Home / Romance / Her poison, His antidote / Chapter 4- finding me

Share

Chapter 4- finding me

Author: Pjay
last update publish date: 2026-02-24 09:05:20

My thumb slid across the screen, not to answer, but to send the call to a silence deeper than any voicemail. I powered the phone off.

The world didn’t end. The pavement beneath my feet stayed solid. I took the third step, then the fourth and more.

One minute I walked out of Alberth lounge then the next I was collapsing into the backseat of a pigoet, gasping for air.

The taxi ride home was a blur of streetlights and a low hum of radio talk. I kept the phone off, a dead weight in my lap. The silence it represented felt like the only thing I controlled.

Back in my apartment, the stillness was a physical presence. I toasted a slice of bread, forced down a few bites, the food tasting like ash.

The act felt ridiculous, nourishing a body that housed a completely shattered spirit. But I did it anyways.

The thought of Eleanor’s offer enveloped me,how she spoken, how she looked at me…I didn’t deserve any of this from both Austin and his mother,I thought of her last statement, “He would come begging.”

Then, the itch started.

It began as a faint tremor in my hands, a restlessness in my chest. It was the same compulsion that had driven me to the photo box, to the old text logs.

A need to know, to probe the bruise, to confirm the rot. Eleanor’s words "He will come for you” had set up a terrible expectation in my bones even though I had refused his calls earlier. But what was he doing right now, while I was waiting for his next move?

My phone sat on the kitchen counter, a black rectangle of potential pain. I told myself I was just checking for a work email. I told myself I was strong enough now to be a passive observer.

I was a liar.

I powered it on. The screen lit up, and for a moment, there was only my neutral wallpaper a photo of a blank canvas I had taken in a moment of optimism. Then, the notifications cascaded in. The missed calls and texts from PAT were a dull, expected throb. I ignored them, my finger moving with a will of its own to the blue app icon.

His profile loaded. And there, pinned at the top, was the update.

Posted two hours ago.

It wasn’t a yacht. It was a rooftop bar, all gleaming glass and string lights against the night sky. Austin stood in the center of a group, his arm slung around a guy I recognized as his college friend, Mark.

They were all laughing, faces flushed under the warm light. In his other hand, he held a bottle of beer. On the table in front of them, the remnants of shared plates truffle fries, sliders. Out with the boys.

The caption was casual, effortless, "Much needed laughs with the crew. Good vibes only. #FriendsAreTheBestTherapy”

I stared.

#FriendsAreTheBestTherapy.

While I had been in a gilded prison being offered a blank cheque for my broken heart…

While I had been gasping for air in the back of a taxi…

While I was right now, in my silent apartment, forcing down dry toast and trembling with the aftershocks of his mother’s strike…

He was laughing. He was eating truffle fries. He was broadcasting his resilience, his good vibes, to the world.

The wailing sadness that had been my constant companion for days didn’t rise up. It evaporated. In its place flooded a vacuum, so cold and empty it stole my breath.

This was the reality. Not the dramatic, tear streaked confrontation. Not the betrayal. This. The simple, brutal fact that his life had a pause button for our drama, and then a swift, seamless play button for his own enjoyment. My world had stopped. His had merely skipped a beat.

I looked from the bright, noisy, smiling photo on the screen to the profound silence of my own apartment. The contrast wasn’t just painful, it was absurd. It was the punchline to a joke I had been the butt of, for who knows how long.

A sound left my lips not a sob, but a short, sharp puff of air, almost a laugh. The laugh of someone who has just seen the final, undeniable proof of their own foolishness.

I was the one wailing over spilled milk, while he was already at a different bar, drinking a fresh pint and joking with his friends about the mess left behind.

The pain didn’t vanish, but it crystallized. It hardened from a weeping cloud into a sharp, clear lump of truth lodged in my chest. This photo was the gift Eleanor hadn’t offered,the gift of seeing him clearly, without the filter of my own longing.

He wasn’t heartbroken. He was… fine. He was moving on, hashtag by hashtag.

