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He Stands at the End of Memory
He Stands at the End of Memory
Author: Ronye

Chapter 1

Author: Ronye
On the day of my father's funeral, my husband, Sebastian, never came after all.

Night fell, and Sebastian came home.

He saw how pale and worn my face was and reached out to comfort me. I turned my head away.

"This is my fault, baby. Something came up in Paris and I had to deal with it. Whatever you want, I'll make it up to you, okay?"

After a long silence, I lifted my hand and slid two neatly folded documents across to him. "Sign them."

Sebastian looked relieved. Without so much as glancing at what they were, he picked up a pen and signed his name.

As far as he was concerned, anything I wanted, whatever it was, he'd agree to without hesitation.

"Anything you and the baby need, I'll give you, sweetheart."

I'd just opened my mouth to say something when his phone cut sharply through the quiet.

The name flashing on the screen was the one he kept pinned at the top and never let me see. Serena.

Serena, my cousin.

He ended the call and gave an awkward little laugh, then pressed a light kiss to my forehead. "There's a deal I have to close. I've got to go make money for our baby. I'll spend real time with you next time, all right?"

He didn't wait for an answer. He grabbed his coat and turned to go, hurried, without a trace of reluctance.

The house sank into dead silence, the empty space pressing down until it was hard to breathe.

I sank slowly back onto the couch.

Countless images flooded in without warning, every small piece of the last three years.

Sebastian had treated me well, so well that every woman in the city envied me.

I slept badly, so for three years he held me on his side every night and pulled the blanket over me, never once letting it slip.

Whenever we fought, right or wrong, he was always the first to soothe me and the first to apologize. He would swallow his own feelings rather than let me feel slighted, and he never touched work until I had cooled down.

Once, in the middle of the night, I wanted to see the rain-soaked streets, and he simply ordered the whole road cleared. Every car was banned, and an entire busy avenue opened quietly for me alone.

Back then I drowned in that kind of devotion, endlessly grateful, sure I was the luckiest woman alive.

I naively believed that was love, that year after year of safety lay ahead.

But the day my father died, ninety-nine unanswered calls and one photo of an embrace on a Paris street broke the beautiful three-year illusion to pieces.

After hesitating a long time, I rose from the cold floor and walked to the deepest part of the house, to the hidden basement Sebastian had never let me set foot in.

The moment the heavy iron door swung open, a biting cold rushed at me, and the blood in my veins went still.

The entire basement was packed full, every inch of it a trace of Serena.

Her portraits covered the walls. The shelves held neat rows of candid shots of her, photos from her awkward school years, even doodles she had scribbled without thinking. On the vanity sat the perfume and jewelry she always wore, each piece wiped spotless, each one carefully kept.

So every bit of tenderness, every indulgence, every favor he had shown me had never been because I was Vivienne.

It was only because I had a face that looked so much like Serena's.

The cold swept through me and my heart ached in a thousand tiny places, yet I could not squeeze out a single tear.

It did not matter.

He had lied to me for three whole years, but this time he was not going to win.

I picked up the phone and called immigration to start the paperwork. Sebastian, let us never see each other again.

I bent to pick up the two signed documents from the table, my fingertips brushing over his sharp handwriting.

The first was the divorce agreement.

The second was the abortion consent form.

Inside me was a child not yet two months along, one I had once pinned all my hopes on, believing this bond could tether his tenderness to me.

Now I saw the child was nothing but the most ridiculous accessory to this absurd deception.

Sebastian, cling to the obsession you will never have for the rest of your life.

I hoped you would spend every year in regret, and never once feel whole.
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  • He Stands at the End of Memory   Chapter 8

    Serena's urging finally moved Sebastian to take that step.He set aside all his pride, left everything back home, and came alone to a foreign country, hoping to win me back.He must have stayed certain that three years of deep love had rooted itself in me, that if he only bowed his head, I would surely come back.But he did not know that my heart had long since died amid countless disappointments.I was settled now in this small seaside town, my days gentle and clean, with no more suffocation, no more deception, and no more endless self-torment.Julian was at my side, keeping me safe, giving me a love that was equal and pure, something I had never felt before.The day Sebastian found me, I was walking by the sea with Julian.Seeing him again after months, he still had that proud, aloof look, only now there was a haste and a raggedness in his eyes.He came toward me quickly, his tone yielding and tentative, trying to explain the past and offer a late apology.But Julian steadily drew me

