He walked in, picked up each item like it meant something, then looked straight at me.
“You should pack this stuff up. I’m marrying Elyna. Time to let go of your little fantasy. We’re not blood, sure—but I’m never gonna love you.
“And now that Elyna’s pregnant? She doesn’t need to see any of this. I’m not risking anything happening to my wife or our baby.”
I let out a quiet “mm” and swept everything off the desk into a storage box.
I was gonna toss it all before leaving anyway. Might as well start now.
Cedric’s frown deepened. He reached out, stopping me.
“Can’t you be more careful? Look—you broke the little bunny on this hairpin.”
I glanced at the pin in his hand. His first gift to me. He’d given it right after adopting me, back when my parents died and he stepped in as their closest friend.
I’d guarded it for years. Never even let anyone else touch it.
I’d just dumped it all into a junk box like it meant nothing—and he was the one who couldn’t handle it.
“You’re such a performer,” he snapped. “Always acting for someone. You’re still in love with me, and now you can’t deal with me marrying someone else. Who are you trying to fool?
“You’re clearly so torn up over my engagement you’re fleeing Lurevia, and now you wanna pretend you’re over it? Please. If you’ve really moved on, I’ll write my last name backward.”
He huffed. “Maybe it’s for the best you’re leaving. Elyna’s pregnancy is still shaky. Better if you’re not around stressing her out.”
Then he pulled out his phone and transferred ten grand. “Use this to travel around. Take a month. By then, things’ll be more stable.”
He looked at me, all serious. “Have a good trip. Don’t miss me too much. I’ll be a married man soon—you’ll have to get used to that. We still live under the same roof. It’ll be awkward if you don’t.”
He even started giving me travel tips.
What he didn’t know? I’d already been through all of this once.
And this time, I was really gone.
On Cedric’s wedding day, the Gramont mansion was a full-on frenzy from sunrise.
While they were all running around, I slipped out the back with my suitcase and caught a cab to the airport—quiet, clean, gone.