
On the first day we started dating, I confessed to my boyfriend that I had an ex-husband. He breathed a sigh of relief, looking like he wanted to say something but held back. It wasn't until we signed our marriage license that he confessed he had been hiding two things from me. First, he had secretly investigated my past and knew all about my marriage history long before I told him. Second, he didn't graduate from an average state college. Just like my ex-husband, he was a Harvard alum. He lied because he was terrified I would reject him if I knew the truth. I was so furious I kicked him out of the apartment that very day. But at midnight, a frantic call from his best friend jolted me awake: "Sister-in-law! Nathan is completely wasted! Hurry up and come to VIP Room 3201 to drag him home!" Swallowing my grogginess and irritation, I pushed open the gold-rimmed doors of the private lounge and pasted on my best professional, fake smile. "Sorry for the interruption. I'm just here to pick up my husband." The next second, the chaotic noise in the room screeched to a dead halt. Dozens of the city's brightest elites turned to look at me. Their eyes nailed me to the spot. Sitting dead center was a man in an immaculate suit, his features sharp and freezing cold. He was slowly running his thumb along the rim of his whiskey glass. "...Chloe Thorne?" Someone finally broke the suffocating silence. "This is a Harvard alumni mixer, not a community college shelter." "Wait, is this the legendary 'Chloe-ism' girl? She doesn't even look like much. Ezra actually tanked a Philosophy final for her, writing 'Chloe-ism' instead of 'Objectivism' for the entire exam. Almost gave the professor a heart attack." A roar of mocking laughter erupted in the room. "She schemed her way into her stepbrother's bed to force a marriage, and now Ezra's new fiancée is a Yale PhD. How do you even have the nerve to show your face here?" They didn’t know. My ex-husband, Ezra Vance, used to be dead last in our high school class. He grinded his way to the top of the academic ladder, and he did it all for me. But none of that mattered anymore. The past was dead and buried. Facing the searing judgment of the room, I didn't crumble like they expected. I just calmly said: "I'm not here to celebrate with you elites. I'm here to take my husband home." Ezra finally lifted his eyes. They were dark and heavy. "Chloe, we divorced three years ago." I let a genuine, soft smile touch my lips. "I know." "That's exactly why I didn't say I was here to pick you up, Mr. Vance." "So shameless. Still trying to ride Ezra's coattails even after the divorce." A few stifled giggles echoed through the lounge. Carter Hayes lit a cigarette and looked at me lazily. "Never seen someone try so hard to play the other woman." Carter used to be Ezra's and my best friend in high school. He used to be the person who treated me second-best in the whole world. But when my marriage with Ezra was falling apart, Carter didn't hesitate to take Ezra's side. Because the girl Carter was secretly in love with happened to be the third person in my marriage. And Carter had been helping Ezra hide their affair the entire time. I was the only one kept in the dark, playing the absolute fool from start to finish. "Carter, knock it off," Ezra snapped coldly, his lips pressed into a tight line. Carter refused to back down, crushing his cigarette in the ashtray with an impatient scowl. "What's wrong with saying it? An idiot like Chloe Thorne can't even hold a candle to a brilliant scholar like Valerie." "Only you would settle for a dummy like her. She dragged you down for years." Ezra locked eyes with me, his voice dangerously low. "Chloe isn't stupid." Chloe isn't stupid. Hearing that come out of the mouth of a certified genius like Ezra was actually quite comical. But sixteen-year-old Chloe used to believe it. The summer before high school, my mom married Ezra's dad, blending our broken families. Ezra and I were the same age and ended up at the same public high school. We were even in the same homeroom. He was the worst student in the grade; I was somewhere in the middle. Ezra hated me, so he never spoke a word to me. I'd constantly see him getting into fistfights and ending up in the principal's office. Then, my mom would have to come to school, bowing her head and absorbing the insults from the administration. One night, I went to the kitchen for water and saw my mom sitting on the couch in the dark, crying. "Clo, what do I have to do to make Ezra accept me?" I didn't have an answer. I only knew that after that night, my quiet coexistence with Ezra turned into a full-blown war. I put hot sauce in his sodas, poured dirty mop water into his backpack, and spiked his lunches with laxatives. Ezra cornered me and laid down the law: "Got any more tricks? Let me tell you right now, Chloe—if you don't kill me, I'm going to ruin your mother." We stayed at each other's throats for over half a year. I thought I would hate Ezra Vance for the rest of my life. But in the end, he became the only person in the world who truly loved me. Our war ended the night the domestic violence started. Ezra's dad beat my mom so badly she had to be hospitalized. As the paramedics loaded her into the ambulance, his dad was still screaming abuse at her. "I chased you for two years! You're nothing but a pretty face! Completely useless!" My mom was nearly forty. She had been spoiled rotten by my biological father for the first half of her life, so she naturally didn't have any real-world survival skills. When Ezra heard his