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Chapter 8 - Proof

I don't like the way he said it.

He pushed you.

The words haven't stopped echoing in my head.

Marcus pushed me?

No.

Marcus was safe.

Marcus was steady.

Marcus was the man I was supposed to marry.

I look at Adrian.

He's watching me unravel.

Not with satisfaction.

Not with victory.

But with something far more dangerous.

Patience.

"Show me," I say.

His expression doesn't change.

"Show you what?"

"Proof."

Silence stretches.

"You said he betrayed me."

"Yes."

"Then prove it."

He studies me carefully.

Measuring whether I'm strong enough for whatever comes next.

"You won't like it."

"That's not your decision."

A pause.

Then—

"Come with me."

---

He leads me back into the study.

The room feels different now.

Not just a place of contracts and strategy.

But a vault.

Of secrets.

He walks to the desk.

Opens the bottom drawer.

The same one I found the divorce papers in.

But this time—

He removes a thin black folder.

No hesitation.

No dramatics.

Just precision.

He places it on the desk between us.

"This is the last thing you asked me to investigate," he says calmly.

My stomach tightens.

"Investigate?"

"Yes."

"I hired you?"

"You begged me not to."

The words hit strangely.

"What do you mean?"

"You didn't want to believe it."

Believe what?

My pulse starts racing.

"Open it," he says.

My hands feel colder than they should as I flip the folder open.

The first page is printed email correspondence.

Marcus's name at the top.

My breath falters.

"What is this?"

"Keep reading."

I scan the page.

At first, it doesn't register.

Corporate language.

Investment terms.

Partnership discussions.

Then I see it.

My name.

Alessandra Valez-Reyes.

My firm.

My architectural contracts.

A project I vaguely recognize from memory.

A waterfront redevelopment.

My stomach drops.

"What am I looking at?"

"Marcus pitched your design to a competitor."

The room goes silent.

"No."

"Yes."

"That doesn't mean anything."

"He forwarded your proposal before it was public."

"That's impossible."

"It's timestamped."

I flip to the next page.

Attachments.

Confidential drafts.

Internal budget outlines.

My hands start trembling.

"He wouldn't do that."

"You confronted him."

The words land like a stone.

"I did?"

"Yes."

"What did he say?"

Adrian's jaw tightens slightly.

"He said it wasn't personal."

The room tilts.

"No."

"Yes."

"He said you were overreacting."

My breath becomes uneven.

"That doesn't sound like him."

"It is."

"He wouldn't sabotage my work."

"He didn't think of it as sabotage."

"Then what?"

"Opportunity."

The word hits like a slap.

My chest tightens painfully.

"I don't remember this."

"You collapsed the same night."

The air feels thin.

"He admitted it?"

"Yes."

"And I stayed with you?"

"No."

The word freezes me.

"What?"

"You left."

"Left where?"

"To here."

My mind struggles to process.

"You came home shaking," Adrian continues quietly.

"You were holding your phone like it was burning you."

My pulse pounds.

"You told me you were stupid for ever trusting him."

A flash.

Brief.

Blurry.

Me pacing.

Crying.

Angry.

"I don't see it clearly," I whisper.

"You will."

"Why didn't I go back to Marcus after that?"

"You tried."

That shocks me.

"I did?"

"Yes."

"Why?"

"Because betrayal feels safer than grief."

The words don't make sense at first.

Then they do.

"You're saying I stayed with him because losing him was easier than losing the baby."

"Yes."

My knees feel weak.

I grip the desk.

"That's not logical."

"Neither is trauma."

The word trauma lands heavily.

"I loved him," I whisper.

"You loved who you thought he was."

I shake my head.

"No."

"You wanted him to be innocent."

"And you?"

He holds my gaze steadily.

"You wanted me to be wrong."

Silence crashes between us.

Raw.

Ugly.

"You think I chose you because he betrayed me?"

"No."

"Then why?"

His voice lowers slightly.

"You chose me long before that."

The memory of the rooftop flashes again.

The rain.

The kiss.

"I need more than emails," I whisper.

Adrian nods once.

Reaches into the folder.

Pulls out his phone.

He taps the screen.

Then sets it on the desk.

A voice recording begins to play.

Marcus's voice.

Clear.

Unmistakable.

"I didn't think it would matter, Alessa. It's just business."

My breath catches violently.

"I trusted you," my own voice says faintly in the recording.

I sound broken.

Small.

"You're being dramatic," Marcus replies casually. "They would've found the design eventually."

"You used my name," I whisper in the recording.

Silence.

Then Marcus says something that makes my chest cave in.

"You're my fiancée. What's yours is mine."

The room spins.

My hands start shaking uncontrollably.

He said that.

Not Adrian.

Marcus.

What's yours is mine.

The possessiveness sounds different now.

Colder.

Self-serving.

"You ended the call after that," Adrian says quietly as the recording stops.

I can't breathe properly.

"He… he thought my work belonged to him."

"Yes."

My throat feels tight.

"And you?"

His voice stays steady.

"I told you what's yours is yours."

The contrast hits painfully.

"I don't remember this," I whisper again.

"But your body does."

The words send a chill through me.

I look down at my trembling hands.

At the tightness in my chest.

At the nausea rising in my stomach.

This isn't confusion.

This is recognition.

"You asked me to destroy him," Adrian says quietly.

My head snaps up.

"I what?"

"You wanted me to sue."

My breath catches.

"Did you?"

"No."

"Why not?"

"Because you were angry."

"And?"

"And I don't make permanent decisions based on temporary rage."

The irony almost makes me laugh.

"You refused me?"

"Yes."

"And then I asked for a divorce."

"Yes."

The timeline clicks painfully into place.

"You wouldn't ruin him for me."

"No."

"So I punished you."

A muscle in his jaw flexes.

"You were drowning."

"That's not an answer."

"It's the only one that matters."

The room feels suffocating.

"He betrayed me," I whisper.

"Yes."

"And I stayed with him?"

"For a while."

"Why?"

His voice softens slightly.

"Because admitting he wasn't safe meant admitting you chose wrong."

The words slice deeper than anything else tonight.

"And I don't like choosing wrong," I whisper.

"No."

Silence.

Long.

Heavy.

"Why didn't you show me this before?" I ask.

"Because I didn't want you to remember him like this."

"Why?"

"Because I didn't want your love story with him to rot in your mind."

The restraint in that answer shocks me.

"You're not using this to win."

"No."

"You could have."

"Yes."

"But you didn't."

"No."

I stare at him.

Really stare at him.

"You're not the only one who can be patient," I whisper.

A faint flicker passes through his eyes.

"I know."

My chest feels tight.

Everything feels different now.

Marcus isn't purely safe anymore.

He's complicated.

Flawed.

Selfish.

And Adrian—

Adrian isn't just possessive.

He's restrained.

Deliberate.

Protective in ways that don't always look gentle.

"You still didn't sign the divorce papers," I say quietly.

"No."

"Even after I pushed you away?"

"Yes."

"Why?"

His eyes lock onto mine.

Because he knows I need the truth now.

"Because I knew you weren't leaving me for him."

My breath stutters.

"Then why was I leaving?"

His gaze darkens slightly.

"Because you were trying to punish yourself."

The words hit deeper than betrayal.

"Punish myself for what?"

He doesn't answer immediately

And that—

That's when I know.

There's something worse coming.

Because as I stare at the open folder—

Another memory breaks through.

Not Marcus.

Not Adrian.

But me.

Standing in the nursery.

Saying something unforgivable.

And suddenly—

I understand why I asked for the divorce.

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