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Chapter 6: Shattered Glass

Author: Evve
last update Last Updated: 2025-12-22 16:31:51

The drive back was a silent scream.

Aurora’s car sliced through the pre-dawn gloom, the gray, misty light of 3 AM turning the world to ash. The city was behind her, a glittering, indifferent monster.

The earring was in the pocket of her coat. It felt less like a piece of jewelry and more like a hot coal, a piece of shrapnel she’d dug from a wound.

She was no longer the woman praying to be a fool. She was the fool.

She had the proof. And the proof was a ruby that matched the crimson of Vanessa's triumphant, lying mouth. The proof was an empty bed. The proof was that he hadn't even bothered to hide it.

He wasn't just betraying her. He was humiliating her. He was counting on her to be the good, quiet Vale heiress, the one who would value the merger over her own soul. He was counting on her to swallow the broken glass and smile while she bled.

When she reached the Vale estate, the gates slid open, welcoming her back to the scene of the crime.

She didn't park in the main courtyard. She drove around to the service entrance, her tires crunching softly on the gravel, and parked in the shadows by the kitchens. She felt like a thief, her heart pounding with a dull, heavy ache.

She used her key to slip in through the same service door she'd fled from, what felt like a lifetime ago.

The house was tomb-silent. The scent of lilies from the ballroom, now wilted and hours old, hung in the air, thick and funereal.

She padded through the dark corridor, past the closed kitchen doors. She was heading for the grand staircase, for the sanctuary of her suite, where she could lock the door and finally, finally, fall apart.

She just needed to make it to her room.

She stepped out into the main foyer.

A single, low-wattage lamp clicked on.

"Going for a drive?"

Aurora froze. Her blood didn't just run cold; it evaporated.

Liam was standing in the archway of the library.

He wasn't in his tuxedo. He was in dark trousers and a crisp, white shirt, unbuttoned at the collar. It was a fresh shirt. He looked rested. He looked powerful. He looked, impossibly, like he had just come from a refreshing night's sleep.

He was holding a glass of water, swirling the ice.

"I came back to check on you," he said, his voice a low, dangerous purr. "Your headache. I was worried."

He took a step out of the shadows. His eyes, gray and cold, raked over her. The black trousers. The cashmere coat. The bare feet in loafers. The pale, scrubbed face.

His expression didn't flicker with guilt. It hardened with a sudden, cold fury.

"Or was it a 'headache,' Aurora?" he asked, the politeness vanishing, replaced by the razor-sharp edge of the CEO. "Where have you been?"

She had spent the last hour in a state of hollow shock. Now, seeing him stand there, so calm, so arrogant, so completely and utterly guilty, a new emotion, white-hot and forged in the fires of her humiliation, rose up.

Rage.

"Where have you been?" she countered. Her voice didn't shake. It was as cold and clear as the ice in his glass.

Liam's eyes narrowed. He was not used to this. He was used to the girl who whispered "I trust you" in the dark.

"I told you. I was worried about you," he said, taking another step. "I came here, found your bed empty. I've been waiting for you for an hour. Our wedding is in less than ten hours. What the hell do you think you're doing, wandering around New York in the middle of the night?"

He was doing it. The same thing he did in the corridor. He was spinning the story, making her the erratic one, the problem to be solved.

"Stop it," she whispered. "Just... stop lying."

"Lying?" He gave a short, incredulous laugh. "Aurora, you are the one sneaking into your own home at three in the morning, looking like you've seen a ghost. You're acting paranoid. You're acting hysterical."

"I am not hysterical," she said, her voice rising, the ice cracking. "I am done. I went to your penthouse, Liam."

The words hung in the air, sharp and definitive.

His face, which had been a mask of controlled anger, went perfectly, terrifyingly still. The blood drained from it. He didn't look guilty. He looked... violated.

"You what?"

