LOGINIvy’s POV
I didn’t sleep. How could I? Every time I close my eyes, I see those pictures haunting me. And the fact that nobody was on my side…that made it worse. I stayed curled up on our bed, still wearing my birthday dress, my mascara had dried in crusty streaks down my cheeks. The house was so quiet I could hear the refrigerator humming downstairs. Usually that sound annoyed me, but tonight it was the only thing keeping me company. So sad. I kept listening for Ethan’s movement, hoping he would walk through the bedroom door and tell me he believed me. That he knew me better than some fake photos. But he didn’t show up, not even his shadow. But before you knew it, the sun was up already, and I was still alone with my thoughts and bawling eyes. I picked my phone that sat on the night stand up with shaking hands. 3:47 AM was the last time I checked the time, and now it was already 8:23 AM. There were no missed calls or texts from anyone, not that i was expecting considering how they all left angrily. I sat up slowly, my whole body aching like I had been in a car accident. I looked at my reflection in the dresser mirror, and the person that stared back at me was definitely a stranger, because what the hell? I looked exactly like someone who deserved to be abandoned. Stop it, I told myself. You didn’t do anything wrong. But if I didn’t do anything wrong, why was I alone? Why had everyone I loved looked at me with such disgust? Yes, it was not my fault but yet I was all alone, with my marriage hanging by a thread. Or is this whole thing a prank? My fingers moved on their own, pulling up my mom’s contact. I pressed the call before I could think better of it. She answered on the second ring. “Mom.” My voice cracked. “Mom, please, I need you to listen to me.” I said as soon as she picked the call. “I have nothing to say to you, Ivy.” Her tone was so icy, the kind of cold that could burn when it touches skin. “Those pictures weren’t real,” I said quickly. “Someone made them. Someone is trying to ruin my life. You have to believe me...” “We saw everything.” She cut me off. “We saw what you did to your husband, to your marriage and to this family.” She stated blatantly, like i am some sort of betrayer that doesn’t deserve a listening ear. “I never cheated on Ethan! I swear on my life, I have never even met that man!” “Don’t you dare swear on anything.” Her voice rose, and I heard Dad say something in the background. “You have disgraced us, Ivy. You’ve humiliated us in front of the Carters. Do you have any idea what you’ve done?” My tears kept pouring down my face. How would I explain myself now? “I didn’t do anything! Please, Mom, you’re my mother. You’re supposed to believe me. You’re supposed to be on my side.” “I don’t have a side anymore. I have a daughter who threw away a good man for some fling, a daughter who lied to everyone who ever loved her.” “I’m not lying!” “Don’t call this number again. You are no longer our daughter!” Then the line went dead. What the hell just happened? I stared at my phone, at Mom’s smiling face in her contact photo. Thinking how she could just cut me off like I was someone she met randomly. I thought of calling my Dad but that wasn’t going to work since I heard what he said. And Ethan’s mother? I would rather die than call that woman. She had hated me from day one, always looking at me like I wasn’t good enough for her precious son. This would just prove her right in her mind. That only one person left was Natalie. Natalie answered on the fourth ring, and I almost sobbed with relief at just hearing her voice. “Nat,” I breathed. “Thank God. I need to talk to you…uhm…about last night.” She was quiet at first before she finally spoke. “Why would you do that to us, Ivy?” She asked. I could feel the heartbreak in her voice. She has always admired our marriage, have always supported me, and even call us couple goal. She always tells me that she wishes to have a man like Ethan, who would love her, care for her and cherish her. I totally understand how disappointing that could be, but i was innocent. I didn’t do what they’re thinking. “I didn’t do anything,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “Those photos were fake. I don’t know who made them or how they made them, but they’re not real.” “They looked pretty real to me.” Her tone was flat, laced with disappointment. Like I had borrowed her favorite dress and returned it stained. “I mean, that was obviously your body and your face.” “I know how it looked, but you have to believe me. You’ve known me for years girl. Have I ever given you a reason not to trust me?” She released a long sigh. “Look, you’re still my friend. Okay? I’m not just going to abandon you or whatever.” Hope sparked in my chest. “Really?” “Yeah, but…” She paused. “I’m not going to sit here and pretend what you did was okay. Ethan didn’t deserve that. Nobody deserves that.” “I didn’t do it, Nat.” “Ivy.” Her voice had that patient tone