Ellie POV:
The knock on the door, followed by the mover's cheerful announcement, sliced through the tense silence. It was a tangible, undeniable force of reality.
"Moving company, ma'am! Here for the pickup!"
The words seemed to hang in the air, a final punctuation mark on our relationship. Carter's face, already pale, drained of all color. Bridget, who had been trying to drag him out, froze, her eyes wide with a mixture of shock and annoyance.
I walked to the door, pulling it open. Two burly men in matching uniforms stood on the threshold, clipboards in hand. "Ellie Roach?" the first one asked, a friendly smile on his face.
"Yes, that's me," I replied, my voice calm, almost detached. "You're here for the pickup, right?"
"That's right, ma'am," he confirmed, consulting his clipboard. "Looks like we're moving some boxes for a Mr. Carter Kemp?"
The words hung in the air like a death knell. Carter visibly flinched. He looked from me to the movers, his eyes darting frantically, as if searching for a way out, a loophole, a hidden camera.
"Yes, that's correct," I said, stepping aside and gesturing into the apartment. "All the boxes labeled 'Carter' are ready to go."
"Ellie, what are you doing?" Carter stammered, his voice laced with desperation. He took a stumbling step forward, reaching for my arm.
But I simply ignored him, turning to the movers. "Thank you so much for coming on such short notice. I really appreciate it."
It was a strange feeling, this calm. I had always imagined this moment, the actual act of separation, would be agonizing. A gut-wrenching, soul-crushing experience. For years, the thought of leaving Carter had been a phantom limb-a constant, throbbing ache that was always there but never quite real. I thought I would be a weeping mess, clinging to every last shred of our shared history.
Instead, I felt… light. Relieved. It was easier than I had ever dared to hope. All those times I had packed a bag in a fit of rage, only to unpack it hours later, craving his hollow apologies, his manipulative promises. All those times I had threatened to leave, secretly hoping he would beg me to stay, to prove he couldn't live without me. I had wanted the drama, the chase, the validation.
But this wasn't about him anymore. This was about me. And I realized, with a jolt, that I didn't need his begging, his promises, or his validation. I just needed him gone.
I pulled a neatly folded piece of paper from my pocket. "Here's the delivery address," I told the lead mover, handing it to him. "Everything goes there."
The movers nodded, their faces impassive, used to the quiet dramas of human lives unfolding around their work. They moved with practiced efficiency, one of them rolling in a dolly.
"No! Stop! Don't touch those!" Carter suddenly shrieked, his voice high-pitched and ragged. He lunged forward, placing himself dramatically in front of the stack of boxes. "Those are my belongings! And she can't just send them away!"
He turned to me, his eyes wide and wild. "Ellie, you can't! We're not breaking up! I don't agree to this! I was going to propose! Bridget told you! The ring! The bracelet! Don't you care about any of that?"
He gestured wildly, first at the Tiffany box still clutched in his hand, then vaguely at the empty space where his future with me supposedly lay. "You knew! You must have known I was going to ask you! How can you do this to me?"
His face crumpled, a grotesque caricature of pain. Tears welled up in his eyes, rolling down his cheeks, leaving shiny tracks. He looked utterly broken, a man on the verge of total collapse. Part of me, the old, weak part, almost felt a pang of sympathy. But that part was quickly silenced.
This is what he looks like when he's losing control, a cold voice in my head whispered. Not when he's actually hurt you.
He was a child throwing a tantrum, desperate to reclaim a toy he had neglected and discarded.
"Carter," I said, my voice cutting through his frantic pleas, "you're making a scene. And it's not a good look."
I remembered the times I had broken down, really broken down, in front of him. Begging him to listen, to care, to just see how much he was hurting me. I remembered his cold, dismissive eyes, his impatient sighs, his subtle sneers.
"Stop crying, Ellie," he'd said once, after I' d found another one of Bridget' s suggestive texts on his phone. "It's so dramatic. Can't you just be normal for once?"
Another time, after a particularly vicious argument initiated by Bridget' s constant interference, I had collapsed on the floor, sobbing uncontrollably. He had calmly stepped over me, walked out the door, and returned hours later, pretending nothing had happened.
This was his turn. This was his meltdown. And I felt nothing. Absolutely nothing. It was a strange, liberating emptiness. He was finally feeling a fraction of the anguish he had inflicted on me.
"Just let them do their job, Carter," I said, my voice flat. "It's over."





