I had dimmed my own light for years to make him feel like a man, and now his insecure wife wanted to extinguish my future completely. Did they really think I was just a helpless, struggling designer they could easily crush?
It was time to stop hiding. I gathered my timestamped source files, logged into my official accounts, and prepared to show them exactly who they were messing with.
Chapter 1
Chloe POV
The night before my wedding, Danial Gross, my fiancé of six months and partner for four years, stood across from me in our perfect Chicago apartment. He confessed he loved his coworker, Kiana Roth. My world fractured. I packed a small bag, leaving everything behind-the dress, the rings, the life we planned. I booked a one-way ticket to Austin, Texas, seeking peace. My anonymous digital artist identity, "Aura," a secret I kept to protect Danial's ego, remained hidden. He'd never asked about my finances, content to believe my "freelance side projects" barely covered my half of the rent. It was easier that way. For him. I chose a low-level graphic design job, hoping to heal in the quiet.
I stared at the pristine white lace gown hanging on the back of the bedroom door. Its delicate fabric shimmered under the soft lamplight. My hands, still bearing faint marks from the last-minute alterations, felt strangely numb. Just hours before, I had fantasized about walking down the aisle in it, towards a future I meticulously built. Now, the dress hung there, a silent, mocking testament to a shattered dream. The air in the room, usually filled with a comfortable silence, was thick with unspoken words.
Danial stood awkwardly by the bedroom door. He avoided my gaze. His hands fidgeted, a tell-tale sign of his discomfort. He seemed to shrink under the weight of his own confession.
"Who is she?" I asked, my voice flat, almost a whisper. I focused on a loose thread on the gown, trying to anchor myself in something tangible. My heart pounded against my ribs, but my face remained an impassive mask. I refused to give him the satisfaction of seeing me break.
He cleared his throat. "Kiana Roth. She's from the marketing department."
I nodded slowly. The name registered, but it meant nothing to me. Another cog in the corporate machine, now a wrecking ball. I walked to the dresser, picking up a framed photograph of us. Danial and I, smiling, oblivious. I placed it face down on the polished wood. It was a simple act, a small rebellion against the chaos inside me.
"How long?" I asked, my voice still steady. I needed to know the full extent of the damage.
Danial shifted his weight. "About six months."
My breath hitched. Six months. That meant it started right around the time he proposed. The diamond on my finger suddenly felt heavy, suffocating. The grand gestures, the whispered promises, the excitement of wedding planning-all tainted. He bought me that ring while he was already buying another woman a life.
"I need to cancel the wedding," I stated, my voice devoid of emotion. I pulled out my phone, fingers moving mechanically across the screen. I saw Danial's shoulders slump slightly, but he did not speak. He had probably expected tears, shouting, a dramatic collapse. He got none of it.
"I'll handle the vendors," I said, my thumb hovering over the wedding planner's contact. "You can tell your family yourself."
He nodded, still silent, still avoiding my eyes. It was a pathetic display of his guilt, or maybe his relief.
I walked into the guest room, the small bag I had packed for our honeymoon now serving a different purpose. I tossed in a few clothes, a sketchbook, and my laptop. The engagement ring slid off my finger and landed with a soft clink on the bedside table. It belonged to a life that no longer existed.
The next morning, I sent a terse email to my boss, resigning with immediate effect. No two weeks' notice. No explanation. Just a clean break. Then, I bought a one-way ticket to Austin. The city was a blank canvas, a distant dot on the map, far from the wreckage of Chicago.
Four years. Four years of my life, discarded like yesterday's news. I remembered the day we met, the gradual build-up of trust, the dreams we shared. It all felt like a movie I had watched, a story that belonged to someone else.
As I was leaving the apartment, suitcase in hand, Danial suddenly appeared. He blocked the doorway. His face was pale, his eyes wide.
"Chloe, wait," he pleaded, his voice cracking. "Let's talk. Please."
I looked at him, truly looked at him, for the first time since his confession. He was a stranger, a ghost from a past I was rapidly shedding.
"There's nothing to discuss," I said, my voice cold and firm. I did not raise it. I did not make a scene. "You are no longer my concern."