people use with children or crazy people. “I saw the pictures. We all did.” “Someone faked them!” “Okay.” She didn’t sound like she believed me at all, but at least she gave me a listening ear, unlike my so-called parents. “Okay, if you say so.” “You don’t believe me.” “I didn’t say that.” “You didn’t have to.” She didn’t answer right away. I could hear voices in the background, someone was laughing. Life just continued normally for everyone else while mine burned to ash. “I have to go,” Natalie said. “I’ll call you later, okay?” “When?” “I don’t know. Soon. I just need some time to process all this.” She hung up before I could respond. I sat there on the bed clutching the phone in my hand, as my last thread of hope snapped. Everyone was gone. Everyone who was supposed to love me unconditionally had conditions after all. And I had apparently broken every single one. The tears I have been trying to suppress break free, I could feel my heart breaking into millions of pieces. I curled into a ball on top of the blankets, still wearing my stupid birthday dress, and cried until my throat was raw and my ribs hurt. When I finally stopped, the sun was higher in the sky. 11:47 AM. I had wasted another three hours crying which wouldn’t bring Ethan back or make my parents believe me or fix any of this shit. Get up, I told myself. Get up and do something. But what? What was I supposed to do? How was I supposed to fix something I didn’t break? I forced myself to stand, my legs wobbling. The birthday dress came off easily, pooling at my feet in a puddle of blue silk. I left it there on the floor and walked into the bathroom. I turned the water as hot as it would go, letting it scald my skin until everything was red and angry like my heart. I scrubbed at myself like I could wash away what had happened. Like I could peel off this version of Ivy that everyone hated and find the real one underneath. But when I stepped out and wiped the steam off the mirror, the same face stared back at me. A quick advice, when you’re sad, just go pour water over yourself, it works wonders. I got dressed without thinking about it. I wore a black sweater and paired it with jeans. I twisted my hair into a messy bun, I couldn’t bring myself to do any makeup, because that was pointless. The house felt too big and empty, too full of memories. I couldn’t stay here, sit in this silence and wait for my mind to eat itself alive. I grabbed my purse and keys and walked out the front door without looking back. The bar was called The Blue Room, and I had never been inside before. It was the kind of place where the people of my kind don’t go to, that will make it a safe space for me to go and forget my self and my problems. I pushed through the heavy wooden door and let the noise and darkness swallow me whole.Back at my desk I spent the afternoon trying to focus on work and mostly failing. Tuesday passed without incident, while wednesday arrived and with it my consultation with Diana Reeves.Her office was in Midtown, sixteenth floor, all clean lines and quiet authority. She was in her late forties with natural gray streaks in her dark hair and the kind of calm focused energy that made you believe she’d seen everything and nothing surprised her anymore.She listened to my entire story without interrupting once. The birthday party. The photos. Ethan throwing me out. The email about the joint accounts and the house.When I finished she was quiet for exactly five seconds.“First things first,” she said. “You have more rights than he’s implying. Significantly more.”Something unknotted in my chest. “Really?”“New York is an equitable distribution state. That means marital assets are divided fairly, not necessarily equally, but fairly. The house, the joint accounts, any investments made during
Monday morning arrived with sharp cold that reminded you winter was coming whether you were ready for it or not. I was already up at six, dressed by seven, sitting at my small desk with a cup of coffee, with my laptop opened, searching for divorce lawyers in Manhattan. The kind that were good but not so expensive that I’d burn through the last of my savings before the case even started.It was harder than I expected. Every website looked the same with professional headshots and promises of aggressive representation and confidential consultations. Words designed to make desperate people feel like they were in capable hands.I didn’t feel capable of anything right now. But I was trying.I narrowed it down to three names. All women, which felt important for reasons I couldn’t fully articulate. All with strong reviews and reasonable consultation fees. I sent emails to all three before leaving for work, explaining my situation briefly and asking for the earliest available appointment.The
