My husband unveiled a custom pink car on live TV, calling it a "tribute to our love."
The internet hailed him as the perfect man.
But I knew the truth.
That car was the exact place he cheated on me with his VP, Keri.
And the lipstick stain on the passenger seat wasn't mine.
He thought I was at home, waiting to celebrate his success.
Instead, I was at a clinic, signing a waiver to surgically remove my memories.
I aborted the child he desperately wanted.
I smashed the jade locket he claimed bound our souls together.
I burned my passport, my license, and every photo of us in the kitchen sink.
When he finally came home, he found nothing but an empty house and a gift box containing the remains of our unborn child.
A year later, he crashed my engagement party in Charleston, falling to his knees and begging for forgiveness.
I looked down at the weeping billionaire and felt absolutely nothing.
"I'm sorry, sir," I said calmly.
"But do I know you?"
Chapter 1
Gretchen Rivas POV:
"Are you absolutely certain about this, Ms. Rivas?" The doctor's voice was calm, almost too calm. It echoed in the sterile white room of the Mnemosyne Project clinic.
I gripped the arms of the plush leather chair. My knuckles were white. "Yes," I said. My voice was steady, even to my own ears. "I'm certain."
He nodded slowly, his gaze unwavering. "The procedure is irreversible. The targeted memories, once suppressed, cannot be retrieved. It's like a surgical removal, but for your mind."
A faint tremor ran through me, a ghost of fear. But it quickly vanished. What was there to lose? I thought. My past felt like a black hole, sucking away all my light.
I closed my eyes for a moment. Flashes of a life I used to love, a life I now hated, flickered behind my eyelids. His laughter. My tears. His promises. My broken heart. Nothing worth holding onto. Nothing at all.
"I understand," I said, opening my eyes. I reached for the tablet on the table. The consent form glowed. My finger hovered over the signature line. This was it. The escape I craved.
My name, Gretchen Rivas, felt heavy and foreign. I pressed down, signing the screen with a flourish I didn't recognize. A part of me was already gone.
"Excellent," the doctor said, a faint smile touching his lips. "We'll schedule your treatment to commence in three days. Please maintain minimal contact with external stimuli until then."
"Minimal contact," I repeated, feeling a lightness spread through my chest. The suffocating weight I'd carried for weeks seemed to lift, just a fraction. I stood up, feeling a strange sense of liberation. The air outside the clinic felt cleaner, sharper.
I pulled out my phone as I stepped onto the street, the screen buzzing with notifications. A text from Donovan. 'Tune in now, baby. I have a surprise for you.'
My heart gave a sick lurch. Of course he did. He always had a surprise.
I tapped open the link. The screen filled with the dazzling lights of a grand stage. Donovan Whitney, my husband, stood under a spotlight, charismatic and confident. Behind him, a massive object was draped in shimmering fabric.
The host's voice boomed. "Donovan Whitney, the visionary behind Whitney Motors, is about to unveil his latest masterpiece! A testament to innovation, and a tribute... to love!"
Donovan smiled, that practiced, dazzling smile that charmed millions. "This isn't just a car," he announced, his voice filled with emotion. "This is a dream. A dream I poured my soul into, for the woman who owns my soul."
He gestured dramatically. The fabric fell away, revealing a sleek, futuristic electric vehicle. It was entirely, ostentatiously pink. "The Soulmate," he declared.
A gasp rippled through the audience. Women in the livestream chat exploded with heart emojis and envy. 'He's so romantic! He worships his wife!'
The host turned back to Donovan. "Mr. Whitney, the design is absolutely stunning. What was your inspiration?"
Donovan's eyes softened, looking directly into the camera, as if speaking only to me. "Gretchen, my beautiful wife, sometimes gets a little lost. I wanted to design a car that would always keep her safe, always bring her home. A car that symbolizes that true love isn't about restriction, but about giving freedom."
The crowd erupted in applause. My phone buzzed with a thousand adoring comments. 'Best husband ever! Relationship goals!'
I stared at my phone screen, then slowly, deliberately, closed it. My stomach churned. A wave of nausea washed over me, stronger than any morning sickness.
My mind replayed the video I'd received a month ago. Not from Donovan, but from Keri Parrish, his marketing VP. It was explicit. Donovan, my husband of ten years, in that very prototype pink car, with Keri. Her mocking laugh. Her hand reaching for him. His eyes, full of lust, not for me.
The car, his "tribute to love." It was the same car. The one they used.
I remembered the lipstick, a bright fuchsia, smeared on the passenger seat headrest, left there deliberately. Keri's triumphant text: 'He says you're too boring for pink, Gretchen. But he loves me in it.' Then, a photo of a positive pregnancy test.
He was dirty. Our love was a lie.
He was never going to bring me home.