His mouth opened and closed. He seemed completely taken aback by my composure, by my complete lack of emotion. He probably wanted me to fight, to rage, to give him a reason to justify his actions. I gave him nothing.
I pushed past him, my suitcase wheels rattling softly on the hardwood floor. I didn't look back. The taxi waited outside. I got in, watching Chicago disappear in the rearview mirror. As the skyline shrank to nothing, I allowed myself one single, shaky exhale. Then I straightened my spine. Whatever came next, I would face it alone. I always had.
Austin was a blur of sunshine and unfamiliar streets. I found a small, sparsely furnished apartment on the outskirts of the city. It was nothing like my old place in Chicago, but it was mine. I closed the door, the silence of the empty rooms a balm to my raw nerves.
"A new start," I whispered to myself, the words feeling foreign yet empowering.
I spent the next few weeks cloistered in my apartment. The blinds were drawn, the world outside a distant hum. My laptop became my sanctuary. I poured all my energy into "Aura," my anonymous digital art persona. For the past four years, Aura was my secret escape, my true passion. My art, vibrant and emotive, resonated with a global audience. Aura's projects brought in a high six-figure income, more than enough to live comfortably. The money sat in a separate account Danial never knew existed. I'd told him I had a small trust fund from my grandmother to explain the occasional splurge. He never questioned it. He never questioned much.
I was financially independent, a fact Danial never knew. He always assumed I was a struggling graphic designer, barely making ends meet. He often promised to take care of me, to build a future where I didn't have to worry about money.
I remembered him once saying, "Don't worry, Chloe. Once we're married, you won't have to stress about finding clients. I'll make sure you have everything you need." He painted a picture of a comfortable, albeit creatively stifled, life under his patronage.
I had smiled then, a small, private smile. It was amusing to think about his grand pronouncements now. He never imagined that while he was "taking care" of me, I was building my own empire, brick by digital brick. I chose not to correct his assumptions. His ego was fragile, and my success would only have threatened it.
Now, in Austin, I sought structure, a semblance of normalcy. I was not looking for a job to pay the bills. Aura handled that. I needed a routine, a reason to get out of bed beyond my solitude.
I applied for a low-level graphic design position at a small, independent agency downtown. It was a deliberate choice. No pressure, no high stakes. Just a quiet corner where I could blend in.
On my first day, a cheerful woman with bright red hair and an infectious laugh, Kaitlyn Clarke, introduced herself. She was my cubicle neighbor.
"So, what brings you to Austin?" Kaitlyn asked, her eyes sparkling with friendly curiosity. "Big move from Chicago, right?"
I offered a bland smile. "Just needed a change of pace. New scene, you know."
Kaitlyn nodded, accepting my vague answer without pushing. She was a good first impression.
I quickly settled into my new role. The work was simple, almost rote, but it provided the routine I craved. Kaitlyn, with her outspoken and fiercely loyal nature, became my first real friend in Austin.
"Let me guess," Kaitlyn said one day, leaning over our shared desk. "Dumped before the wedding. Fiancé ran off with a coworker. You packed your bags and fled to the safest, weirdest city in Texas."
My jaw almost dropped. I stared at her, utterly stunned.
Kaitlyn chuckled. "Relax, it's a common story. You have that look. The 'I've been through hell but I'm not broken' vibe. Plus, your ring finger has that tell-tale tan line." She pointed to her own finger, "I had one too, once."
A genuine laugh escaped me, the first in weeks. "Is it that obvious?"
"Only to a fellow survivor," she winked. "Come on, lunch is on me. You need a friend who understands that sometimes, a clean break means a whole new postcode."
I agreed, a warmth spreading through me. Kaitlyn was a breath of fresh air. My first friend in Austin.
I kept my work at the agency minimal, doing just enough to be competent but never outstanding. My evenings and weekends were still dedicated to Aura, where I truly thrived. Balancing the two lives was a delicate dance, but I managed.
One afternoon, our boss called an urgent team meeting. "We landed a huge new client," he announced, his voice tinged with both excitement and dread. "It's a lifestyle brand, Odyssey. They want innovative, fresh designs, but they're incredibly demanding."
