Too Late For Your Proposal

Ellie POV:

I used to be the kind of woman who would always compromise, who would always reach out first, who would always try to mend the broken pieces. I imagined myself, just a week ago, in this very hospital bed, sobbing into my pillow, desperately checking my phone for some sign of remorse from Carter. I would have caved. I would have begged him to come back, to explain, to just see me.

But this time, something was different. After the nurse had given me a sedative to help with the pain and anxiety, I' d finally drifted off. When I woke, the first thing I saw was the harsh white of the hospital ceiling. The second was my phone, still clutched in my hand, displaying Bridget' s latest Instagram story.

It was a selfie of her and Carter, faces flushed from the cold, noses almost touching, wide smiles plastered across their faces. The caption, bolder and more defiant than before, read: "Some connections just feel right. No drama, just genuine happiness."

My eyes scanned the words, then the image. A strange, serene calm washed over me. It wasn't the usual fresh wave of pain, or the familiar sting of jealousy. It was… nothing. An empty space where those emotions used to reside.

I looked at their beaming faces, at the undeniable intimacy in their pose, and for the first time, I didn't feel a surge of inadequacy. I didn't wonder if I was pretty enough, fun enough, carefree enough. I just saw two people, oblivious to the world, celebrating their connection. And I realized, with a startling clarity, that I no longer cared.

The constant need to compare myself, to fight for his attention, to justify my feelings – it was all gone. Replaced by a blank canvas. I hadn't cried since that initial breakdown. I hadn't checked his last seen, or re-read old texts. The craving, the desperate ache for his presence, had simply evaporated.

When Bridget had accused me earlier, her eyes blazing with a perverse anger, I saw her, really saw her, for the first time. She was still fighting a battle I had already surrendered. And Carter? He was still waiting for me to break, for me to come crawling back, for me to reinforce his inflated ego.

I took a deep breath, the hospital air tasting strangely clean. I pushed myself up from the bed, the IV still attached to my arm, and reached for the nurse's call button.

"I need to go home," I said, my voice firm and clear.

Back in the apartment, standing before Carter and Bridget, the Tiffany box still extended like a peace offering, the calm I felt was absolute. This wasn't about anger anymore. It wasn't about bitterness. It was about a quiet, profound understanding.

"I don't need you," I said, my voice cutting through the silence, each word precise and deliberate. "And I don't need your bracelet, Carter."

His face contorted, a mixture of shock and disbelief. "What are you talking about?" he stammered, lowering the box slightly. "Ellie, you always wanted this. We can still work this out."

"Work what out?" I asked, a hint of genuine curiosity in my tone. "The fact that you chose a ski trip with Bridget over our relationship? The fact that you told me not to come crying to you? The fact that you ignored my calls and texts while I was essentially having a breakdown, all while she was posting your love story on Instagram?"

He flinched, his eyes darting to Bridget, who suddenly looked very uncomfortable.

"You complained that I was too emotional, too demanding, that I suffocated you," I continued, my voice unwavering. "Well, consider yourself free, Carter. I'm not going to delay your life anymore."

I gestured to the boxes again. "I've already arranged for a moving company to pick these up. They should be here any minute. Make sure you take everything that belongs to you."

My gaze met his directly, holding steady. "And after tonight, there'll be no more contact. No more texts, no more calls, no more casual drop-ins. We're done."

He looked at me as if I had spoken in a foreign language. His mouth formed a silent "no."

For a split second, I considered deleting his number, blocking him on everything, just as I had done countless times in my head. But no. This needed to be a clean break, face to face. He needed to see the finality of it.

He stood there, stunned, his eyes wide, searching my face for any sign of the old Ellie, the one who would crack, who would crumble. But that Ellie was gone. Buried under layers of pain and finally, a profound sense of self-preservation. My eyes held no trace of the desperate love he was used to seeing. There was only a quiet, resolute emptiness.

A cold dread seeped into Carter. He had expected bluster, drama, a fight he could easily win by playing the victim. This quiet, unwavering resolve was something he hadn't anticipated. It was terrifying.

Bridget, who had been simmering in the background, chose that moment to interject, her voice sharp. "Oh, for heaven's sake, Carter, just leave! She's clearly lost it! Let's go."

But Carter didn't look at Bridget. He looked at me, a flicker of genuine panic in his eyes.

"Ellie, wait," he pleaded, his voice cracking. "Is this… is this really what you want? To just throw everything away? All those years? Our plans?" He gestured vaguely between us, then to the apartment. "This apartment, our future… I was going to propose! For real!"

His words were frantic, tumbling out, but they fell flat. Too little, too late.

Just then, a loud, insistent knock echoed from the front door. "Moving company, ma'am! Here for the pickup!" a cheerful voice boomed.

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