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He Loved Me When You Didn't
img img He Loved Me When You Didn't img Chapter 4
4 Chapters
Chapter 5 img
Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
Chapter 11 img
Chapter 12 img
Chapter 13 img
Chapter 14 img
Chapter 15 img
Chapter 16 img
Chapter 17 img
Chapter 18 img
Chapter 19 img
Chapter 20 img
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Chapter 4

Kaitlyn Barton POV:

Kacy's eyes welled up, her lower lip trembling just so, a perfect picture of fragile innocence. She dabbed at her eyes with a delicate, embroidered handkerchief, then let out a soft, theatrical sob.

"I must leave," she choked out, her voice barely a whisper. With an exaggerated gasp, she spun around and started to rush towards the door, her steps purposefully unsteady. As she passed a low-lying coffee table, her foot "tripped" on its leg. It was a practiced, utterly unconvincing stumble.

She let out a sharp cry, a little too loud, and then dramatically crumpled to the floor. The sound of her fall, emphasized by a sharp intake of breath, echoed in the stunned silence of the room. She landed with a theatrical thud, clutching her ankle, her face contorted in a grimace of pain.

The sudden, staged collapse immediately jolted Edwin. His composure, already frayed, snapped. Panic flashed in his eyes. He lunged from the sofa, his chair scraping loudly across the polished floor. He rushed to Kacy's side, his movements frantic and clumsy.

"Kacy! My love! Are you alright?" he cried, his voice thick with genuine alarm. He knelt beside her, his hands hovering, unsure how to help. Then, with a sudden, decisive movement, he scooped her up into his arms, carrying her like a fragile princess. Her head rested against his shoulder, her eyes fluttering closed, a tear tracing a path down her cheek.

Edwin rose, his gaze landing on me. His face was a mask of furious, icy disdain. It was etched with a cold anger, a furious condemnation I had never seen directed at me, not in all our years. His jaw was clenched, his eyes narrowed into slits.

"Happy now, Kaitlyn?" he snarled, his voice low and dangerous, dripping with venom. He didn't wait for an answer. "I'm taking Kacy out of here. We won't bother you anymore. You can have your precious party all to yourself." He turned, carrying Kacy towards the exit, leaving me standing alone, the silent accusation hanging heavy in the air.

A profound sadness settled over me, a pain that went deeper than anger or humiliation. Edwin, my Edwin, the boy who was once my shadow, my confidant, my first love, had just publicly humiliated me. He had chosen Kacy, her engineered fragility, over our entire shared history. He had stripped away my dignity, casting me as the villain, and then banished me from my own welcome-home party. After twenty years of shared life, of growing up together, of promises whispered under starlit skies, I was discarded, replaced, and then condemned. This agonizing feeling, this public dismissal, was a bitter pill to swallow. It hurt more than I could have imagined. To be so blatantly overlooked, so maliciously misrepresented, by the one person I thought would never betray me, was an unbearable weight.

My phone vibrated again, a sudden, insistent buzz against my thigh. I pulled it out, almost automatically. Several messages, urgent and bright, illuminated the screen. They were from Everett Rowe.

"Kaitlyn, have you landed in A City?" the first message read.

A second followed quickly: "Have you considered my offer? My commitment is serious."

Then, a third: "I can give you everything you want, everything you deserve. Five years, Kaitlyn. Five years I have waited. My intentions are genuine."

The next message was a bold declaration, a lifeline in the wreckage of my emotional landscape. "If you are truly ready, I will marry you. Right now. Just say the word."

Everett Rowe. Everett, the brilliant tech CEO, the man who had patiently, respectfully, pursued me for five long years. He had begun his pursuit back in college, a quiet, steadfast presence who never pushed, never demanded. He had continued his unwavering courtship even when I moved to London, visiting regularly, always available, always supportive, never once overstepping his bounds. His messages were always carefully worded, laced with respect and genuine affection, never a hint of the entitled possessiveness Edwin had just displayed. If Edwin hadn't been in my life, I likely would have accepted Everett's proposal years ago.

A sudden, fierce surge of clarity, of self-preservation, washed over me. What was I doing, clinging to a ghost of a past, to a man who had so clearly destroyed all that we once were? Everett represented a different future, a future built on respect, on genuine adoration, on a love that was given freely, not taken for granted.

"Yes," I typed, my fingers moving quickly, decisively. "I'll marry you." I hit send. It wasn't too late. It was exactly the right time.

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