Claire Keller POV:
The memory of Callan, standing at the altar five years ago, still had the power to twist my gut into knots. He epitomized strength, a towering figure in his ceremonial robes, his eyes fixed solely on me. He wasn't just marrying me; he was claiming me, etching his mark onto my soul for all eternity.
He' d sealed it with a gesture steeped in ancient tradition: a faint, ethereal glow from his hand as he touched my forehead, a silent vow that reverberated through my very being. We were bound, truly bound, in a way few understood. Our love, they said, was the stuff of legends, unbreakable. Everyone envied us, whispered about the fierce devotion of Callan Drake, the CEO who wore his heart on his sleeve for his wife.
He used to come to me every night, his arms wrapping around me, pulling me close until there was no space left between us. He' d murmur promises into my hair, his voice a low rumble against my ear. "Forever, Claire," he' d breathe, each word a sacred oath. "You are mine. My strength, my weakness, my everything. I can' t live without you." He would hold me tighter, as if the fear of losing me was a physical thing, a beast he constantly fought off.
I had believed him. Every word. My own senses, sharpened by the experimental treatment, had been a double-edged sword. They could detect the faintest shifts, the most subtle energies. But they had never once warned me of this. Not of his betrayal. My own love, my unwavering trust, had been a blindfold. I' d seen what I wanted to see, felt what I wanted to feel.
It was a cruel lesson, how easily love could curdle, how quickly forever could become ephemeral. A month ago, the cracks had started to show. A whispered comment from a junior executive about Callan' s late-night meetings, a casual observation about his increased "work trips."
Then, the scent. A faint, cloying sweetness clinging to his shirts, a perfume I didn' t recognize, alien and unwelcome. It was subtle at first, easily dismissed as a lingering scent from a business dinner or a client meeting. But it persisted. It became stronger.
My intuition, once so serene, screamed at me. I followed him, a shadow in the night, using the hushed silence of the estate as my cover. My heart already knew the truth, a cold, heavy stone in my chest, even before my eyes confirmed it.
His excuses had grown increasingly elaborate, his absences more frequent. I spent countless nights alone in our vast bed, the silence amplifying the hollowness in my chest. Each lie he spun was a new twist of the knife, each passing day a fresh agony. The public, blissfully unaware, continued to fawn over our "perfect" love story, their admiration feeling like salt poured into an open wound. The compliments, meant to uplift, only made me flinch.
I walked back into my private study, the grand hall' s festive energy fading behind me. My hands, trembling despite my resolve, reached for the hidden compartment in my desk. I pulled out the document, stark and unfeeling: a "Dissolution of Partnership." It wasn' t a legal divorce, not in the traditional sense. Our bond, as Callan had publicly declared, was beyond mundane laws. But it was a symbolic severing, a declaration of my intent to break free, to dissolve my side of the unspoken contract.
My hand shook as I signed my name, the pen scratching against the heavy parchment, each stroke a fresh wave of pain washing over me. It felt like tearing out my own heart. But I had to. This was the only way I knew how to sever the ties, to reclaim myself.
Suddenly, I heard his footsteps, strong and purposeful, approaching the study. My breath hitched. Panic flared, cold and sharp.
His arms wrapped around me from behind, his familiar scent – now tainted with that saccharine sweetness – filling my nostrils. "My beautiful Claire," he murmured, pressing a kiss to my temple. "What are you doing in here, sequestered away from the preparations?"
I flinched, my body stiffening. I clumsily swept the document under a stack of old art catalogues, my hands shaking so violently I almost dropped them. His touch, once my solace, now burned like acid. Even now, a faint tremor ran through me, a ghost of the connection that still stubbornly clung.
He must have felt my tension. "Is something wrong, love?" he asked, his voice laced with concern, his fingers gently tracing the line of my jaw. It was a familiar gesture, one meant to soothe, to reassure. Another lie. "I apologize for my delay. A sudden, unavoidable business matter."
I knew it was a lie. I knew the specific scent of the "business matter" clinging to his skin, mingling with the expensive cologne he favored. I knew her name. Ericka.
He pulled back slightly, then presented a small, velvet box. "For you, my dearest. A little something to celebrate our enduring love." He opened it, revealing a delicate necklace, a single, shimmering moonstone pendant. "It reminded me of your eyes, so pure, so luminous."
My body remained rigid. The scent of her perfume, faint but unmistakable, wafted from his shirt, even stronger now that he was so close. I saw it then, a faint, reddish mark, almost imperceptible, high on his neck, just below his ear. A love bite. A fresh one.
Ericka. She wore that exact shade of seductive, musky floral. And he hadn't even bothered to wash it off. Hadn't bothered to hide the evidence of his night with her. How many more marks were hidden beneath his expensive suit, beneath his carefully constructed façade of devotion? How many nights, how many hurried moments had he shared with her, before returning to me, smelling of her, his body imprinted with her touch?
The pain that ripped through me was visceral, a physical agony that made my vision blur. It wasn't just the betrayal of his body, the desecration of our vows. It was the crushing realization that everything I believed, everything I cherished, might have been a carefully constructed illusion. Had I been so naive? So foolishly blind? Had our entire history, our miraculous reunion, our publicly adored love story, been nothing more than a convenient narrative for him?
His loving gaze, his tender touch, his honeyed words, they were all still there, oblivious to the storm raging inside me. He genuinely believed he was doing no wrong, that he could have both.
I forced a smile, a shaky, brittle thing that felt like shattered glass in my throat. I reached up, gently covering his eyes with my hand. "Such a thoughtful gift, my love," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "But I have one for you too, a very special one. You can open it precisely at midnight. Not a moment before."
He chuckled, his lips pressing a kiss to my palm. "Always full of delightful surprises, my Claire. Midnight it is." His smile was easy, carefree, completely unaware of the chasm that had opened between us.
I looked at him, at that carefree smile, at the kindness in his eyes that was now nothing more than a cruel mockery. I burned his image into my memory, the one he presented to the world, the one I had loved. This was the last time I would see it.
By midnight, I would be gone. Vanished without a trace.