Isolde smoothed her hands over the white silk of her dress. Her palms were damp. She dragged her fingers over the fabric again and again, trying to flatten wrinkles that didn't exist. It was a nervous tic she had developed over the last seven years-a desperate need to make things perfect when everything inside her was falling apart.
"Miss Gibson?"
The voice cut through the hum of the air conditioner. The clerk behind the glass partition cleared her throat, her eyes darting to the empty space beside Isolde. It was a look of pity mixed with bureaucratic impatience.
"Is Mr. Rhodes coming or not? We have a schedule."
Isolde's breath hitched. Her lungs felt too small for her chest. She reached for her phone on the bench beside her, her fingers trembling so violently she almost dropped it. She unlocked the screen. No messages. No missed calls. Just the background image of a landscape she had restored last month.
She dialed Arland.
One ring. Two rings.
Please, she begged silently. Just answer. Tell me you're stuck in traffic. Tell me you're in the elevator.
The call went straight to voicemail.
Isolde lowered the phone, a cold numbness spreading from her fingertips up to her shoulders. Before the screen went black, a notification from Metropolis Daily popped up. The banner was bright red, urgent.
She tapped it. The image that loaded was high-resolution, sharp enough to see the pores on the subjects' faces. It was taken at JFK Airport, likely an hour ago.
Arland Rhodes was in the center of the frame. He looked devastatingly handsome even in the grainy paparazzi shot, his jaw set tight, his focus entirely on the woman in his arms. He was lifting her into the back of a black limousine as if she were made of glass.
Emilie Blackburn.
Isolde zoomed in. Emilie looked frail, her head resting against Arland's chest, her eyes closed. But there was a ghost of a smile on her lips-a triumphant, possessive curve that Isolde recognized instantly.
The headline screamed in bold, black letters: Rhodes Heir Abandons Business Duties for Returning 'First Love'-Secret Pregnancy Rumored?
The air in the room seemed to vanish. Isolde felt a physical blow to her stomach, a nausea so sudden she had to swallow hard to keep from gagging. He wasn't in traffic. He wasn't in a meeting. He was at the airport, welcoming the woman who had tormented Isolde's relationship for years, on the very morning he was supposed to marry Isolde.
"Miss Gibson?" The clerk's voice was sharper this time. "We can't hold the slot."
Isolde looked up. The pity in the clerk's eyes had turned to annoyance. To the world, Isolde was just another woman left at the altar, a footnote in the grand, dramatic life of Arland Rhodes.
Isolde stood up. Her legs felt like lead, but she forced them to move. She picked up her handbag, her movements slow and deliberate.
"No," Isolde said. Her voice was steady, terrifyingly calm. It didn't sound like her own. "He isn't coming."
She turned and walked toward the exit. She didn't look back at the clerk, or the whispering couples, or the empty chair that should have held her husband.
Outside, the New York sky was a bruised shade of grey. A fine drizzle was falling, slicking the sidewalks with oil and grime. Isolde stepped out, the cold rain hitting her heated skin like tiny needles. She stood there for a moment, letting the water ruin the silk dress she had spent months selecting.
Her phone rang again.
Isolde looked at the caller ID. Mother.
She closed her eyes for a second, bracing herself, then answered.
"Did you see it?" Beatrice Gibson's voice was a shrill shriek that pierced Isolde's ear drum. "It's on every channel, Isolde! Every single channel! The Rhodes boy carrying that... that invalid at the airport!"
Isolde watched a yellow taxi splash through a puddle, the dirty water missing her white shoes by an inch. "I saw it."
"You are a humiliation," Beatrice hissed. "Seven years. You gave him seven years, and he leaves you at City Hall for the Blackburn girl? Do you know what this does to our stock prices? To our reputation?"
Isolde said nothing. There was nothing to say.
"The Stone family deal is still on the table," Beatrice continued, her tone shifting from anger to calculation. "Esequiel Stone is looking for a wife. He doesn't care about scandal; he needs a caretaker and a figurehead. Come back to the Capital."
Isolde stared at the grey skyline. The Rhodes Penthouse was visible in the distance, a glass needle piercing the clouds. It was where she lived. It was where she had built a life on a foundation of sand.
"Okay," Isolde said.
Beatrice paused. The silence on the other end was heavy with shock. Beatrice was used to Isolde fighting, crying, begging for time. "You... agree? To marry the cripple? He's in a wheelchair, Isolde. He's half a man compared to Arland."
"I agree," Isolde repeated, her voice void of emotion. "Prepare the papers."
She hung up before her mother could say another word. She raised her hand and hailed the taxi.
The Rhodes Penthouse was dark when Arland finally came home.
It was 2:00 AM. The city lights outside the floor-to-ceiling windows cast long, skeletal shadows across the living room floor. Isolde was sitting in a wingback chair facing the window, her silhouette rigid.
The digital lock beeped, and the heavy door swung open.
Arland walked in. He looked exhausted. His tie was loosened, hanging crookedly around his neck, and his shirt sleeves were rolled up. He ran a hand through his hair, sighing as he kicked off his shoes.
He flipped on the light switch. The sudden brightness was blinding.
He jumped slightly when he saw her. "Isolde? Why are you sitting in the dark?"
He walked toward her, and the scent hit her before he even reached the chair. It was a mix of hospital antiseptic and heavy, cloying gardenia. Emilie's perfume. It was a scent that had haunted Isolde for years, clinging to his coats, his car, his skin.
Arland stopped a few feet away, frowning. He seemed to be bracing himself for a scream, a plate thrown, tears.
"Emilie had a panic attack at the airport," he said. His voice was rough, defensive. "She couldn't breathe. The paparazzi were swarming her. I had to get her out."
Isolde turned her head slowly to look at him. Her eyes were dry. There was no redness, no puffiness. Just a flat, dead calm.
"I understand," she said softly.
Arland froze. He blinked, confused. He had prepared a dozen excuses, a dozen logical reasons why he had to miss their appointment, why his duty to the Blackburn family came first. He wasn't prepared for acceptance.
"You... you do?" Arland asked, stepping closer. He looked relieved, but also slightly unsettled. "I knew you would. You're always so reasonable, Isolde. That's why I love you. I'll make it up to you. We can reschedule for next week."
He reached out, his hand open as if to rest on her shoulder, but stopped mid-air. He seemed to remember the invisible wall between them, the one he had never dared to cross, and let his hand fall back to his side.
Bzzzt. Bzzzt.
His phone vibrated in his pocket. It wasn't a normal notification sound; it was a specific, urgent pattern.
Arland pulled his hand back instantly. He checked the screen, and his face tightened. The exhaustion vanished, replaced by a sharp, focused alertness.
"I have to go back," he said, already turning away. "She's asking for me. She doesn't know where the medication is."
Isolde looked at his back. He was already moving toward the door, his body language tense, his priority clear.
"Go," Isolde said.
Arland hesitated at the door. He looked back at her, a flicker of guilt crossing his handsome face. "I'll be back by morning. We'll have breakfast. Pancakes. Your favorite."
"Okay," she lied.
He nodded, satisfied, and walked out. The door clicked shut, the sound echoing like a gunshot in the empty apartment.
Isolde remained in the chair. She didn't cry. She simply looked at the space where he had been standing, realizing that the man she loved didn't exist. He was a figment of her imagination, a projection she had kept alive for seven years.
The man who had just left was a stranger. And she owed strangers nothing.