Chapter 6

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LISA's POV

"I want a divorce"

The words swirled around us like a cloud of poisonous fumes. Theoretically, I understood what they meant, but I couldn't comprehend them.

Divorce meant breaking up. Breaking up meant separating. And separating was simply impossible. It was something that happened to other people, not to us.

Her wedding ring burned a hole in my pocket.

"I can't believe I married someone who likes mint chocolate chip," I said as Jennie hoovered down a bowl of her favorite icecream. "You know you're basically eating toothpaste, right?"

"Delicious toothpaste." Her mischievous smile hit me right in the gut. We'd been married exactly one week, two days, and twelve hours, and I still couldn't believe she was mine. "You knew about my taste in dessert before our wedding, so you can't complain now. I'm afraid you're stuck with me and my mint chocolate forever."

Forever.

The concept seemed laughable a year ago. Nothing lasted forever. People, places, relationships... everything had an expiration date.

But for the first time in my life, I allowed myself to believe someone when they said they would stay.

My hand found hers and laced our fingers together. "Promise?"

Her face softened. We were technically supposed to be watching the latest action blockbuster, but the explosions were mere background noise at this point. "I promise."

A door slammed in the hallway, and the memory fizzled as quickly as it arose.

The buzzing in my ears returned. "You don't mean that."

Jennie simply stared at me, her eyes bright with unshed tears but her face set with quiet determination.

I couldn't breathe properly. This moment didn't feel real, at least not to me.

"You never told me." I dropped my arm, wondering where the hell we went wrong. "You never said a thing about any of this until now."

Had I missed more dates than I should've these past few years? Yes. Did Jennie and I talk as much as we used to? No. But that was the nature of building an empire, and I thought we understood each other. We'd been together for so long; we didn't need to constantly reassure each other of our relationship.

"I should've." Jennie looked away. "That was my fault. I kept it all to myself when I should've told you how I was feeling. It's not just about one trip or dinner. It's not even about a dozen trips and dinners. It's about what missing them represents." Her eyes met mine again, and my heart twisted at the hurt I saw in them. Had I really been so blind I'd missed how unhappy she'd been all this time? "You've made it clear, time and again, that I'm not a priority."

"That's not true."

"Isn't it?" She gave me a sad smile. "Do you know what I asked myself every night when you were staying late at the office again? I wondered, if there was an emergency at work and at home at the same time, who would you choose. Me or your investors?"

The buzzing intensified. "You know I would choose you."

"That's the thing, Lisa. I don't." A tear slipped down her cheek. "Because you haven't chosen me. Not in a very, very long time."

Silence fell between us, punctuated by my rapid breaths and the deafening ticks of the clock in the corner. Any response I might've had was crushed beneath the weight of her tears.

Poverty. Failure. Sabotage. I'd endured plenty over the years and survived, but seeing Jennie cry was the one thing that could bring me to my knees. Every damn time.

"I've made so many excuses for you, both to my friends and to myself, but I can't do it anymore." Her voice dropped to a whisper. "We've been holding on to something that doesn't exist anymore, and we need to let it go. We'll both be happier."

Every syllable chipped away at the composure I'd spent a decade constructing. An army of emotions stormed through me—anger, shame, and a fierce desperation that I hadn't felt since I was a teenager fighting to get out of my godforsaken hometown.

I wasn't supposed to feel any of those things anymore, dammit.

I was a goddamn CEO, not a helpless girl with no family and no money to her name. But when faced with the prospect of losing Jennie...

Panic seized my chest. "You honestly think we'll be happier if we divorce? That I'll be happy without you? This is us." The word ripped from my throat, raw and loaded with emotion. "You and me, forever."

Jennie's quiet son ripped at my heart. I reached for her, and when she shrank back, the rip turned into a full-blown chasm.

"Don't make this any harder than it has to be." The words were barely audible. "Please."

My hand dropped to my side as the fist squeezed tighter around my lungs. I didn't know how we got here, but I damn well wasn't walking away without a fight.

"I fucked up yesterday," I said. "And I've fucked up many more times before that. But you're still the love of my life."

She closed her eyes, her tears now a quiet, steady stream running down her face. "Lisa.."

"We'll work this out." The thought of living without her was incomprehensible, like asking a heart to stop beating or the stars to give up the night. "I promise."

We had to.

Maybe I haven't expressed it as much as I should have, but Jennie was an indelible part of me. She had been since the moment I laid eyes on her eleven years ago, though I hadn't known it at the time.

Without her, there was no me.

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