfamiliar. We weren't heading towards the cemetery. My heart began to pound. "Brennan, where are we going?" I asked, my voice tight with fear. He didn't answer, his eyes fixed on the road, a faint smirk playing on his lips. My gaze drifted to the window, and I saw it. A massive billboard, a familiar face smiling down at the busy street. Aimee. Her face, enlarged to almost grotesque proportions, dominated the city block. Below her, splashed in bold letters, were the words: "Aimee Wells: The Artist Unveiled." And in the background of the image, unmistakably, was a distorted, shadowy figure that bore a chilling resemblance to the infamous caricature of me from the tabloid headlines. My blood ran cold. This wasn't a funeral. This was a spectacle. The car stopped directly in front of a grand art gallery. A new banner, equally huge, hung above the entrance: "Aimee Wells: My Truth." And there, prominently displayed in the center of the banner, was a painting. A painting of a broken, weeping woman, her face obscured by shadow, holding a shattered musical note. It was me. It was the visual representation of my humiliation, my darkest moments, now being showcased as "art." "What is this, Brennan?" I choked, my voice raw with disbelief and betrayal. "What is this sick joke?" He turned to me, his gaze cold, devoid of any warmth. "This, Garnet, is Aimee's art exhibition. Her debut. She wants you to be here. For support. For validation. It's good for her career. And for ours, in a roundabout way." His words were a knife, twisted slowly in my gut. He was using my humiliation, my raw pain, to launch his new muse. The absurdity of it, the sheer, audacious cruelty, hit me like a physical blow. Tears welled in my eyes, hot and stinging, blurring the grotesque image of myself on the banner. My mother was dead, and he had brought me here, to this shrine of my public crucifixion. "No," I whispered, shaking my head. "I won't. I can't." I fumbled with the car door handle, desperate to escape. But he was faster. His hand clamped around my wrist, his grip like iron. "You will, Garnet." His voice was low, menacing. "You will walk in there, and you will smile. For Aimee. For me." He dragged me out of the car, his fingers digging into my flesh, propelled me towards the entrance of the gallery. The moment we stepped inside, a cacophony of sound assaulted me. Flashing cameras, hushed whispers, the clinking of champagne glasses. The air was thick with perfume and false smiles. It was a carnival, and I was the main attraction in the freak show. Then I saw her. Aimee. She was radiant, dressed in a shimmering gown that mirrored the elegant silver of Brennan' s suit. They were a perfect, sickening match. She floated towards us, a triumphant smile on her lips, her eyes glittering with a predatory glee. Brennan immediately released my arm, his harsh grip replaced by a tender embrace for Aimee. "My love," he murmured, his voice soft, almost worshipful. "You're magnificent." Aimee melted into his arms, then glanced at me, her smile widening. "Garnet! So glad you could make it. Brennan told me you wouldn't miss it for the world." Her words were saccharine, laced with venom. I felt a wave of nausea. I remembered a time, not so long ago, when Brennan would have protected me from the flashing lights, from the hungry eyes of the press. He would have held my hand, his presence a shield. Now, he was the one exposing me, forcing me into the spotlight of my own downfall. Reporters swarmed us, their microphones thrust forward like weapons. "Miss Bauer, what do you think of Aimee's groundbreaking work?" "Is it true you were the inspiration for these... intensely personal pieces?" "How does it feel to see your private life laid bare for public consumption?" Their questions were barbed, designed to wound, to humiliate. Brennan' s grip tightened on my wrist. "My partner is here tonight to support Aimee's artistic journey," he declared, his voice smooth, practiced for the cameras. "We are all incredibly proud of her talent." He smiled, a perfect, empty smile that didn't reach his eyes. His fingers, still wrapped around my wrist, felt like shackles. Then he let go. He turned away from me, towards a group of prominent art collectors, introducing Aimee as "the future of contemporary art." Aimee, meanwhile, nestled further into his side, her proprietorial hand subtly tucked into his arm, her eyes darting to me with a triumphant gleam. She was the hostess, the star, the woman of the hour. I was merely a prop, a footnote in her ascendancy. I stood there, alone and exposed, the object of pitying glances and whispered conjectures. The room spun. The humiliation was a suffocating cloak, binding me, choking me. My face burned. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't bear it another second. I pushed past a cluster of curious onlookers, my hands shaking. I grabbed Brennan' s arm, my voice raw, desperate. "Brennan, please. Let's go. I can't do this." His head snapped towards me, his eyes now cold, hard chips of ice. A flicker of something dangerous ignited in their depths. "Garnet," he hissed, his voice barely audible, but laced with pure menace. He ripped his arm from my grasp, shoving me away with brutal force. I stumbled, my heel catching on the plush carpet, and I fell, my injured hand scraping against the floor. A sharp, searing pain shot up my arm, but it was nothing compared to the agony in my heart. "What is wrong with you?" he growled, his voice low and furious. "This is Aimee's moment! Her grand opening! Do you have to ruin everything?" Aimee rushed forward, her eyes wide with feigned concern. She knelt beside me, reaching for my arm. "Oh, Garnet, are you alright? Brennan, darling, be gentle. She didn't mean it." She leaned in close, her voice dropping to a whisper that only I could hear. "He's mine now, Garnet. You lost." Then, with a dramatic sniffle, she looked up at Brennan, her eyes glistening. "She's just so jealous, Brennan. She can't stand to see me happy." Brennan immediately scooped Aimee into his arms, his protectiveness a sickening contrast to his earlier violence towards me. He glared down at me, his face a mask of disgust. "You see, Garnet? This is why I can't trust you. Always a scene. Always about you." My tears flowed freely now, hot and unstoppable. The last vestiges of my dignity shattered. I looked up at him, my vision blurred. "Is this what I am to you, Brennan?" I whispered, the words choked with pain. "A problem? An inconvenience? Is that all five years meant?" "Please," I begged, my voice cracking, raw with despair. "Just... let me have some dignity. Let me go." My plea was not for him to love me, but for him to simply acknowledge my humanity, to spare me further torment. It was the most pathetic, desperate sound I had ever made.