Prologue: Nothing left to fix
Before marriage, Rose’s name moved faster than she did.
It traveled through studios and fabric houses, whispered between designers and printed on glossy invitations. People said her designs didn’t just dress women—they told stories. Silk that spoke of confidence. Cuts that carried quiet rebellion.
At nineteen, she stood beneath white lights, pins between her fingers, watching models walk in creations born from her imagination. Each fold, each stitch, was a sentence she had written without words. By twenty, she was already being called the girl who would change fashion.
Her laugh was loud. Her steps were confident. Her future stretched wide and endless.
Then James Morrison walked into her life, carrying a name that seemed to promise stability.
They said he was safe. They said he was dependable. They said love didn’t need to be wild if it could be secure.
Rose believed them.
Marriage didn’t silence her all at once. It changed her gradually.
Applause turned into quiet footsteps in long hallways. The scent of fabric and ink faded into tea and polished floors. Her studio became a guest room. Her sketches became folded papers tucked into drawers, each one labeled with a silent promise: one day.
James never told her to stop designing. He simply never made space for it.
And Rose, in love, learned how to shrink.
By twenty-three, her life revolved around schedules that weren’t hers. She hosted dinners she didn’t enjoy, smiled at conversations that drained her, memorized the small expectations that kept the household at peace. She learned which words pleased his mother, which silences avoided tension.
She became everything for everyone else.
And slowly, she became nothing for herself.
Loneliness didn’t arrive loudly. It came quietly, in moments she couldn’t explain. In the way James’s phone flipped face down when she entered. In the pauses in conversations that stopped when she appeared. In the way he listened, but never truly heard her.
So she tried harder.
She softened her voice. She made herself smaller. She held the marriage together with careful hands, even when it began slipping apart. She smiled through the ache, prayed through the silence, and fought quietly for something that was already breaking.
Especially when it hurt.
On the night of their wedding anniversary, she came home early, holding a small, neatly wrapped gift.
Hope still lived in her then.
But the house was wrong.
Too quiet. Too still.
No music. No movement. Just the faint hum of electricity and a hallway light left on.
She called his name.
No answer.
Her steps felt heavy as she moved toward the bedroom, her heart tightening with something she didn’t want to name.
The door wasn’t fully closed.
She pushed it open.
The world didn’t shatter.
It simply stopped.
James stood by the bed, his shirt half-buttoned, his expression empty. Jane—her step-sister—sat on the edge of the bed, wrapped in a sheet, calm and unbothered.
For a moment, no one spoke.
Rose felt the gift slip from her hand. It landed softly on the floor.
Jane stood first, unhurried, as though this moment had already been rehearsed.
James didn’t move toward Rose. He didn’t apologize. He didn’t even look surprised.
He looked interrupted.
Jane gave a small, cold smile.
“So,” she said, “I guess this is where you cry.”
Rose opened her mouth.
Nothing came out.
Jane reached into her purse, pulled out a thick envelope, and tossed it onto the bed.
“Take it,” she said casually. “You’ll need it.”
Rose stared at it, her vision blurring.
James finally spoke. His voice was flat, detached.
“Sign the papers inside. Everything’s already arranged.”
Arranged.
The word echoed painfully in her mind.
Jane crossed her arms. “It’s better this way. This marriage was already over.”
Something inside Rose broke—quietly, deeply, like fabric tearing thread by thread.
Her anniversary. Their marriage. Reduced to a plan she knew nothing about.
Jane stepped closer and dropped a few loose bills at Rose’s feet. The money scattered across the carpet.
“Pick it up,” she said softly. “You’re good at holding things together, aren’t you?”
Rose moved.
Not because she was weak, but because standing felt impossible. Her hands trembled as she gathered the money, each note heavy with humiliation.
When she stood again, she didn’t look at them. She placed the money neatly on the table, beside the forgotten gift.
Her voice, when it came, was quiet. Steady.
“You didn’t just cheat on me,” she said. “You erased me.”
No one answered.
The silence said enough.
Rose turned and walked out of the room, out of the life she had spent years trying to protect.
Outside, the night air met her like something new.
She walked slowly down the quiet street, the pain sharp but strangely clear. No one stopped her. Not James. Not his family.
And in that absence, she understood the truth.
This had never been an accident.
It had been decided.
Planned.
Allowed.
The city around her felt distant, like it was watching her leave behind a version of herself that no longer existed. The girl with bold sketches. The woman who believed love would make space for her dreams.
She had lost all of it.
And yet… she was still standing.
The pain was real. Heavy. Unavoidable.
But beneath it, something else remained.
A small, steady ember.
Rose didn’t know what came next. She didn’t know how to rebuild what had been taken from her.
But she knew this—
She had survived.
And survival, she realized, was not a small thing.