로그인Elara 's POV.
The message plays in my head all night. I lie in the dark, staring at the ceiling, and wonder what she looks like. Sophia. His ex. The woman he laughs with on the phone. The woman he softened his voice for. I have never seen her face, he never kept photos. But I know she exists in the spaces between us, a ghost I have been competing with since the day I said I do. Morning comes. I rise at six, same as always. I make his coffee. I arrange the tray. I place a fresh rose in the tiny vase. He comes down at seven-fifteen. He takes the cup and leaves. But something is different. He is humming. I stand at the kitchen counter, listening to the sound fade down the hall. I have not heard him hum in years. The melody is unfamiliar, something that belongs to a man who is happy. He is happy because she is coming back. When I step out of the kitchen, I see the maid walking in with new shirts. Slimmer cuts, younger fabrics. He never did any of this for me. I remember our first year. I bought a red dress for our anniversary, spent an hour on my hair, lit candles in the bedroom. He came home at midnight, said he had a late meeting, and slept in his study. The next morning, I found the red dress crumpled on the bathroom floor. I had taken it off alone. He never saw it. I never wore red again. **** Three days have passed. My vitamin bottle runs out, and Adrian has been out lately. I go to the cabinet in the hallway to retrieve a new one. The bottle I find is different. The label is unfamiliar, the font smaller, the brand name something I don't recognize. I turn it over in my hands. A strange prickle runs down my spine. Without thinking, I pull out my phone. My fingers move before I can think. I type the manufacturer's code into the search bar. The results load. My blood turns to ice. Ethinyl estradiol/drospirenone. Combined oral contraceptive. Not vitamins. Birth control. I stare at the screen. My hands begin to shake. I read the words again, hoping they will change. They don't. Ten years. Ten years of little white tablets. Ten years of trusting him. Ten years of wondering why my body never quickened with his child. I thought it was me. I thought I was broken, barren, a wife who couldn't give her husband what he deserved. I cried over it in the dark. I apologized to him once, my voice cracking, telling him I was sorry I couldn't bear his child. He held my hand that night. Told me it was fine. Said he didn't need children. He was lying. He was making sure I never had a choice. I wait in his study. The bottle sits on my lap. My fingers grip it so hard my knuckles have gone white. I have been sitting here for an hour. Maybe two. I have lost track of time. The door opens. Adrian walks in, still loosening his tie. He stops when he sees me. His expression flickers. Then it settles into something cold. "What are you doing in here?" I hold up the bottle. "What are these?" He looks at it. His jaw tightens. For a moment, I think I see something, guilt, maybe. But it passes. "You weren't supposed to find out." No explanation. No apology. Just you weren't supposed to find out. Something inside me snaps. I stand. My legs feel like they might give out, but I hold myself straight. "You've been feeding me birth control for ten years. Telling me they were vitamins. Letting me think I was the problem." He doesn't answer. He walks to his desk, opens a drawer, and pulls out a folded document. "I didn't come here to discuss the pills." Papers fell off his desk, and I quickly picked them up before he could reach them. My eyes widened, Divorce agreement. I swallowed hard, my gaze darting from the papers to Adrian, silently wishing it wasn’t what I thought. “Sophia is coming back,” he says. His voice changes, quieter, almost careful. “She doesn’t like to be kept waiting.” "Then why did you marry me?" He meets my eyes, unmoved. "You looked like her. That's why I chose you." He pauses, something unreadable flickers in his eyes. “Don’t make this harder than it needs to be.” The words land like stones in my stomach. I think of the day I met him. I was twenty, fresh from my first major recital, still buzzing with the applause. He was in the audience. He came backstage with flowers. He looked at me like I was the only person in the room. I thought he saw me. I…I thought he loved me. I was twenty years old, and I gave him everything. My music, my dreams, my body. My trust. He took it all. And now he tells me I was never anything but a stand-in for the woman he actually wanted. I pick up the pen. My hand is steady. I will not