

Chapter 1 of Escape from Toxic Love
The glass doors of Luxe Linens slid open with a soft whoosh, releasing a wave of air-conditioned chill that made me shiver. Another sharp cramp twisted through my abdomen, and I paused just inside the entrance, pressing my palm against my stomach. The pain had been building all morning, a dull ache now transformed into something that felt like someone was wringing out my insides.
"Nathan," I whispered, reaching for his arm. "Can we stop by the pharmacy after this? These cramps are getting worse."
My fiancé of seven years barely glanced up from his phone, his thumbs tapping rapidly across the screen. "Hmm? Yeah, sure. Let's just get this done first."
I bit my lip, swallowing the flash of hurt. This was supposed to be our moment—selecting the bedding we'd share as husband and wife. The Egyptian cotton sheets that would dress our marital bed, the pillowcases we'd rest our heads on after making love. It should have felt sacred, intimate. Instead, Nathan's eyes remained fixed on his phone as we moved through the store, his attention clearly elsewhere.
I trailed my fingers across a display of silky pillowcases, trying to recapture the excitement I'd felt when we'd first penciled this shopping trip into our wedding planning calendar. Another cramp seized me, and I inhaled sharply, bending slightly at the waist.
Nathan didn't notice.
"These are beautiful," I said, stopping at a collection of cream-colored Egyptian cotton sheets with a subtle damask pattern. The fabric felt like butter between my fingers, luxurious and cool. "What do you think?"
Nathan finally pocketed his phone and glanced at the display. Something flickered across his face—recognition, then calculation. He picked up the package, examining the label.
"Eight hundred thread count," he murmured, running his thumb across the fabric sample. For a moment, I thought I glimpsed the Nathan I remembered—the one who used to notice things that mattered to me, who would have wrapped an arm around my waist and whispered how he couldn't wait to hold me between these sheets.
Instead, he checked his watch. "I'll take these."
"Great," I smiled, reaching for the package. "They'll look perfect with the—"
"Not for us," he said, pulling the sheets away from my outstretched hand. His voice was flat, matter-of-fact. "Isabella's been having terrible cramps lately. I promised my brother I'd take care of her, remember?"
The store's bright lights suddenly seemed harsh, exposing. "You're buying our wedding sheets for Isabella?"
"They're just sheets, Liv." He shrugged, already pulling out his phone again. "We can get something else."
I stood frozen as he texted someone, his face softening into a smile I hadn't seen directed at me in months. "She's downstairs in the parking garage. I'll be right back."
He walked away before I could respond, leaving me alone among rows of pristine bedding, clutching my cramping abdomen. Seven years together, and he couldn't see what was happening right in front of him. Couldn't feel what he was doing to me.
I followed him. I'm not sure why—maybe some masochistic need to witness the full extent of his betrayal, or perhaps a desperate hope that I was misunderstanding something fundamental.
From behind a concrete pillar in the parking garage, I watched as Isabella's sleek black BMW pulled up. She stepped out, all glossy dark hair and delicate features. Nathan's face transformed as he approached her—tender, attentive, concerned.
"Here," he said, handing her the sheets I'd selected. "Egyptian cotton, just like you wanted. They should help keep you cool when the cramps get bad."
Isabella smiled up at him, touching his arm. "You always know exactly what I need. Thank you for thinking of me."
"Of course," Nathan replied, his voice gentle. "I promised I'd take care of you, didn't I? Have you been using the heating pad I brought over?"
"Every night," she said. "And that special tea you found helps so much."
The ground seemed to shift beneath my feet. Heating pads? Special tea? In seven years, Nathan had never once brought me anything for my cramps. Had never even acknowledged them beyond an occasional distracted "feel better."
Something broke inside me—not with a crash, but with the quiet finality of a thread pulled beyond its tensile strength.
I stepped out from behind the pillar, my voice steadier than I felt. "The wedding is off, Nathan."
They both turned, startled. Nathan's face drained of color as our eyes met, and in that moment, I knew he saw me—really saw me—for the first time in months.
But it was far too late.
Read the Full Novel on















![[ENG DUB] Lovestruck Duo](https://v.pinedrama.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/0e45e7c45145403727617164286/22QGqjroBE4A.webp!15491.webp)

