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Chapter 10 - After The Run

The uneven and breathes sound of our footsteps echoed down the marble steps. My veil was tore away somewhere between the doors and the parking lot, catching on the wind before vanishing like it couldn't bear to follow me anymore. The heels on my shoes slipped against the pavement, but Eli's hand never faltered. He pulled me closer with steady grip. His breathing was as ragged as mine.

"Lia!" The voices who chased after us scattered and panicked. "Stop her!"

But I didn't. I couldn't.

The world behind me collapsed into noise. My heart pounded so violently that I thought it would shatter through my ribs. The white silk of my dress was dragged against the ground, catching dust and petals but I didn't care how I looked. I just needed to get away.

When we reached his car, Eli fumbled for the keys with his trembling fngers. He urgently opened the door for me like he always had. It made me feel both safe and terrified.

"Get in," he said. His breath was uneven.

I did.

The door shut with a heavy click. The sounds from the hotel and inside the car felt still. My chest rose and fell in quick and shallow bursts. The scent of roses and smoke clung to my skin as a reminder of what I just burned down.

Eli sat behind the wheel. He's gripping it hard with his pale knuckles He didn't start the car right away. His jaw worked like he was chewing on words he couldn't yet speak.

When he finally looked at me, his voice was low and shaking. "What did you just do, Lia?"

I turned toward the window. The church doors were a blur in the distance now. They became tiny figures in my sight. "I did what I should've done a long time ago."

He let out a broken laugh. "You really left him."

"I left everything," I whispered. "The version of me that kept trying to fit into something that didn't belong."

Eli leaned back in his seat while exhaling deeply. For a moment, the only sound was our breathing and the faint sound of the engine as he finally started it. The car rolled forward slowly, even we're afraid of what came next.

"You realize," he said softly, "the world will know by now."

"I know."

"They'll call you a coward."

"I've been worse things."

That made him look at me. The silence that followed wasn't awkward.

"Do you regret it?" he asked after a long pause.

I met his eyes. "No. Do you?"

"Not even close."

His answer came too quickly and too sure. It made something deep inside me tremble. I turned away, staring at the blur of trees outside. "I don't know what happens next."

Eli's lips twitched into a faint smile. "We never did."

The city endlessly sretched ahead, mocking our uncertainty. I pressed my palms to my lap, feeling the weight of the ring that was no longer there. "He deserve this," I said quietly.

I closed my eyes while leaning my head back against the seat. The adrenaline was fading now and was replaced by exhaustion that felt like it was sinking into my bones.

"When you left before," he said after a while, "I told myself I'd let you go. That if you were happier without me, then maybe that was love."

"And now?"

"Now I think love's never been about letting go." His voice softened. "It's about finally holding on when it matters."

I turned to him then. He looked different but still him. He still has the same eyes that saw me before I even knew who I was and the same voice that could make me steady even when the world tilted.

"You shouldn't have followed me," I said, though my voice lacked conviction.

"Lia," he said gently, "I never stopped."

Without warning, simething inside me broke quietly again this time. I blinked away the tears that threatened to fall, but one escaped anyway, tracing a slow line down my cheek.

Eli reached out. He's hesitating for a second before his thumb brushed it away. "You don't have to be brave right now."

I let out a shaky laugh. "Too late for that."

He smiled faintly. "You're shaking."

"I just ruined my own wedding. I think I'm allowed to."

He chuckled softly. "You didn't ruin it. You saved yourself."

The car stopped at an intersection. The light turned red. For a moment, time stilled again. The world outside moved in slow motion. The cars are passing. The strangers walk life indifferently. I watched the people crossing the street and how ordinary they looked. I wondered if they knew how lucky they were not to be me right now.

Eli's voice pulled me back. "So… what now?"

I looked at him, then out the window again. "Now, I figure out who I am when I'm not someone's fiancée or someone's mistake."

"You were never a mistake."

I laughed under my breath. "Then what was I?"

He hesitated, then said quietly, "The one thing I never got over."

The light turned green. He didn't move. He just stared at me, like he was waiting for permission to speak, to breathe, and to hope.

I broke the silence first. "Drive, Eli."

He did.

The road stretched out before un. My heartbeat finally began to slow and sync with the rhythm of the engine. For the first time that day, I felt air fill my lungs without it hurting.

"Do you think they'll find us?" I asked.

He smiled without looking at me. "Do you want them to?"

I thought about the chaos we left behind, the questions, the whispers that would never stop. Then I shook my head. "No. I just want a few hours where I don't have to explain myself."

"Then that's what we'll take," he said softly.

And for the first time, we did.

We drove in silence, the city was replaced by open skies and fields washed in sunlight. I leaned my head against the glass as I watch the clouds drift by. Everything I thought and lost was all somewhere out there, waiting to be found again.

Maybe this wasn't the ending everyone expected. Maybe it wasn't even an ending at all. Maybe it was just the first breath of a life I should've chosen years ago.

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