dad shouting that, his cold, rebellious facade shattered. He stared at me in shock and muttered: "It wasn't your mom who seduced my dad..." Ezra had hated my mom because he genuinely believed she was the homewrecker who drove his own mother away. It didn't matter anymore, because after that day, I didn't have a mother either. When I brought my mom's favorite white freesias to the hospital, I found out she had run away. She took nothing with her. She didn't take me, either. Chloe Thorne was homeless. I had nowhere to go. I was wandering the streets in the dead of night when Ezra found me. His eyes were bloodshot. He looked so furious I thought he was going to hit me, so I curled into a tight ball on the sidewalk. Trembling in fear, I suddenly felt his warm arms wrap tightly around me. It was the first time I ever heard him speak so gently. "Chloe, come home with me." "From now on, I'll be your whole world." I took his outstretched hand and held on for dear life. And from that moment on, at sixteen years old, my entire universe consisted of Ezra Vance. After my mom vanished, Ezra's dad grew even more violent. Afraid I'd get caught in the crossfire, Ezra moved us both out into a tiny, rundown apartment. Life went on, but everything had changed. I stopped causing trouble, and the sharp, angry edges of Ezra's personality softened into something gentle. He started spending more and more time studying. I couldn't help but ask him about it. "You used to hate reading. You skipped class all the time." He looked at me with total seriousness, then helplessly pinched my cheek. "Chloe, I want to give you a better life." I looked at the tips of his ears, which were blushing red, and nodded hard. I promised myself I would never drag Ezra down. I studied like my life depended on it, but while Ezra miraculously skyrocketed from the bottom of the class to Valedictorian, I was still stuck in the middle of the pack. Ezra would stay up until midnight tutoring me. I stared at the calculus problems and shook my head in despair. He sighed. "Chloe, you really are a dummy." "But I love how clumsy you are. It's too cute." As sleep finally overtook me, my pen slipped from my hand. I mumbled into the desk, "Ezra... can you walk a little slower? I'm never going to catch up to you." Ezra told me I would never have to chase him. He promised he would wait for me forever. He didn't keep that promise. Later on, my clumsiness and average mind became the things he despised the most about me. I became a nuisance. "Still not stupid?" Carter toyed with his silver lighter, picking up the conversation in the VIP room. "You worked yourself to the bone tutoring her, and she still only managed to get into some safety-school state college." I glanced around the room, still not seeing my husband, Nathan. Nathan actually did go to Harvard with Ezra, just in a different college program. They probably wouldn't hang in the same circles anyway. I figured Nathan must have texted me the wrong room number. I had zero energy to rehash old drama. "Sorry to bother you all," I said, turning on my heel to leave. I had texted Nathan, but he hadn't replied, and his phone was going straight to voicemail. I decided to just head home first. Before I could reach the door handle, a hand clamped down on my wrist. "Little sister, forgive me, okay?" Ezra kept his eyes lowered, hiding an emotion I couldn't read. Little sister. That nickname used to make my face burn. It used to be our favorite forbidden, flirtatious joke, especially since Ezra was usually so rigid and proper. But eventually, that exact "stepbrother/stepsister" dynamic was the weapon used to destroy me. "Ezra, are you addicted to playing the victim?" I shook his hand off, my face blank. "I don't have a brother." As the tension in the room thickened, a light scoff shattered the awkwardness. "Chloe, I never expected to see you here." Valerie clicked over in her designer heels, as haughty and arrogant as ever. In the past, her mere presence would have intimidated me. I used to envy her, look up to her, and feel an uncontrollable wave of inferiority around her. But now, after that wretched history had burned me out entirely, all that was left was total indifference. "Chloe, why don't you come home with Ezra and me? Your mother misses you so much," Valerie said sweetly. Even I was surprised by how calmly I replied after three years. "I don't have a mother." My stepbrother. My mother. They both chose Valerie. And I threw them away a long time ago, too. Valerie grabbed my wrist, "accidentally" letting her sleeve slip to reveal a vintage emerald bracelet. It was the heirloom Ezra's mother had left him. I wore that bracelet for ten years. My entire relationship with Ezra only lasted ten years. Carter was right. I really was an idiot. Even with Ezra tutoring me with everything he had, I only barely made it into a state school. Meanwhile, Ezra aced his SATs, became the top scorer in the state, and went to Harvard. We were both in Massachusetts, not too far apart. Even though we couldn't be together every single day, our lives were tightly woven together. It was the simplest kind of happiness, and a memory I will never be able to fully erase. Ezra was handsome and brilliant. Everyone wanted him. But he gave me absolute security. During college, I visited him on campus all the time. He was so famous that anything he did caused a stir. Eventually, the online campus forums started gossiping that I wasn't good enough for him. They said I was nothing but a pretty face—no talent, no background, just a beautiful idiot