  • He Stands at the End of Memory   Chapter 7

    Life in this distant country was gentle and unhurried, and it smoothed away every wound and hardship of the past three years.I settled in a small coastal town, the climate mild, every season bright.I rented a sea-view apartment with a wonderful outlook, spending my days at the studio working on oil painting and my free hours at a nearby workshop learning to arrange flowers. My life was simple, clean, and full.And it was in this clean, gentle town that I met Julian Hayes.Julian was a locally well-known architect, refined in manner, clear and decent in character. We first met at a charity art show by the sea. I was standing quietly before a painting, taking in the light and color of the water, when the crowd passing behind jostled me half a step off balance.It was Julian who reached out in time to steady me.At that first meeting he was measured and courteous, with no brash advances, merely asking softly if I was all right.He remembered that I loved the evening sea breeze, and he o

  • He Stands at the End of Memory   Chapter 6

    The wind in this foreign country was gentle and easy, and it blew away all the gloom I had carried for three years.I had been in this small seaside town for several days now. The temperature stayed mild year-round and the sea breeze drifted slow and easy, with no endless intrigues, no ambiguous affection I couldn’t distinguish as real or fake, and none of the man who had taken all my heart and left me covered in wounds.I rented an apartment with floor-to-ceiling windows and a view of the sea. Each morning I opened them to blue water, and at dusk the last of the light spread across the whole balcony, quiet and healing. I set down the chains of the past for good and slowly returned to a life that was my own.I signed up for the flower-arranging and oil-painting classes I had always liked, and my days were plain and full. I slowly came out of my shell and met a group of warm, uncomplicated new friends. They were pure and kind, untangled by love or hatred, content to chat about trivial j

  • He Stands at the End of Memory   Chapter 5

    When the anesthetic finally wore off, Sebastian forced his eyes open, his body utterly drained.But he paid no mind to his own condition, his thoughts on Serena.He summoned his second-in-command at once and learned that Serena's surgery had gone smoothly and that the marrow had taken well. The tension he had carried for days finally eased.He could never let Serena know it was his marrow that had saved her.He ordered her moved that very night to the most private clinic available, every surgical record sealed, no one permitted to breathe a word.In the days that followed he poured all his patience and tenderness into Serena, sinking into the comfort of having the woman he loved back, and put Vivienne entirely out of his mind.As far as Sebastian was concerned, Vivienne had been gentle for three years, loving him with a stubborn, humble devotion. However much she sulked or fumed, in the end she would wait obediently at the house for him to come back and smooth things over.She would ne

  • He Stands at the End of Memory   Chapter 4

    Sebastian pulled every connection and every ounce of power he had, searching the whole city like a man possessed. After a full day and night, he finally got Serena back."Sebastian, this had nothing to do with Vivienne. She didn't do it. You've got her wrong."That one short sentence shattered all of Sebastian's suspicion and certainty in an instant.He went rigid, the menace draining from his eyes, replaced by heavy shock and a belated trace of guilt.A moment later he walked into my room."Vivienne, I'm sorry. I was rash. I blamed you wrongly."So no matter how I explained myself, it counted for nothing next to one light sentence from Serena.After I was discharged, I went back alone to the house full of false tenderness.One by one I gathered up the expensive, exquisite gifts and tossed them into a discard box.There was no reluctance and no regret, only a complete sense of release. I did not want a shred of the affection built on lies.Once Sebastian had settled things with Serena,

  • He Stands at the End of Memory   Chapter 3

    The next day at noon, a friend I had not seen in a while asked me to lunch. We sat across from each other, talking softly, and I tried to ease the gloom that had built up inside me.But fate insisted on grinding away the last scrap of my dignity.When I looked up, I suddenly saw two familiar figures.Sebastian walked in front, tall and refined, his suit immaculate. Beside him, shoulder to shoulder, was Serena.The instant our eyes met, Sebastian stopped short, surprise and a flicker of panic churning in his gaze.Almost at once he came toward me, his words rushed, deliberately covering and explaining. "Vivienne, listen to me. I was at the office all morning. I just ran into Serena over lunch, that's all. We only happened to eat together."Every line was forced, every word guilty.Before I could speak, Serena gave a gentle little smile. "Vivienne, what a coincidence. If you don't mind, why don't you and your friend join us? It's livelier with more people."With the moment at an impasse

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