The phone nearly slipped out of my hand.I read the message three more times, standing barefoot on the sidewalk outside my building, the cool concrete biting into my feet. The more I looked at the picture, the more my stomach drop a little further.*Didn’t waste any time did you? Whore.*Unknown number with nothing to identify who was on the other end.So someone has been there tonight. Sitting somewhere near that restaurant, close enough to photograph us through the window. Close enough to see Adrian’s hand cover mine, to watch me smile for the first time in weeks and decide to punish me for it.My eyes shot to the street around me instinctively. It was empty, with just parked cars and a couple walking their dog half a block away, not paying any attention to me.Whoever it was, they were already gone. Perhaps it was the same person that framed me with those pictures.I took the elevator up to my apartment with shaking hands and locked the door behind me, sliding the chain across even
Friday came faster than I expected. The week had passed in a blur of new employee training, content calendars, brand guidelines, and trying to remember everyone’s names without looking at my phone under the desk. Work was actually good. Better than good. It gave me something to focus on besides the wreckage of my personal life, somewhere to put all the energy I’d been wasting on crying and replaying those horrible birthday party moments in my head.Sarah was a good manager. Direct and no nonsense but fair, the kind of person who would told you exactly what she wanted and left you alone to deliver it. She’d already given me two projects to run independently, social media campaigns for two of Rhode Enterprises’ smaller brands, and seemed genuinely pleased with my initial ideas.“You’re picking this up fast,” she’d said on Thursday, looking over my campaign proposal. “I expected at least two weeks before you were ready for independent work.”It felt really good to hear that. Like maybe I
We stood there in her living room, me crying and her holding me, until the buzzer rang with our food delivery.Natalie ordered me to wash my face while she got the food. By the time I came out of the bathroom with puffy eyes and splotchy cheeks, she had everything laid out on her coffee table. Pad thai, spring rolls, and curry that smelled amazing.I wasn’t hungry, but I forced myself to eat. Natalie was right, I needed to keep my strength up.“Marcus wants to meet with you,” Natalie said, spooning curry onto her plate. “He has questions about people in your life. Anyone who might have access to photos of you, anyone with technical skills, anyone who might have a motive.”“When?”“This weekend if you’re free. Saturday maybe?”I nodded, pushing noodles around my plate. “Did you hear back from Ethan? About meeting for coffee?”Natalie’s expression tightened. “Yeah. He said no.”“Of course he did.”“He was actually kind of rude about it. Said he had nothing to say to me and I should stop
I didn’t wait until I got home to call Natalie back. The second I stepped out of the building onto the Fifth Avenue, I hit redial, pressing the phone against my ear hard enough to hurt, but who cares?The street was packed with people rushing home from work, a river of suits and briefcases and exhaustion flowing around me.Pick up, pick up, pick up.“Ivy.” Natalie answered on the first ring. “Where are you?”“Just left work. What did Marcus find? What’s wrong?”“Are you somewhere you can talk? Like actually talk?”My stomach dropped. “Nat, you’re scaring me.”“I know. I’m sorry. But this isn’t a phone conversation. Can you come over?”“Now?”“Yeah. Please. I’ll order food. We can eat while we talk.”I looked at the subway entrance, then in the direction of Queens where my empty apartment waited. I didn’t want to go home, and sit alone with whatever bomb Natalie was about to drop.“I’ll be there in thirty minutes,” I said.The subway ride to Natalie’s neighborhood felt endless. My mind
The apartment was on the fourth floor of a building that had seen better days. Probably in the seventies. I stood in the doorway with the last of my boxes, staring at the empty space that was supposed to be my fresh start. The walls were beige, that sad kind of beige that wasn’t trying to be ne
“A few times. Usually just in passing. He’s intense but fair from what I’ve heard. Why, have you met him?”“Briefly. During the interview process.”That was technically true.“He’s single, you know.” Kelly had apparently been listening. “Every woman in this building has a crush on him. Rich, hot, p
My first day at Rhode Enterprises started with me throwing up in my new bathroom.Nerves, mostly. And the cheap instant coffee I’d tried to choke down for breakfast. I brushed my teeth twice, gargled with mouthwash, and stared at my reflection in the spotty mirror.“You can do this,” I told myself.
I took a hot shower, scrubbing away the last two days until my skin was red and looked very raw. I washed my hair twice and stood under the water until it started running cold. When I got out, I felt slightly more alive like the human I was. Still broken, but clean. I put on something comfort







