The Partner Who Stole My Life

Ally Patterson

The old house was exactly as we'd left it.

A small bungalow on the outskirts of San Jose. Peeling paint. Overgrown yard. A creaky front gate that groaned when I pushed it open. We'd bought it with our first real paycheck from Innovatech, back when a hundred thousand dollars felt like all the money in the world.

I walked up the cracked concrete path, my fingers trailing over the weathered wood of the porch railing. The rose bushes we'd planted together had gone wild, their branches tangled and overgrown, but they were still blooming. Deep red blossoms, the color of the wine we'd shared on our first anniversary.

Grayson had called this place our forever home. He'd said we'd grow old here, after all the success, after all the struggle. We'll come back, he'd promised. Every year. Just to remember where we started.

We never came back. He was always too busy.

I pushed open the front door. It groaned on its hinges. The air inside was stale, thick with dust and the faint, sweet smell of decaying wood. But everything was still there.

The lumpy sofa we'd hauled up the stairs together, our hands raw and our backs aching, laughing at the absurdity of it all. The coffee table with the water ring from my endless coffee cups the nights I'd stayed up coding while he slept. The remote control wrapped in electrical tape because Grayson refused to buy a new one, saying we needed to prioritize every dollar.

I sat on the sofa. It creaked under my weight, the same sound it had made a thousand times before.

This was where I'd asked him to meet me. The final conversation.

He arrived twenty minutes late, clutching a takeout bag. I brought your favorite, he said, holding it out like a peace offering. Sweet and sour pork. From that place on Elm Street. Remember?

I remembered. I also remembered him telling me we couldn't afford takeout anymore. That we needed to save. That every dollar counted.

Sit down, Grayson.

He sat. His eyes were red. His suit was rumpled. He looked like a man who hadn't slept in days. His hands trembled as he set the takeout bag on the coffee table, right next to the water ring.

Do you remember this sofa? I asked.

He glanced at it, confused. Of course. We bought it at that garage sale. Carried it up the stairs ourselves. You scraped your knee, and I...

I patched you up, I finished. You said it was proof of our love. That we'd never replace it, no matter how rich we got.

He flinched. Ally.

And this. I picked up the remote, running my thumb over the electrical tape. You broke it when you were drunk, celebrating our first big contract. I fixed it. You said I was the only one who could fix anything in your life.

Tears welled in his eyes. You are. You always have been.

Then why, Grayson? Why did you marry her? Why did you give her your grandmother's ring? Why did you build her a mansion while I lived in a one-bedroom apartment and drove a ten-year-old car?

He broke. Sobs racked his body, his shoulders heaving, his face crumpling like a child's. I don't know! I was weak! She made me feel young, feel powerful. She didn't know the struggling Grayson. She only knew the successful one. And I... I got lost in it.

He reached for my hand. I pulled it away.

But I never stopped loving you, Ally. Never. You're my family. You're my home. Everything I built, I built with you. Everything I am, I am because of you. Please. Please, just tell me we can fix this.

I looked at him this man I'd loved since I was nineteen. The boy who'd held me after my parents died in that car accident, who'd whispered that we'd be okay, that we'd take care of each other, that we were family now. The partner who'd dreamed with me, struggled with me, built with me. The man who'd sketched the first Innovatech logo on a napkin at a diner at 2 AM, his eyes bright with possibility.

He was still crying. Still begging. Still promising to change.

And I felt nothing.

There's something you should know, I said. Jami found the betrayal clause. The one I wrote ten years ago. The one you signed.

His crying stopped. His face went pale.

The board voted this morning. Your equity is forfeited. All of it. Innovatech belongs to me now.

Ally. His voice cracked. You can't. We built it together. It's ours.

It was ours, I corrected. Until you decided to build a secret life with someone else. Until you used our money to fund her luxury while I lived like a pauper. Until you married her and gave her your grandmother's ring.

I stood. You made your choices, Grayson. Now you live with them.

I walked to the door. Behind me, I heard him collapse to his knees, a guttural sound escaping his throat.

Ally! Please! I'll do anything! I'll spend the rest of my life making this right!

I paused at the door. I didn't turn around.

Then spend it, Grayson. But not with me.

I closed the door and walked away.

Behind me, through the thin walls of the old house, I could hear him sobbing. The sound followed me down the cracked concrete path, past the overgrown rose bushes, through the creaking gate. It followed me into my car. It followed me all the way home.

But it didn't change anything.

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