let him see me break. I sign my name on the line, each letter a small death. I set the pen down. “Elara…..you’ll be better off this way.” Instead of responding, I picked up the pill bottle and I walked out of his study without looking back. My room is dark. I lock the door behind me and press my back against the wood. Then I slide down. My legs fold beneath me. I sit on the floor, my forehead pressed to my knees, and the tears come. They are silent. I learned to cry without sound years ago. But they fall anyway, hot and endless, soaking into my dress. Ten years. Ten years of waiting by windows and swallowing pills I thought were love. Ten years of being a placeholder for a man who never saw me. I cry until there is nothing left. Then I stand. I wash my face. I open my closet. I pack one small suitcase. I take nothing he gave me. No jewelry, no clothes, no souvenirs of a life that was never mine. I take my old sheet music, the worn leather journal I kept as a girl, and the jade pendant my mother gave me before she died. That is all I have. That is all I came with. I walk down the stairs. Agatha stands there, a slow, mischievous smile curling her lips. Adrian’s mother. Of course, this is what she has always wanted. “At last, the barren woman is gone. We can finally cleanse the house,” she says, like she’s talking about dust, not me. I look at her, biting down hard on my lip, forcing the tears back before they can fall. I walk out immediately. The rain has started, I get into my car, my hands steady on the wheel. I pull out of the gates. The mansion shrinks in my rearview mirror. I do not look back. My phone buzzes. Adrian's name lights up the screen. I let it ring. I keep driving, the rain falls harder. The wipers struggle to keep up. I should pull over. But I keep going because stopping means thinking, and thinking means remembering, and my heart can't bear it. Headlights appear in front of me. Too bright. I hear the screech of tires. I let out a scream.. Then everything goes white..Elara's POV.I followed my grandmother through the narrow hallway of her cottage, my hand still clasped in hers. I wondered what she could possibly have to show me that would make any of this better.She led me into the sitting room, and I stopped short in the doorway, my breath catching in my throat as I took in the familiar faces I hadn't seen in years, faces I had convinced myself I would never see again, faces that belonged to the people who had once been my entire world before I threw them away for a man who couldn't even be bothered to choose me.My cousin Lucy stepped forward first, a tall woman with sharp eyes and a confident posture that reminded me of the girl I used to be. She embraced me with a warmth that made my eyes sting with unshed tears."We've been watching you," she said, her voice low and steady. "We've been waiting for you to come back."I looked past her to see my aunt standing by the window, her arms crossed and her expression unreadable. But there was a sof
Adrian’s POV.“Elara, wait…” I begged, but she shoved past me.I stood in the hallway, my hand still raised from where I had reached for her, and the sound of her laughter echoed in my ears like a mocking reminder of how badly I had misjudged this moment. I had expected tears or anger, or even that cold, cutting silence she had been perfecting, but instead she had simply laughed and walked away. I found myself frozen in place as the door clicked shut behind her."Adrian." Sophia's voice cut through my daze, her hand closing around my arm with a possessiveness that made my skin crawl. I turned to look at her, my eyes cold and hard."You need to leave," I said, my voice flat mand final.I watched her face shift from confusion to disbelief, then to something that looked almost like rage."What are you talking about?" she demanded, her grip tightening on my arm.I shook her off hard enough to make her stumble back a step."Leave first thing tomorrow morning. If you're still here, you'l
Elara's POV.A bitter laugh escaped my lips before I could stop it, the sound cutting through the tension like a blade and drawing every eye in the room.Expressions ranging from confusion to disdain settled on their faces, as though I had committed the gravest sin by finding humor in the absurdity of the situation.I let the laugh linger for a moment longer than necessary before I finally turned away.I pushed past him, my shoulder brushing his as I rushed to my room."Elara, wait..."But I was already inside my bedroom with the door locked behind me, my back pressed against the wood as I slid down to the floor and buried my face in my hands, my heart pounding against my ribs.I wanted to scream and tell every single one of them to go to hell. But what was the point? Adrian was the reason I was being insulted in my own matrimonial home.In my past life, I would have begged, but not anymore. Adrian would still choose her, so what was the point?I let out a scoff as I pushed myself awa
