He Chose Them, I Lost Everything
img img He Chose Them, I Lost Everything img Chapter 3
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Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
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Chapter 3

Adeline Campos POV:

"She' s been through enough without you being so goddamn cruel," Dorian spat, his hand on the door handle. "You owe her an apology."

My wrist throbbed where he had gripped it earlier. A dull, aching pain that radiated up my arm. But it was nothing compared to the cold ache that was spreading through my chest, freezing everything in its path.

In that moment, a switch flipped inside me. It wasn't loud or dramatic. It was a quiet, final click. The part of me that still hoped, that still made excuses for him, that still loved him with the desperate loyalty of a girl who had no one else in the world-it just went silent.

"Apologize?" I asked, my voice flat. I reached over, my movements precise and deliberate, and hit the button to release his seatbelt. "Get out of my car."

"Adeline, I' m not kidding," he said, his voice low and threatening.

"I said, get out." My voice didn' t rise. It didn' t need to. The cold finality in it was enough.

He stared at me, his eyes searching my face for the woman he knew, the woman who would have broken down by now, who would have cried and fought and eventually, always, forgiven him.

She wasn' t there anymore.

"Fine," he snarled, shoving the door open with such force it shuddered on its hinges. "You want to be this way? Fine. Don' t come crying to me when you' ve had time to think about what a bitch you' ve been."

He slammed the door shut.

I didn't flinch. I just watched in the side mirror as he ran to catch up with Brittny, who was standing on the corner, looking lost and pathetic. He put his arm around her, pulling her into a comforting embrace, his head bent toward hers as he murmured what I could only assume were words of solace.

My body felt like it was being torn in two. My hands were shaking so violently I could barely grip the steering wheel. I pressed the gas pedal, the engine roaring to life.

As I drove past them, Brittny looked up. Her tear-stained face was gone. In its place was a triumphant, mocking smile. She met my eyes in the rearview mirror, a silent, vicious declaration of victory.

The days that followed were a cold hell. We were in a state of undeclared war, living in the same house but not speaking, not looking at each other. The air was thick with resentment. Our friends, Dorian' s friends really, started showing up. A coordinated effort.

"Come on, Addie," Mark said, sitting on our sofa, a beer in his hand. "He' s just got a soft spot for a sob story. It' s not like he' s sleeping with her."

"You know how Dorian is," another one, Paul, added. "He sees a stray dog, he has to take it home. He sees a struggling single mom, he has to save her. It' s about his own past, you know? He couldn' t save himself or you back then, so he' s overcompensating."

His own past. Our past.

They didn' t know the half of it. They didn' t know what it was like to be eight years old, watching your parents' car get T-boned at an intersection, and then being thrown into the system. They didn' t know the gnawing hunger, the cold nights we spent huddled together on a park bench after running away from a foster home where the father' s hands wandered.

I remembered Dorian, just a boy of ten, wrapping his skinny arms around me, his voice fierce in the dark. "I' ll get us out of here, Addie. I swear. I' ll make you a home. A real one. I' ll make you my princess, and you' ll never have to be scared again."

And he did. We built our company from nothing, from a single brilliant idea coded in our cramped apartment. He built this house for me, filled it with light and warmth and everything we never had. He called me his "little princess," his voice full of a love so vast it felt like the only solid thing in the universe.

"He' s a man, Adeline," Mark' s wife, Sarah, said, her tone condescending. "All men get distracted sometimes. You can' t just throw away a marriage over something like this. Stop being so stubborn."

It was then that I realized. This wasn' t a friendly intervention. This was a message from Dorian. This was the olive branch he was offering, through them. He expected me to take it. To be the bigger person. To forgive and forget, just like all the other times.

Something inside me hardened. No. Not this time.

The final nail in the coffin of our marriage arrived via my best friend, Jaclyn. She sent me a screenshot of Brittny Quinn' s latest social media post.

It was a picture. A close-up of two small hands holding a crayon, drawing a stick-figure family on a piece of paper. A man, a woman, and a little boy. Underneath, Brittny had written: "My Cael drew our little family. My heart is so full. He finally has the father figure he deserves."

But it wasn' t the drawing that made my blood run cold. It was the man' s hand, resting on the edge of the paper, guiding the child' s.

I knew that hand better than my own.

And on the fourth finger was the simple, platinum wedding band I had placed there ten years ago.

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