Escape from Toxic Love

I stumbled through the door of our apartment—no, his apartment now—with tears blurring my vision. My hands trembled as I pulled my suitcase from the closet, the weight of what I'd just done pressing against my chest. The wedding is off. Three simple words that had shattered seven years of my life.

Another cramp twisted through me, and I sank onto the edge of our bed, pressing my palm against my abdomen. The pain seemed fitting somehow—my body mirroring the agony of my heart.

"I need to get my things and go," I whispered to myself, forcing my body to move despite the pain. I wouldn't give Nathan the satisfaction of finding me curled up in misery when he returned.

I moved mechanically through our bedroom, pulling clothes from hangers, folding them with shaking hands. Each item carried memories—the blue sweater I'd worn on our trip to Vancouver, the dress from our anniversary dinner last year. I stuffed them into my suitcase, trying not to think about how Nathan's eyes had lit up when he'd seen me in them. Before everything changed.

In the bathroom, I swept my toiletries into a travel bag, pausing at the sight of Nathan's leather-bound notebook on the counter. He carried it everywhere lately, jotting things down with an intensity that had become familiar. Curiosity—or perhaps a need for confirmation of what I already knew—made me reach for it.

The first page hit me like a physical blow.

*For Isabella - Daily Tasks*

Beneath the heading was a meticulous list in Nathan's precise handwriting:

- *Pick up chamomile and ginger tea (helps with her cramps)*

- *Drop off dry cleaning (the blue silk blouse is her favorite)*

- *Schedule massage appointment (ask for Mia—she knows Isabella's pressure points)*

- *Check heating pad settings (medium-high for first day, medium for days 2-3)*

I flipped through the pages, each one filled with similar lists. Detailed notes about Isabella's preferences, her comfort, her needs. The care and attention that had once been mine, documented in painful black and white.

On the most recent page, a single line stood out: *Remember fairy lights for Isabella's apartment—like the ones from the mall with Liv.*

My knees buckled. The fairy lights at Pacific Place mall—hundreds of them strung up the night Nathan had asked me to move in with him. It had been magical, personal, a moment I'd treasured. And now he was recreating it for her.

"What are you doing?"

I hadn't heard the door open. Nathan stood in the bedroom doorway, his expression hardening as he saw his notebook in my hands.

"This is what you've become," I said, my voice surprisingly steady as I held up the notebook. "A catalog of betrayals."

"You're going through my private things now?" He stepped forward, snatching the notebook from my hands. "That's low, Olivia."

"Low?" I laughed, the sound brittle even to my own ears. "You're recreating our memories with Isabella, and I'm the one who's crossed a line?"

"You don't understand." His jaw tightened, that familiar defensive look settling over his features. "These are things my brother would have done for her. I'm just following through on what he would have wanted."

"Your brother wouldn't have wanted you to destroy us in the process," I countered, zipping my suitcase closed with finality. "He wouldn't have wanted you to treat me like I don't exist."

"You're overreacting." Nathan's voice took on that condescending tone I'd grown to hate. "This is grief, Olivia. Something you clearly can't comprehend."

"Don't you dare." My voice shook with fury. "Don't you dare use your grief as an excuse to hurt me. I've stood by you for months while you've pulled away. I've made excuses for you when you've forgotten our plans, ignored my needs, dismissed my feelings. But I won't stand by while you give another woman the care and attention you promised to me."

"It's not like that," he insisted, but his eyes couldn't meet mine. "Isabella needs me."

"And I don't?" The question hung between us, unanswered.

Three days later, I stood alone in St. Mark's Chapel, arranging white lilies beside my mother's photograph. The five-year memorial service would begin in thirty minutes, and already the small church was filling with friends and family who had loved her.

My father arrived early, his face lined with the grief that never fully left him. I'd reserved the front pew for us—the closest we could be to where my mother's presence felt strongest.

"She would be proud of you," Dad said, squeezing my hand. "For standing up for yourself."

I nodded, unable to speak past the lump in my throat. I hadn't told him everything about Nathan and Isabella, just that the wedding was off. Some humiliations were too raw to share, even with him.

The chapel doors opened again, and my heart stopped. Nathan walked in with Isabella at his side, her hand tucked into the crook of his arm. They were twenty minutes late. As my father and I watched in disbelief, Isabella glided directly to the front pew and slid in beside my father, forcing me to the edge.

My mother's memorial, and they couldn't even give me this one day of peace.

As the service began, I felt my father's hand tighten around mine, his breathing suddenly labored. When I turned to look at him, his face had gone ashen, beads of sweat forming on his forehead.

"Dad?" I whispered, alarm shooting through me. "What's wrong?"

His eyes met mine, filled with pain and confusion. "Can't... breathe," he gasped, clutching at his chest as he slumped against me.

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