Charlotte POV:
His words echoed in the small hallway, a cruel finality to them.
Less messy. Daniella... she's moving in.
I pictured his apartment, our shared space, the one I had poured my heart into making a home for us.
He always saw it as his apartment. Not ours.
And now, even that illusion was shattered.
I stood there, frozen, the weight of his betrayal suffocating me.
I didn't respond, couldn't respond.
He shifted, clearing his throat.
"I'm sorry, Charlotte," he murmured, his voice lacking genuine remorse. "Things... things just got complicated."
I turned then, slowly, my eyes meeting his.
He flinched, a flicker of something, guilt or fear, in his gaze.
A sarcastic laugh, hollow and brittle, escaped my lips.
"Sorry?" I repeated, the word tasting like ash in my mouth. "Sorry? Alberto, what we had wasn't 'complicated.' It was a secret. And now it's over."
The words, sharp and direct, hit him like a physical blow.
His face, usually so composed, contorted with anger.
"Don't talk like that, Charlotte!" he snapped, his hand shooting out, grabbing my arm. His grip was painfully tight. "Don't you dare act like a common... a common gold-digger."
My mind raced.
Gold-digger? Is that what you think of me?
I remembered all the times he' d told me to keep our relationship quiet, how it could "complicate" his career, how it would be "better for us" if we waited.
I remembered the countless evenings I spent alone, waiting for his calls, reassuring myself that his excuses were valid, that his ambition was a shared goal.
He had orchestrated this entire charade, weaving a web of lies and manipulation.
And now, he had the audacity to accuse me?
The strength I'd been holding onto all night, the iron will that had kept me from falling apart, dissolved.
A single tear, hot and stinging, traced a path down my cheek.
Then another. And another.
They streamed down my face, a dam breaking, releasing the flood of pain, humiliation, and utter despair I had been holding back.
I cried.
I cried until my throat was raw, until my chest ached with the effort, until there were no more tears left to shed.
Alberto stood there, looking uncomfortable, but he didn't move, didn't offer a single word of comfort.
He just watched me, a cold, detached observer.
When the last sob finally wracked my body, I pulled away from his grasp.
I stumbled into my apartment, slamming the door shut with a resounding thud.
I locked it, then slid down to the floor, my back against the cold wood.
The apartment felt empty, hollow.
Like me.
I called in sick to work the next day. And the day after that. And the day after that.
I didn't answer my phone. I didn't open the blinds.
The food in my fridge went untouched.
My stomach growled, but the hunger was a dull ache compared to the gnawing emptiness in my soul.
It was a void, vast and terrifying, where love and hope used to reside.





