Chapter1
Rain clung stubbornly to the glass walls of the café, distorting the outside world into streaks of grey and gold.
Inside, Ruby Hale sat perfectly still, her fingers wrapped around a cup of coffee that had long gone cold.
Jason’s words still echoed, sharp and unreal.
“I just… I don’t think I can do this anymore.”
No explanation. No argument. No visible reason.
Just distance.
Ruby blinked slowly, trying to steady the tightness in her chest. She had always prided herself on composure,on grace under pressure. At work, she could close a million-dollar deal with a calm smile. But here, in the quiet aftermath of yet another failed relationship, she felt something c***k beneath the surface.
“What changed?” she had asked him.
Jason avoided her eyes. “Nothing. Everything. I just… I need something different.”
Different.
The word had lingered like an accusation.
Now he is gone. Just like the others.
Ruby exhaled softly, pressing her lips together. She wouldn’t cry here. She never did. Instead, she reached for her phone and dialed the one person who always knew how to put her back together.
“Pearl?”
“Ruby, hey! You sound… off. What happened?”
There was warmth in Pearl Whitmore’s voice—familiar, comforting, unwavering.
Ruby closed her eyes. “It happened again.”
A pause. Then a soft sigh. “Jason?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, Ruby…” Pearl’s tone melted into sympathy. “I’m so sorry. Where are you? I’m coming.”
Twenty minutes later, Pearl swept into the café like a burst of light against the dull afternoon.
She was immaculate as always; perfectly styled blonde waves, tailored coat, effortless elegance. Heads turned as she approached, but her attention fixed solely on Ruby.
“There you are,” Pearl said softly, sliding into the seat opposite her. “You look like you’ve been through a war.”
Ruby gave a faint smile. “Feels like it.”
Pearl reached across the table, gently squeezing her hand. “Tell me everything.”
And Ruby did.
She spoke of the sudden distance, the coldness that had crept into Jason’s voice over the past week. The unanswered questions. The feeling that something had shifted without her knowing why.
“I don’t understand,” Ruby admitted, her voice barely above a whisper. “Everything was fine. We were… happy.”
Pearl listened intently, her expression carefully crafted into concern.
“That’s what scares people,” Pearl said after a moment. “Perfection.”
Ruby frowned slightly. “What do you mean?”
“You’re amazing, Ruby. Beautiful, successful, kind, it’s intimidating.” Pearl tilted her head sympathetically. “Some people just can’t handle that.”
Ruby shook her head. “That doesn’t make sense. Jason isn’t insecure.”
Pearl’s lips curved faintly, almost imperceptibly. “You’d be surprised what people hide.”
Ruby fell silent, absorbing the words.
It wasn’t the first time she’d heard something like this. Each breakup carried the same pattern; confusion, withdrawal, unexplained endings.
A pattern she couldn’t explain.
Pearl leaned forward slightly. “Did he say anything else? Anything at all?”
Ruby hesitated. “He… asked strange questions.”
Pearl’s gaze sharpened, though her voice remained soft. “What kind of questions?”
“About my family.”
Pearl’s fingers tightened ever so slightly around her cup. “Your family?”
Ruby nodded. “He asked if… if there were any health issues. If there was something I wasn’t telling him.”
Pearl’s expression flickered, just for a second before smoothing out. “And what did you say?”
“The truth,” Ruby replied. “That my parents and my brother lost their hearing after the accident. That it wasn’t genetic.”
She swallowed, her chest tightening again. “But he looked at me like… like he didn’t believe me.”
Pearl leaned back slowly, her eyes thoughtful.
“That’s strange,” she murmured.
Ruby studied her. “You think so too, right? It didn’t come out of nowhere.”
“No,” Pearl agreed softly. “It didn’t.”
For a moment, silence stretched between them.
Then Pearl reached for Ruby’s hand again, her touch reassuring. “Listen to me. This isn’t your fault.”
Ruby let out a shaky breath. “Then why does it keep happening?”
Pearl’s gaze softened, almost tender. “Because people are weak, Ruby. They see something rare, something extraordinary… and instead of holding onto it, they run.”
Ruby wanted to believe her.
She always did.
Later that evening, as Ruby stepped out into the cool Oklahoma air, she felt marginally lighter. Pearl had a way of doing that; of easing the ache without solving the mystery.
“Go home,” Pearl had told her. “Rest. Tomorrow is a new day.”
Ruby smiled faintly at the memory as she walked toward her car.
Tomorrow.
“Maybe things will make sense tomorrow," Pearl reassured her.
“If you want, I can stay at your place today if you don't want to be alone."
She suggested.
“No, thanks, you've done more than enough already for just being here."
Ruby responded.
Across town, in a dimly lit apartment, Pearl Whitmore stood by her window,
Her expression was no longer soft.
No longer kind.
“