Failed Escape
Divorced and remarried—I've lost count of how many times Aaron and I stepped in and out of marriage.
He once treated me like something precious, but less than a year after our wedding, he asked for our first divorce.
The reason was simple, Vivian was coming back.
"Vivian's a public figure," he told me. "I don't want anyone thinking she's involved with a married man."
That third-tier actress had nothing but her father's sacrifice to her name.
He had taken a bullet for Aaron—a life for a life.
And because of that, Aaron believed he owed her everything.
Every time Vivian returned to the country, Aaron divorced me.
And every time she left, we remarried.
The first time we split, I drowned my tears in whiskey and stumbled back to his house half-drunk.
The lights inside were warm. He was with her.
And I stood outside, shivering through the night.
The second time, I tracked his every move—restaurants, auctions, charity galas—just to "accidentally" run into him again.
Later, I learned better.
The moment he mentioned divorce, I would quietly pack my suitcase and disappear from his mansion.
My love and humiliation kept me trapped in that endless cycle of breaking up and coming back together.
But this time, when Aaron waited for me at City Hall to remarry, I never showed up.