The morning after my fiancé left me, his mother called and told me to come to his office in my slippers.
Not later.
Not after I showered.
Not once I had pulled myself together.
“Brooke,” Valerie said, her voice sharp with urgency, “come to Eric’s office right now. Don’t change. Don’t fix your hair. Don’t even wash your face.”…
Less than twenty-four hours earlier, Eric had ended our engagement while wearing the five-thousand-dollar watch I had given him for his birthday.
A watch I had saved for over two years to buy.
A watch he had accepted with tears in his eyes.
A watch he had called “forever.”
Then the next day, he sat across from me at our kitchen island, the watch still shining on his wrist, and told me he wasn’t built for marriage.
Our wedding was six days away.
Guests had flights booked.
The venue was paid for.
My dress was hanging in the guest room.
And Eric looked at me like the whole thing was an inconvenience he had finally decided to cancel.
“I think we rushed this,” he said.
I actually laughed at first because my brain refused to understand him.
“Rushed? Eric, we’ve been together three years.”
He folded his hands.
“I’m just not a family man.”
“You proposed to me.”
“I know.”
“You planned this wedding with me.”
“I know.”
“You cried last night when I gave you that watch.”
His hand twitched toward his wrist.
“Don’t make this about a gift.”
“A gift?” My voice cracked. “I worked extra shifts for two years for that.”
His face hardened.
“You can’t buy a marriage, Brooke.”
The words hit like a slap.
Then he stood, took his phone, and walked out.
I followed only far enough to hear him laughing in the driveway.
“Of course I waited,” he said into his phone. “What was I supposed to do? Break up before my birthday and lose the watch?”
My entire body went cold.
I reached for my phone and hit record.
“I saw the check stub in her drawer,” he continued. “I knew she was cashing out that little savings account.”
A man on the other end laughed.
Eric laughed too.
“You think I’m stupid? I wasn’t missing out on a five-grand Swiss watch.”
Then came the line that shattered what little was left of me.
“I’ll tell everyone she got too intense. Clingy. Emotional. They’ll believe it.”
I stopped recording.
For a long time, I stood there holding his sweatshirt in one hand, listening to the man I almost married rewrite me into a villain.
By morning, I was asleep on the couch in yesterday’s clothes, mascara smeared under my eyes, one slipper missing.
That was when Valerie called.
Eric’s mother and I had never been close. She was polite, but guarded, as if she had always been quietly studying me.
So when I answered, I expected judgment.
Instead, she asked, “Are you safe?”
The question almost broke me.
“What did Eric tell you?”
“A story,” she said. “Not the truth.”
Of course.
“He said you became unstable. That he tried to end things for weeks. That you refused to accept it.”
I closed my eyes.
“He’s lying.”
“I know,” Valerie said. “And now you need to come to his office.”
“No. I can’t.”
“You need to see what he’s doing before the lie becomes the official version.”
“I’m not dressed. I’m in slippers.”
“Good.”
I froze.
“Good?”
“Yes. Come exactly as you are. He has been performing all week. I want people to see who had to carry the damage.”
That sentence got me moving.
I grabbed my keys and drove across town with tangled hair, swollen eyes, and fleece slippers on my feet.
Twice, I almost turned around.
Then I looked at my phone.
The recording was still there.
So I kept driving.
Eric’s office lobby was bright, polished, and cold.
The receptionist looked up and blinked when she saw me.
“Brooke?”
“I know,” I said. “Not my best morning.”
She glanced toward the hallway.
“They’re around the corner.”
I turned and stopped.
Eric stood near the front desk, clean-shaven and calm, the watch still gleaming on his wrist.
Valerie stood beside him.
Dana, our wedding planner, held a thick folder.
And near the coffee station stood Grace, Eric’s new coworker, pale and confused.
Eric’s face changed the second he saw me.
“Why is she here?”
Valerie did not move.
“Because you made her the subject of your lie.”
Eric pointed toward the door.
“Go home, Brooke.”
“No.”
“You’re making a scene.”
“At your office?” I asked. “In front of the people you lied to?”
Dana stepped forward.
“Brooke, I’m so sorry.”
I looked at the folder in her hands.
“What is going on?”
Valerie answered.