“I had to,” I said.
She was quiet for a moment, then asked, “Do you miss him?”
The question landed in my chest like a pebble dropped into water.
I thought of James’s smile when he proposed. The rain in Millennium Park. The way he’d looked at me like I was the answer.
I thought of his hand gripping my arm tonight, demanding control even as his lies collapsed.
I thought of the video of him saying he needed my trust fund.
I shook my head slowly.
“I miss who I thought he was,” I said. “I miss the story.”
Diana nodded. “Yeah,” she murmured. “That’s always the part that hurts.”
The car turned onto our street.
Our street.
The word felt strange now.
When we pulled up in front of the house, the lights were on.
My father’s instructions had already reached someone.
I saw movement through the windows.
People inside.
Removing things.
The car door opened, and cold air rushed in. I stepped out, dress gathered in my hands, heels dangling from my fingers. My feet hit the sidewalk barefoot, the concrete cold and real.
Diana followed, closing the door behind her.
We walked up the front steps.
Inside, the house smelled like familiar wood and lemon cleaner. The lights were bright, too bright, as if the house was trying to show us nothing could hide here.
Two men stood in the living room with boxes. One of them held a framed photo of James and me, taken last summer at the lake.
My stomach tightened, but I kept my face calm.
“Hi,” one of them said awkwardly. “Mr. Chen said we should… start with his personal items.”
I nodded.
“Put everything in the boxes,” I said. “Anything that’s mine stays.”
The man nodded quickly, relieved to have clear instructions.
Diana wandered into the kitchen and returned with a glass of water.
“Drink,” she said, pushing it into my hand.
I took it. The water was cold, grounding.
From the hallway, I heard footsteps.
My father appeared, coat off, sleeves rolled up. He looked like a man who’d decided sleep was optional.
My mother was behind him, eyes red, expression exhausted.
“You’re home,” my father said.
“I’m home,” I echoed.
He looked at my dress, the pearls, the bare feet.
“You should change,” he said, practical as always.
I nodded.
As I moved toward the stairs, my mother reached for my hand.
“Emma,” she whispered.
I stopped.
“I’m so sorry,” she said again, like the words were the only thing she could offer.
I squeezed her fingers gently.
“I know,” I said. “But I’m okay.”
I went upstairs to the bedroom.
The room looked the same, but it didn’t feel the same. The bedspread was smooth. The nightstand held a book James had been reading. A glass he’d left half full of water sat beside it.
I stared at it for a long moment.
Then I walked to the closet.
James’s side was still full.
Suits lined neatly. Shoes arranged in pairs.
Evidence of a man who’d planned to stay.
I opened a drawer and pulled out a large suitcase. The zipper rasped loudly in the quiet room.
I began to pack.
Not in a frantic way. Not in tears.
Methodically.
My clothes, folded.
My documents, organized.
My laptop.
The envelope with Daniel’s evidence.
The key to the new apartment.
Each item placed in the suitcase felt like a sentence in a story I was writing myself.
Downstairs, voices murmured as boxes were taped shut. The sound of packing tape tearing was oddly satisfying, sharp and final.
Diana leaned in the doorway at one point, watching me.
“You’re really doing this tonight,” she said.
I glanced up. “If I sleep here,” I said, “I’ll wake up and second-guess myself. I don’t want to give doubt that kind of power.”
Diana nodded slowly. “Okay,” she said. “Then we do it tonight.”
By the time the suitcase was packed, the house felt hollow. James’s things were stacked near the front door in neat boxes like a shipment being returned.
My father stood in the living room, arms crossed, staring at them as if he could burn them with his eyes.
“Tomorrow,” he said, voice low, “my counsel will contact him. He will not step into the office again.”
I nodded.
“And Melissa,” my mother said softly, like the name hurt her mouth.
My father’s jaw clenched.
“I’ll handle Melissa,” I said.
Both of them looked at me.
“You don’t have to,” my mother whispered, fear and hope tangled in her voice.
“I do,” I said quietly. “Not because I owe her anything. Because I’m not letting her control the narrative anymore.”
My father nodded once. “Good,” he said, as if he’d been waiting for me to claim that.
My mother’s eyes filled again.
Diana cleared her throat and clapped her hands once, brisk. “Okay,” she said. “Where are we going?”
I reached into my purse and pulled out the key.
“To my apartment,” I said.
Diana’s eyebrows shot up. “You already have an apartment.”
“I planned,” I said simply.
Diana stared at me for a beat, then a grin spread across her face. “Of course you did,” she said, admiration thick in her voice. “Of course you did.”
We loaded my suitcase into Diana’s car.
As we drove across town, the city was quieter, the streets slick with winter. Streetlights reflected on the pavement like pale gold. The radio played softly, some late-night DJ talking in a calm voice about weather and traffic like nothing in the world had shifted.
But everything had.
When we pulled up to the new building, it was modest compared to the house, but clean and safe. The lobby smelled like fresh paint and someone’s laundry detergent.
The elevator carried us up.
My apartment door clicked open.
Inside, the space was simple. A couch I’d ordered weeks ago. A small table. A lamp casting warm light against pale walls. Boxes in the corner with labels in my handwriting.
It didn’t smell like James.
It smelled like new beginnings and cardboard.
Diana set my suitcase down and looked around.
“This is… actually really nice,” she said.
“It’s mine,” I replied, and the words felt like a prayer.
Diana turned to me.
“So what happens tomorrow?” she asked.
I sank onto the couch, the fabric firm under me. My dress pooled around my legs like snow.
“Tomorrow,” I said, “I file.”
Diana nodded.
“And I call Linda,” I added. “And I forward Melissa’s message. And Daniel’s full file goes to the attorney. And I start separating accounts.”
Diana let out a low whistle. “You’re terrifying,” she said, and there was affection in it.
I smiled faintly.
“I’m tired,” I admitted.
Diana’s expression softened.
“You don’t have to do anything else tonight,” she said. “Just… breathe.”
I nodded.
She stood, walked into the small kitchen, and returned with two mugs of tea she found in one of my boxes. She handed one to me.
The mug was warm. The steam smelled like chamomile.
I wrapped my hands around it and let the warmth seep into my fingers.
For the first time all night, the adrenaline began to drain.
Without it, exhaustion hit like a wave.
Tears stung my eyes, sudden and hot.
Diana sat beside me without speaking, close enough that her shoulder touched mine.
I stared at the blank wall across the room, and the tears slid down my cheeks quietly.
Not dramatic.
Not loud.
Just real.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered, and I didn’t even know who the apology was for.
Diana’s hand covered mine.
“Don’t apologize,” she said softly. “You didn’t do anything wrong.”
I swallowed, trying to breathe through the tightness in my chest.
“I wanted it to be real,” I admitted. “I wanted it so badly.”
Diana squeezed my hand.
“I know,” she said. “That doesn’t make you foolish. It makes you human.”
I let my eyes close.
The night replayed behind my eyelids: Melissa’s voice through the microphone, James’s frozen face, the video on the screen, my mother collapsing, my father’s rage, the way the room had held its breath.
And then the dance floor. Bare feet. Laughter. The strange relief.
I opened my eyes and looked down at my ring.
The diamond caught the light, cold and bright.
