Ava Burgess POV:
The heavy oak door to Bryant' s office swung open. Bryant emerged, his face a mask of furious disapproval. "Who," he demanded, his voice chillingly cold, "is threatening to fire Kiley?"
He looked at Kiley, then back at me, his gaze accusatory. "She's young, Ava, just getting started. Can't you be more understanding?"
Young. I almost laughed. The definition of "young" had apparently shifted since I last checked. Kiley was barely a few months younger than I was. My stomach twisted with a bitter, self-mocking ache.
I swallowed hard, forcing back the burning tears that threatened to spill. I took a deep, shaky breath, composing myself.
"It's her, or me, Bryant," I said, my voice barely a whisper, yet it cut through the tension. "You choose."
He stared at me, his brow furrowed in disbelief. "Ava Burgess," he snarled, using my full name, a rare occurrence reserved for moments of extreme displeasure. "Don't be unreasonable."
Shock ripped through me. I felt a sudden emptiness, a profound disorientation. He hadn't called me that, not with such disdain, since the very beginning of our relationship, when we were just fighting over trivial things. It was a stark reminder of how far we had fallen.
"You're misunderstanding our relationship," Kiley interjected, her voice still tremulous, but her eyes, I noticed, were now fixed on Bryant, pleading. "We're just childhood friends. That's all." She dissolved into fresh tears, looking at Bryant with a piteous gaze.
"Ava has always had it easy," Kiley continued, taking on a brave, suffering tone. "Born into privilege, everything handed to her. She doesn't understand what real struggle is like. Please, Bryant, don't fight with her because of me. I'm used to dealing with these kinds of emotions. I can always find another job, at another company." She even added, "I can leave the city, if that helps." Her words were calculated, designed to pull at his heartstrings, and I saw the flicker of genuine concern in Bryant's eyes. It was a dagger to my chest.
I forced a brittle smile, a painful mask. I couldn't bear to stay another second. I turned and walked out, leaving them in the silent aftermath of my ultimatum.
As I left, memories flooded my mind. Years of my family indulging my every whim. My father, after I graduated, had wanted me to join the family business, to take my rightful place in the Burgess empire. But I dug in my heels. I fought him, a furious, screaming match, all for Bryant. I stayed in this city because of him.
"He's an opportunist, Ava," my father had warned, his voice heavy with disappointment. "He'll use you and discard you when he's done." I had dismissed his words as snobbery, as a father's protective overreach.
How wrong I was.
I remembered the countless nights Bryant and I spent building this company from the ground up. The endless hours, the frantic coffee-fueled revisions, working until dawn, just to land a crucial contract. Every ounce of my talent, my family' s connections, my very soul poured into his vision.
And for what? Not his loyalty, not his love. Just a body that now required medication to function, a heart scarred by betrayal.
Harding' s sigh echoed in my mind, a sympathetic mournfulness. He had known. He had always known.
"When are you coming home?" he' d asked on the phone, his voice gentle.
"Two weeks," I replied, the decision firm.
I hung up, the phone feeling heavy in my hand. I glanced back at the towering building, a monument to a love and a future that were now ashes. A bitter smile touched my lips. I had given him a choice. He hadn't taken it. Now, it was my turn to let go.





