
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 4
Brennan' s face, which moments before had been contorted with anger, softened imperceptibly at my plea. A flicker of something akin to regret crossed his features. He stepped towards me, his hand reaching out. "Garnet," he said, his voice lower, almost hesitant. "Don't say that."
He knelt beside me, his eyes searching mine. "I... I never meant for things to be this way." For a split second, a fragile hope flared within me, a desperate wish that the man I once loved was still buried beneath the layers of cruelty. His touch, light on my arm, sent a confusing jolt through me.
But then his gaze drifted past my shoulder, to where Aimee stood, watching us with narrowed eyes. The softness vanished from his face, replaced by a familiar hardness. He pulled his hand back as if burned.
"But you're making a scene, Garnet," he said, his voice firm again, the brief moment of vulnerability gone. "Aimee' s exhibition is important. Can't you just... be happy for her?"
My nascent hope withered, turning into ash. He was choosing her again. Always her. The air suddenly felt thick, heavy with unspoken resentment.
Just then, a collective gasp rippled through the gallery. A deafening creak echoed from above. Everyone looked up. A tall, unstable display stand, holding a massive canvas of Aimee's work, began to sway precariously. It was poorly constructed, hastily put together for the event. A metal leg buckled with a groan.
Chaos erupted. People screamed, scattering in every direction. The display stand, now a monstrous wooden and metal skeleton, toppled forward. It was falling directly towards Aimee and me.
Aimee shrieked, a high-pitched sound of pure terror, and instinctively stumbled backward, away from the falling debris. Brennan, a primal roar tearing from his throat, didn't hesitate. His eyes locked onto Aimee. He lunged, a human shield, throwing his body over hers, protecting her from the inevitable impact.
I watched, numb, as the heavy frame crashed down. I felt a searing pain in my side, then a sharp crack in my arm. The world spun, then went dark. As consciousness slipped away, the last thing I saw was Brennan, his face buried in Aimee's hair, whispering reassurances, completely oblivious to the wreckage around me, to me.
I drifted in a hazy, dreamlike state. Images flashed through my mind, fragmented memories of a happier time. Brennan, laughing, holding me close. "I'll always protect you, Garnet. Always." He said it in our penthouse, bathed in the golden light of sunset, his arms a comforting cage around me. He said it backstage, before a performance, brushing a stray hair from my face. "Nothing will ever hurt you as long as I'm here."
Now, the memory was a cruel mockery. His promises, whispered so tenderly, now echoed in my mind as hollow, empty words. The phantom limbs of his love reached for me, but they dissolved into dust.
I woke with a gasp, every muscle in my body screaming in protest. A dull ache throbbed in my head, and my left arm was a searing inferno of pain. I was in a hospital bed, the sterile scent of antiseptic filling my nostrils.
My eyes slowly adjusted to the bright fluorescent lights. A tablet lay on the bedside table. I picked it up, my fingers clumsy. The screen lit up, displaying a news headline, plastered across every major online publication: "CEO Brennan Monroe Heroically Saves Artist Aimee Wells from Gallery Collapse!" A giant photo showed Brennan, looking disheveled but noble, shielding a cowering Aimee.
I scrolled down. The comments section was a cesspool of vitriol. "Garnet Bauer was there too, wasn't she? Probably pushed Aimee into the way!" "Typical diva, making it all about herself even when someone else is the real hero." "Good riddance, Broadway bitch. Aimee deserves a real man."
My stomach churned. The world had already decided who the villain was. And it wasn't the man who had abandoned me. It was me.
A wave of crushing despair washed over me, so potent it threatened to drown me. But beneath it, a cold, hard ember of resolve began to glow. I was not just hurt; I was broken. But I wouldn' t shatter. Not completely.
The door creaked open. Brennan stood there, looking tired, his shirt rumpled. He stepped inside, his gaze sweeping over the pristine room, then landing on me. A flicker of something, perhaps guilt, crossed his face.
"Garnet," he said, his voice low, tinged with a weariness I hadn't heard before. "You're awake." He came closer, but kept a careful distance.
"Imagine that," I whispered, my voice raw and raspy. "Didn't turn into a ghost after all."
He sighed, running a hand through his hair. "I'm sorry, Garnet. I know you're upset. But Aimee... she was in shock. I had to make sure she was okay first." He almost sounded apologetic, but the words felt like another betrayal.
"Of course," I said, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "The fragile artist. And I'm just... the inspiration for her tragic art, aren't I? The muse for her latest hit single, 'Shattered Lullaby,' perhaps?" My gaze fell to my bandaged left arm, throbbing with pain. "Or perhaps this broken arm could be her next masterpiece."
He tried to reach for me, his hand tentatively extended. I flinched, pulling back sharply, my body recoiling from his touch as if it was fire. The air in the room solidified, thick and unbreathable, leaving only the sound of our strained breaths and the insistent beep of a medical monitor.