trying to cling to a god. Ezra had already made our relationship public. When he saw those threads, he was furious. He said no one understood how wonderful I was. So, during a massive Philosophy final, he replaced every mention of "Objectivism" with "Chloe-ism." He nearly failed the class and was publicly reprimanded by the dean for being lovesick. The incident made waves across the entire university. Back then, Ezra wanted the whole world to know I was his girlfriend. But when it came time to actually get married, he said: "Chloe, let's keep the marriage a secret for now." "Give me a few years. When I make a real name for myself, I'll give you the wedding of the century." I agreed. By our fourth anniversary, Ezra was wildly successful. I never got the dream wedding I was waiting for. Instead, I got his infidelity. On the day of our fourth anniversary, Ezra exploded in a terrifying rage. Because I had "lost" the emerald bracelet he gave me. He stormed out of the apartment, slamming the door. It was the first time in his life he had ever spoken to me with such venom. It was pouring rain outside. I searched every single place I had been to. I eventually remembered the tiny, rundown apartment we lived in during high school. Ezra had actually bought that apartment years later, because the walls were covered with thousands of polaroids from our three years there. The moment I pushed the door open. I saw Ezra pinning another woman to the bed. My scalp went numb. I lost my voice instantly. I knew who she was. Valerie. Ezra had mentioned her before, but barely. At first, he told me her dad essentially forced her into his tech startup, and he thought she was going to be a spoiled nuisance. But later, he started mentioning how capable she was. How brilliant she was. And it was right around that time that Ezra started calling me stupid. Our shared topics dried up. Ezra would always sigh and say: "Can you stop asking? Even if I explained it, you wouldn't understand." "Chloe, you're so dense." I had genuinely been happy that he found a business partner who clicked with him. But in that apartment, Valerie was wearing my emerald bracelet, staring at me with a triumphant smirk. I had been tortured by guilt, crawling on my hands and knees like a dog looking for that bracelet. I didn't lose it. Ezra had taken it and handed it to someone else. My ears were ringing. My body lost all its strength. Operating purely on instinct, I grabbed a heavy picture frame off the nightstand and hurled it at them. Ezra shielded Valerie in his arms, his eyes blazing red. "Chloe, you're out of your mind!" The man who once promised to be my whole world. He shoved me violently to the floor. My hands were covered in bloody glass shards. The photo inside the shattered frame was the first picture Ezra and I ever took together. He had his arms wrapped around me, looking so proud, like he was showing off a prize. But now, the frame was broken, and the eyes of the man standing in front of me were filled with nothing but disgust. Before I could even process the heartbreak, another bomb dropped. "Chloe, can you stop throwing a tantrum? You are suffocating. It's no wonder your own mother didn't want you!" It turned out my mother had remarried. She married Valerie's father. She had spent the last ten years doting on Valerie like her own flesh and blood. My ten years of holding out hope for a family had officially morphed into a nightmare. Later, Ezra demanded a divorce. I refused to give them what they wanted, but I couldn't fight them. Everyone I loved had turned their weapons on me. My husband. My best friend. And my mother. Ezra locked me inside our Boston house. For nearly a week, he unleashed all his pent-up frustration on me. "I'm not signing. You want to marry her? Keep dreaming," I spat. At that point, the marriage certificate felt like the only card I had left to play. I was as stubborn as a lunatic. A week later, a blurred, pixelated video leaked online. The audio was crystal clear. "Big brother, I love you the most. Love your Clo a little more, okay?" It was an intimate video from years ago, back when he traveled for work constantly. He had begged me for it, saying he needed something to comfort him when I wasn't there. Ezra was usually so terrifyingly straight-laced, so when he asked for a dirty video, I was both embarrassed and shocked. I only did it for him. But Ezra and Valerie were master manipulators of PR. That single leaked audio clip pushed me into the crosshairs of public outrage, framing me as a psychotic, obsessed step-sister who seduced him. And the final blow was dealt by Ezra himself, who let the narrative run wild. As I lay numbly in bed, watching the entire world—including my family and friends—condemn me, Valerie came to visit. She told me she had confessed her feelings to Ezra back in college. He had rejected her then. His reason? He said he wasn't good enough for her yet. He asked if she would be willing to wait a few years for him. Wait until he was powerful enough to stand beside her in the light. That very night, I gave up. I agreed to the divorce. As I signed the papers, I thought about the past. Sixteen-year-old Ezra, full of fire, promising to give me a better life. But twenty-six-year-old Ezra's future never had Chloe Thorne in it to begin with. I wiped my tears and forced myself to ask him one last question. "What was I, then? Just someone to settle for?" "Or was I just a placeholder to keep you warm until you were ready for the woman you actually loved?"
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