"I went to find you," she said, her voice shaking now, not with fear, but with the adrenaline of the confrontation. "But you weren't there, were you? 1:45 AM, the night before your wedding, and your bed was perfectly, spotlessly empty."

"You broke into my home." He said it not as an accusation, but as a statement of fact. His fury was so cold it was almost silent. "You went through my things."

"You weren't there!" she screamed, the sound ripping from her throat, echoing in the vast, marble foyer. "Where were you, Liam? At a 3 AM meeting? With her?"

"You are acting insane," he hissed, stalking toward her. He grabbed her by the arms, his fingers digging in, bruising her. "You are blowing up this merger, our lives, your father's legacy, because you found an empty bed? I was with my brother! I was getting my head straight, because, yes, you are acting paranoid, and I needed a break from it!"

It was such a good lie. So plausible. So perfect.

Her tears, which she had held back, sprang to her eyes, hot and stinging. He was going to deny it all. He was going to twist it until she was the crazy one.

"No," she choked out, fumbling in her coat pocket. Her fingers closed around the sharp-edged piece of metal.

She pulled her arm from his grasp and held her hand out, palm up, under the dim lamplight.

The ruby and diamond earring lay there, glittering, a single, bloody tear.

"She must have been cold," Aurora whispered, her voice shattering. "She left this. On your nightstand."

Liam's gaze dropped from her face to her hand. He saw the earring.

He didn't speak. He didn't move. He just... stared.

The entire world stopped. The silence in the foyer was so total, Aurora could hear the hum of the refrigerator in the distant kitchen.

He looked up. His face was white. But it wasn't the face of a man caught in a lie. It was the face of a king whose castle had been breached.

"You..." He was shaking with a rage so profound it rendered him speechless. "You went through my bedroom? You're snooping. You're a child. A paranoid, hysterical child."

"Don't," she sobbed, the fight leaving her, the "broken glass" finally shredding her. "Don't lie. Not now. Not after this. Just... who is she? Why?"

"It's a gift!" he roared, the sound exploding in the silence. "It's a wedding gift! For YOU! You insane, paranoid girl, you've ruined it! You've ruined everything!"

It was the worst lie he'd ever told. So blatant, so desperate, so insulting.

She looked at the earring in her palm. A gift for her. A single earring. A ruby.

She looked at his face, contorted in a mask of righteous fury.

She looked at the glass of water he'd set on the console table.

A sound, a raw, primal noise of grief and rage, tore from her throat. She wasn't a Vale. She wasn't a bride. She was just a woman who had been broken.

With a scream, she didn't throw the earring. She didn't throw the glass.

She swept her arm across the console table.

The crystal glass shot off the polished wood and hit the marble floor.

The sound was not a crash. It was an explosion. A gunshot.

It shattered into a thousand glittering, microscopic pieces. Splintered light and ice and water sprayed across the floor.

Liam froze.

They both stared at the glittering, wet, irreparable mess.

The rage vanished, sucked out of her, leaving a cold, hollow, empty void.

The tears she'd been fighting finally fell. Not hot, angry tears, but silent, cold, grieving tears for the life that had just shattered on the floor with that glass.

"It's over," she whispered, the words barely audible. She was crying for the girl in the mirror, the one in the white lace dress. "It's all over."

Liam stared at the broken glass, his chest heaving. His jaw was clenched so tight a muscle jumped.

He slowly, deliberately, looked back up at her, his eyes as dead and cold as a winter sky.

"Clean it up," he said, his voice flat, devoid of all emotion.

Aurora's head snapped up, her tears stopping. "What?"

"Clean. It. Up." He gestured to the glass. "You made the mess. Now fix it."

He smoothed his shirt, his composure rebuilt, his mask of cold control locking back into place.

"And then go to your room," he said, turning and walking back toward the library. "Get some sleep. The wedding is at eleven."

He didn't look back.

He left her there, alone in the foyer, her bare feet just inches from the glittering, shattered glass.

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