Allison Knapp POV:
I ignored the sea of eyes on my back and pushed open the door to Jayson's office. I didn't knock. For five years, this room had been as much mine as his, a second home where we'd built an empire on paper and dreams.
The room was empty, but the air was thick with his presence—the faint scent of his cologne, the ordered chaos of his desk. Lingering beneath it was another scent, a floral perfume I recognized as Ciera's. I felt a flicker of disgust, but it was distant, impersonal.
My gaze bypassed everything personal—the photos on his desk, the awards on the wall—and landed on a display shelf. It was filled with trophies and plaques, but in the center, on a pedestal of its own, sat a small architectural model.
It was the model for "Starlight Bridge," our first project together. The one that had won us that university competition, the one that had launched our careers and our relationship. It was the purest thing we had ever created, a symbol of a time when our shared passion for design was enough.
I reached out and carefully lifted it from the shelf. My fingertips brushed away a thin layer of dust.
For a moment, I was transported back. To a cramped studio, the smell of coffee and model glue hanging in the air. To arguing for hours over the precise curvature of an arch, only to collapse into laughter as the sun came up, knowing we'd found the perfect solution together. The Jayson from back then had looked at me with awe, with respect. Not with the careless, entitled possession that had defined our last year.
A bitter taste filled my mouth, and I swallowed it down. I wasn't here to reminisce.
I cradled the model in my arms and turned to leave.
The office door swung open with such force that it slammed against the wall.
Jayson stood in the doorway, looking tired and irritated. He was still in the suit from yesterday, the tie loosened. He must have come straight from the airport.
He saw me, and his eyes widened in surprise. Then his gaze dropped to the model in my arms, and flickered to my suitcase standing just outside the door.
The deep furrow in his brow vanished, replaced by a slow, arrogant, infuriatingly confident smile.
"What's this, babe?" he asked, his voice laced with a patronizing amusement. "Throwing a tantrum? Running away from home?"
He spoke as if I were a child, a petulant girl to be placated and coaxed back into my cage. He had absolutely no idea.
I looked at his handsome, oblivious face, and the last, lingering ember of affection I might have held for him turned to cold, hard ash. I didn't even feel anger anymore. Just a profound, hollow pity. He had never known me. Not really.
I didn't answer his question. I walked past him to his massive mahogany desk. From my purse, I pulled out a crisp, white envelope. I placed it squarely in the center of his leather desk blotter.
There was no name on it. Just two words, printed in clean, block letters: RESIGNATION LETTER.
Jayson's smile froze. His eyes darted from the envelope to my face, and for the first time, a flicker of uncertainty crossed his features. He was finally realizing this wasn't one of our usual disagreements.
"Allison, what the hell is this?" His voice was low now, stripped of its earlier amusement, edged with the anger of a man whose authority had just been challenged.
I met his gaze. My voice was steady, each word a carefully placed stone. "I'm not running away from home, Jayson. I'm resigning."
I paused, letting the word hang in the air between us. Then I delivered the final blow.
"And we're breaking up."





