Too Late For Your Proposal

Ellie POV:

I remembered those nights vividly. The nights when I would call him, my voice trembling, begging him to come home, to talk, to just acknowledge my pain. The phone would ring unanswered, or go straight to voicemail. I' d send desperate texts, paragraphs spilling out my fear, my hurt, my confusion. "Carter, please, just tell me what's going on. Why are you doing this?" They'd sit unread, or be met with his infuriating silence.

Bridget' s Instagram stories of their "fun" ski trip would pop up, a constant, mocking reminder of where he was, and who he was with. While I was at home, suffocating under a blanket of anxiety, he was out having the time of his life, basking in her adoration. The cold silence from him, the loud celebration from her – it was psychological torture. I had felt like I was dying, slowly, agonizingly. There were moments I truly believed I couldn't survive another hour of the emotional agony.

Now, watching Carter crumble before me, his face blotchy and tear-streaked, I felt a detached sense of irony. His pain, however theatrical, was real to him. But it was a fraction of what I had endured. And I felt nothing for it. No pity, no urge to comfort, no desire to soothe. The well of empathy for him had run dry, utterly parched.

"Carter," I said, my voice still dangerously calm, "you need to stop. You're making a fool of yourself. Don't drag these poor men into our drama." I gestured to the movers, who stood awkwardly, waiting for the scene to pass. "Let them do their job. And then you need to leave. Don't make this any harder than it has to be."

He looked at me, his eyes wide and bloodshot. "Ellie, are you sure about this?" he pleaded, his voice a desperate whisper. "Are you really, truly sure you want to end us? Just like that? You said you'd never give up on us. You said we were forever."

He was throwing my own words back at me, twisting them, weaponizing them.

But those words belonged to a different Ellie. A weaker Ellie. An Ellie who believed his lies.

"Yes, Carter," I said, meeting his gaze squarely. "I am sure. I'm more sure than I've ever been about anything in my life."

It was a revelation, this clarity. For years, I had been tied to him by an invisible thread of hope and fear, always believing that if I just loved him enough, he would eventually see my worth. I had been so wrong. I had been so desperately, pathetically wrong. And now, the thread was severed. The relief was immense.

"We can still be civil, Carter," I continued, my voice softening slightly, a gesture of peace, not surrender. "Let's just end this with some dignity. For both of our sakes."

He stood frozen, his shoulders slumped, looking utterly defeated. Bridget, sensing the finality of the moment, remained silent for once, her smug expression replaced by a wary uncertainty.

The movers, taking my words as a cue, began to roll the first box onto the dolly. It was a box filled with his heavy winter coats, the ones he'd worn on countless "guys' trips" where I was never invited. Each item taken was another layer peeled off, another piece of him leaving my life.

One by one, his possessions were wheeled out of the apartment, down the hallway, and into the waiting truck. His golf clubs, his collection of vintage vinyl records, his oversized gaming chair. Each object carried with it a memory, a fragment of our shared past, now neatly packaged and removed.

Finally, the apartment was empty of his things. The space where his towering bookshelf once stood now looked strangely vast. The empty corner where his gaming setup dominated the room felt light, airy.

I sank onto the sofa, the soft cushions a welcome embrace. The apartment, once our shared home, felt like my own again. The silence was no longer heavy, but serene.

I looked around the familiar walls, the ones we had chosen together, filled with the youthful optimism of a shared future. I remembered signing the lease, bubbling with excitement, imagining our lives unfolding within these very rooms. Our first arguments, our tender reconciliations, the quiet evenings spent curled up on this very sofa. I had envisioned anniversaries, holidays, a lifetime of small, domestic joys. I had even imagined our future children, running through these rooms, their laughter echoing off the walls.

I had never once, not even in my darkest moments of doubt, imagined it would end like this. With his things being hauled away by strangers, leaving behind an echoing silence. It felt like a dream, a strange, surreal dream that had finally come to an end.

I was back to where I started, in an apartment that was now too big for one, with a future that was suddenly wide open, terrifying and exhilarating all at once.

Later that week, I met the landlord to officially terminate the lease. "Are you sure, Ellie?" Mr. Henderson, our kind, elderly landlord, asked, his brow furrowed with concern. "It's a lovely apartment. And you and Carter seemed so happy here."

I smiled, a genuine, unburdened smile. "I'm sure, Mr. Henderson. It's time for a fresh start." I shook my head gently. "I don't need this space anymore."

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