My thumb moved. Not to like, not to comment, not to scream into the void. I went to his profile. I clicked the three dots. I selected Unfollow. Then, Unfriend.

It wasn’t an act of anger. It was an act of hygiene. Like wiping a dirty mirror clean. I could not see my own reflection through the smudge of his performative recovery.

I powered the phone off again. The screen went black, reflecting my own pale, stunned face back at me.

I got up, walked to the living room, and looked at the shattered glass of the sketched frame I had gathered to replace,I had broken it in a fury, a symbol of destroying our memory. Now, I saw it for what it was, just glass. Just a frame. The memory it held was already being overwritten, by him, with truffle fries and rooftop laughs.

I fetched the dustpan and brush. I knelt and swept up every last sliver. I dumped it in the trash, the soft clink a final, satisfying period.

The crying was over. The wailing was done. He had given me the one thing his apologies and kisses couldn’t, the cold, clean clarity of his indifference. And with it, a strange, quiet power.

The milk was spilled. He had already bought a new drink. It was time, finally, for me to stop staring at the puddle on the floor.

A hollow, restless energy buzzed under my skin. The clarity was clean, but it was also empty. And the silence of the apartment, the silence I had craved now felt like it would swallow me whole.

I needed noise. I needed a crowd to disappear into. I needed to prove, if only to myself, that I could feel something other than this piercing silence.

That was when I thought to visit the club.

The club wasn’t a desire. It wasn’t even fun to me. It was more like a prescription,a massive, auditory antibiotic for the infection of memory. A way to sweep my mind clean through volume.

If I could not find peace in my sanctuary, I would seek comfort in the crowd.

Wipe completely every thought of Austin and his mother.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Her poison, His antidote    Distraction, The opposite of love

    After the meeting that day, Alex became consistent in my world. Reaching out when he was out of town and showing up in person on a good day. One time, Alex showed up at my studio with two cups and no agenda. He made us coffee…Two hours of silence, broken only by the scratch of charcoal and the occasional hum of agreement from his side of the room. "You don't have to stay," I said. "I know." Yet, He stayed. The coffee became a ritual. Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m, no exceptions. He never texted to confirm, he just appeared, like the morning light. I had stopped complaining, I just make sure to be at the studio before 10 a.m, and honestly I had always looked forward to having him around. Some days we talked. Some days we dont. He learned that I painted best in silence and talked best when I wasn't looking at him. "You're deflecting," he said once, after I had spent ten minutes describing a documentary I had watched instead of answering his question about how I was

  • Her poison, His antidote    Not done bleeding

    The night didn't care what I wished for. I woke up on the floor at 3:47 a.m., my neck stiff, one cheek pressed against the cold wood. The ceiling stared back at me, blank and white and merciless. I had not disappeared. I was still here. Still Ava. Still the girl who had shouted her ugliest truth in a gallery full of art that was supposed to have healed her. My phone was still before me. I didn't need to check it to know there would be messages. I could feel them waiting. I picked it up anyway. Alex (11:02 PM): Are you home safe? Alex (11:47 PM): I am not going to pretend I understand what happened. But I am not angry. I just need you to tell me you are okay. Alex (12:34 AM): Ava, Please. Then nothing for two hours. Then, at 2:51 AM: Alex: I am outside your building. My heart stopped. I crawled to the window actually crawled, because my legs still didn't feel like they belonged to me and peep back the edge of the curtain. His car was there. A dark sedan, pulled up against

  • Her poison, His antidote    The confession

    The name hit me like a physical blow. Austin. My hand stiffened in Alex’s hand. I could tell he felt the shift in my posture,the way my face turned pale, the way my breath caught and held. He turned to look at me, confusion flickering across his features, then followed my gaze to the doorway. Austin stood there, his shadow revealed against the dim gallery lights. He looked the same. God, he always looked the same. That easy smile, those eyes that had once convinced me I was the center of his universe. He was dressed casually,dark jeans, a leather jacket, like he had just rolled in from somewhere important. “Alex, man, sorry I am late.” Austin stepped forward, already reaching out for a handshake. “The flight got delayed and then…” He stopped. His eyes landed on me. On my hand, still held in Alex's. On my face, which had gone pale. “Ava?” Austin's voice cracked.. He blinked, like he was trying to clear a hallucination. “What…how…” “You know each other?” Alex asked. His voic

