What Bloomed After Goodbye Chapter 03
Caleb grabbed her wrist. “Holly, we’ve known each other for over twenty years. How are we supposed to just cut ties?”
She spun back, pointing at me, voice sharp with resentment. “Then what do you want me to do? Your bride treats me like I’m trying to steal her place. If I don’t leave, what am I supposed to do? This way, she can finally get married in peace, right?”
Every word hit like an accusation.
Like I was the problem. The one making a scene. The one pushing her out.
I didn’t have it in me to argue. Didn’t want to watch their act anymore.
I walked out without looking back.
Caleb came after me.
Outside the hotel, he caught up, already impatient.
“If you’re still upset, fine. We’ll postpone the wedding. When you calm down, we’ll do it again.”
I let out a sharp laugh. “Do it again? Next time is she putting your bed pics on the big screen?”
“Mira!” His face went red. “Take one more step, and you deal with the consequences.”
I stopped, looked at him, confused.
He caught that—and leaned in.
“Your dad just asked me for money. I already lined up a job for your brother. You walk away now? No money. Job’s gone.”
I froze.
I had no idea when my family went to him—or that he’d been doing all this behind my back.
“What did you just say?”
He thought I was playing dumb.
“Stop acting.” He stepped closer. “Come back with me, and we forget this ever happened. Walk away, and think about what happens to your family.”
I stared at him. Familiar—yet not at all.
After a long beat, I laughed, eyes stinging.
“You disgust me.”
I didn’t look at him again. I got in the car and drove off, no hesitation, leaving that humiliation behind.
At a red light, my phone buzzed twice.
One message—from Caleb.
[Mira, all these years, the only person I’ve loved is you. The only woman who’ll ever be my wife is you.]
A dull ache hit my chest, knocking the air out of me.
Caleb loved me.
And he also thought he was the best I’d ever get.
That’s why he was so sure I wouldn’t leave.
Why he stayed too close to Holly—no boundaries.
Why he brushed off every complaint.
Why I was the “immature” one every time I got hurt.
Why, even today, he let her humiliate me in public.
He thought as long as he had money and power, as long as he could help my family, I should be grateful—just accept everything.
If this marriage went through, I could already see the ending.
Endless compromise.
Endless resentment.
Endless favoritism.
And in the end—ruin.
The other notification was an email from my mentor, Pierre Creighton.
He was inviting me—again—to study abroad. Said with my eye for fashion, I shouldn’t throw away my shot to grow.
The email sat there in my inbox, like the one bright spot in all this mess.
***
I drove back to my small rented apartment.
Not big, but clean, quiet—mine.
I turned off my phone, peeled off the heavy wedding dress, and washed the makeup off my face.