Elara's POV.I stood in front of the mirror, studying my reflection with cold calculation. Tonight, I would become the devoted wife again, the woman who could make his heart race and his thoughts scatter. I needed him drawn to me completely, irrevocably. And I intended to make sure of it.I chose a deep burgundy dress that clung to my curves like a second skin, the neckline plunging just enough to hint without revealing. I curled my hair so it cascaded over one shoulder, applied red lipstick with careful precision, and added a touch of perfume to my wrists and neck.The woman staring back at me was no longer the one who had worn gray for a decade. She was dangerous, beautiful, composed, and ready.By seven, I was descending the staircase, my heels clicking against the marble with each deliberate step. Adrian stood at the bottom, one hand gripping the banister, his eyes fixed on me with an intensity that made my stomach tighten.He looked at me like a man watching a storm approach,
Elara's POV.I stood at the bedroom door, my hand hovering over the handle, contemplating whether to leave a message for Adrian.But I stopped myself. Why should I act like a good wife? Why should I explain myself to a man who never explained himself to me? He didn't ask permission when he met Sophia. He didn't inform me when he made plans. So why should I?I pulled my hand back and walked out of the house without a backward glance.****Victor's Academy of Music stood in the heart of the city, a grand building of glass and steel gleaming beneath the afternoon sun. I paused at the entrance, my breath catching as memories rushed back.Years of practice. Endless hours of discipline. The weight of trophies in my hands. The sound of applause echoing through crowded halls.This was my world before Adrian.This was who I was before I became Mrs. Sterling.A bitter ache settled in my chest. Ten years of sacrifices, compromises, and abandoned dreams for a marriage that had given me far less t
Adrian’s POV.I sat at the dining table for a long time after she left.The eggs had gone cold and the toast had turned dry, but neither held my attention as much as the empty chair where she had sat and the painful twist in my chest.A pain I wasn't supposed to feel. I didn't love Elara. I was just trying to be a better person. That's all.I was just trying to be decent until I found the truth about my past. Yet why did this hurt? Why did her pulling away feel like she was taking something vital with her?I groaned, running my hands through my hair. This was supposed to soften her. The breakfast, the smile, the careful way I had arranged the fruit. But it didn't.She had looked at me like I was a stranger wearing her husband's face.I cleared the dishes. The sink filled with water. I washed each plate slowly, methodically, trying to empty my mind.When I finally walked into the bedroom, she was lying on the bed, flipping through a book. Her legs were tucked beneath her. Her hair fell
Elara 's POV.“A wife of mine doesn’t need a career.”The words don’t just echo, they settle into my bones as I stand in his study room, my back presses against the cold wall.I bring him the invitation, the Philharmonic, asking me to play. A single concert. I thought he would be proud, he might f
Elara’s POV.The gala is held in the Sterling Hotel's grand ballroom. Crystal chandeliers. Champagne flowing. The city's elite gathered in their finest, here to see and be seen.I stand at the edge of the room, the emerald dress hugging my body, my hair swept back, my hands steady.Adrian approache
Elara’s POV.The brunch is held in the grand dining room. Crystal chandeliers, a table long enough to seat twenty, though only eight sit at it.I walk in on Adrian's arm. I feel Agatha's eyes on me before I see her.She sits at the head of the table. Diamond rings weighing down her fingers, her ga
Adrian’s POV.The empty bottle sits on the dining table. Vitamin B, the label says. I found it in the dustbin.“What is this really?”My mother doesn't look up from her tea. She shifts in her chair, bracing herself. “Vitamins. I told you. For that wife of yours.”“She has a name,” I say quietly. “