A collective groan went through the room. Kaitlyn rolled her eyes. "Oh, Odyssey. I heard their last agency quit mid-project. They're notorious for changing their minds every other day."
I listened, absorbing the details. The client's vision, their target audience, their aesthetic preferences. A flicker of recognition sparked within me. This project, with its blend of modern minimalism and evocative storytelling, was exactly the kind of challenge Aura excelled at.
I kept my expression neutral. This was not the place to unveil my true capabilities. I submitted a proposal that was perfectly adequate, technically sound, but utterly devoid of the unique flair I reserved for Aura.
My boss reviewed it. "Chloe, this is solid," he said, tapping a pen against the screen. "Good foundation. But Odyssey expects more... a real wow factor. Can you push it further? Be bolder?"
"I'll try my best," I replied, my voice earnest, but my resolve to stay hidden remained firm.
He narrowed his eyes, a hint of suspicion in his gaze. "Are you holding back? I sense there's more there."
"No, not at all," I lied smoothly. "I'm just working within my current skill set."
He sighed, dropping the subject. He likely believed I was simply a decent, but not exceptional, designer.
The client's feedback came in a few days later. "Acceptable," was the general consensus. They moved forward, but without enthusiasm. I felt a pang of relief. My secret was safe.
"You totally sandbagged them, didn't you?" Kaitlyn whispered, nudging me playfully. "That was good, but I know you could do better. I saw some of your personal sketches. They were incredible. I actually saved one-just as inspiration, but I still have it."
"No idea what you're talking about," I said, a small smile playing on my lips.
"Uh-huh," Kaitlyn said, unconvinced. "Sure."
That night, I was back in my apartment, bathed in the glow of my monitor, completely engrossed in an urgent Aura commission. Hours blended into one another, fueled by coffee and determination. My phone buzzed. A message from an unknown number. I glanced at it, saw Danial's name, and immediately deleted the contact.
A few minutes later, another message from a new number.
"I'm getting married," it read. "To Kiana. Just thought you should know."
I stared at the words, a cold knot forming in my stomach. I typed a single word: "Okay." Then, I blocked that number too. He was a persistent pest, determined to needle me even from afar. But something about the message gnawed at me. Why now? Why reach out to the woman you betrayed just to announce your wedding? Unless... he wasn't as happy as he wanted me to believe.
Kaitlyn noticed my quiet mood the next morning. "Everything okay, Chloe? You look like you've seen a ghost."
I hesitated, then decided to confide in her. "Danial's getting married. To Kiana."
Kaitlyn's eyes widened. "Seriously? That quickly? What a jerk!" Her voice rose in outrage. "He broke your heart, and now he's rubbing it in your face? Unbelievable!"
"Well, it gets better," I said, a bitter laugh escaping me. "He was cheating on me with her the entire time we were engaged."
Kaitlyn gasped. "No way! That's... that's just evil! Oh, Chloe, I'm so sorry. He doesn't deserve you. He never did!" She reached across the desk and squeezed my hand.
"It's fine, Kaitlyn," I said, trying to diffuse her anger. "It's not my problem anymore. I'm here now, and he's a distant memory."
But that night, sleep evaded me. It wasn't love that kept me awake, but a simmering resentment. Four years. Four years where I muted my brilliance, downplayed my success, all to prop up his fragile ego. I often cooked his favorite meals, celebrated his minor work achievements as if they were monumental, and allowed him to believe he was the primary provider, the visionary. All to avoid making him feel inadequate. I had dimmed my own light for him.
Now, he was marrying the woman he cheated with, probably basking in a superficial happiness, while I was starting over in a new city, a stranger in a humble apartment. The irony was not lost on me.
I pushed myself out of bed and returned to my laptop. The resentment, the lingering sting of betrayal, slowly transmuted into a fierce, unwavering focus. I worked through the night on a complex Aura project, the digital canvas a battlefield for my emotions. Each brushstroke, each color choice, was a defiant act, a reassertion of my worth. The stars faded, and dawn broke over Austin, painting the sky with hues of orange and pink. I was still there, creating, unbroken. But as I saved my final layer, a notification pinged on my Aura account. A collaboration request. From Odyssey. The same brand that had dismissed my day-job work as merely "acceptable." My blood went cold.