  • Her poison, His antidote    Art and Emotion

    I stood frozen in the doorway of my own exhibition room, the bangle in my hand suddenly feeling like a liability.“You have been looking for me?” The words came out breathless, smaller than I intended.Alex stepped closer, and the gallery lights caught the edges of his face, sharpening the angles of his jaw,which soften something in his expression. “For weeks,” he said simply. “You disappeared.”“I didn't disappear. I was…”“Painting?” He finished my sentence, and his lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. “Okay.”He held out one of the champagne glasses. I took it because my hands needed something to do, because standing in front of him empty handed felt too vulnerable, because I did’nt know what else to do with the way my heart was hammering against my ribs.“You knew,” I said. It was not a question.Alex leaned against the doorframe, close enough that I could smell whatever clean, woody scent clung to his jacket. Close enough that I had to tilt my chin up to hold

  • Her poison, His antidote    The exhibition

    The days leading up to the exhibition passed so fast,I had sleepless night painting my final brushstrokes. At some point I stopped counting how many times I repainted the same corner of a canvas, stopped noticing when the sun came up or went down. The studio became my entire world,The newly painted twelve canvases were my priority. I didn't go back to the club. I didn't look for Alex. I told myself I was too busy, too focused, too close to something important to let myself get distracted by green eyes and gentle smiles. And maybe I was afraid, Afraid that finding him would mean facing the version of myself who ran away, Afraid that he wouldn't remember me or that he would. So I painted,I painted until my shoulders ached and my eyes hurt. I painted until the faces of Austin blurred into something distant. The night of the exhibition arrived with the kind of nervousness that made my dress cling to my skin before I even left the apartment. I stood in front of my mirror for too lo

  • Her poison, His antidote    Finding Alex

    The weeks that followed I found myself repeating a strange kind of routine.I would wake up before the sun, before my brain could remember why it hurt to be awake. I would make coffee that I didn’t taste and force down toasted bread that felt dry down my throat.Then I would grab my bag and walk to the studio before I could talk myself out of it.The studio became my shelter. I needed to make Clara Vance work.Twelve canvases waited for me, blank and patient. They didn't care about my broken heart. They didn't care that I hadn't slept or that I had cried in the shower that morning until the water ran cold. They just sat there, white and expectant, waiting for me to turn my pain into something they could wear.And I did.I painted Austin.Not his face exactly. Something more honest than that. I painted his absence. I painted the way the light looked different after he left me. I painted the sound of a phone that doesn't ring. I painted the weight of words I never got to say.One canvas

  • Her poison, His antidote    In my ex’s bed

    My mind was a jumble of confusion as i tried to piece together the events of the night before. The stranger…..the one whose car i had entered. I hurriedly got off the bed, Austin’s house wasn’t the best place to be right now. As I tried to move, my head swam violently, and i almost fell due to the

  • Her poison, His antidote    Chapter 5- mr green eyes

    I spent the following morning trying to watch a cartoon series recommended by Netflix, as much as i loved to watch my cartoons, it didn’t sink in, I was staring at the screen with no sense of sight in me. By 8pm in the evening I prepared for the club my make up done, I didn't put on the little b

  • Her poison, His antidote    Chapter 3 - Eleanor rail

    I could barely sleep through the night,I tossed and turned the whole night replaying every bit of Eleanor’s words Questions running freely through my mind. Every sane instinct screamed to turn down her request, to bury myself in blankets and block out the world. To heal or to shatter, in privat

  • Her poison, His antidote    Chapter 2- Broken

    The screen glowed an unsaved number. The drop in my stomach was so violent it felt like falling from a tree. The warmth vanished, replaced by a wash of disappointment. it wasn’t him. He was probably still asleep, untroubled, or already charming someone new in his office. I was an idiot. “H

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status