ANGELA PARKER
Mom used to say, “Pumpkin, you’re the strongest person I know.”
But sitting here now, clutching a glass I don’t remember ordering, I don’t feel like the strongest person she knew.I feel like I’m unraveling.
The rim of the wine glass trembles against my fingers as I sit in the dim corner booth of La Belle, the restaurant mason insisted we visit to "celebrate our next big step." His words, not mine. We’d been discussing merging our finances and expanding my shopping complex to include his boutique agency. Business and love. Love and business.
Everything always felt like strategy with him.But I was in love—or at least, I believed I was.I glance down at my phone for the fifth time. 7:42 PM. He said he’d be here at seven sharp.Mason was never late. Not even in college, when he had nothing to be on time for. That small, obsessive part of him was what drew me in—the structure, the certainty. It made me feel safe. Seen.Until now.A soft laugh slices through the low hum of jazz music and dinner conversations. I look up instinctively, and my heart does something strange like it skips, trips, then lurches forward.
At first, I think I’m hallucinating.Then I think I must have seen wrong.But I haven’t.Across the room, partially hidden behind a wine rack and a floral arrangement, Mason is sitting at a table—our table—his hand grazing the arm of another woman.
She leans in, laughing like they share a secret I was never meant to hear. Her red lips curl around the rim of her champagne glass, and his eyes are locked on her like she’s the only thing in the room.He touches her face.My stomach clenches.
No.
No, he wouldn’t.But then he kisses her.Not a friendly peck. Not a misread cheek kiss. A kiss that’s full of intention, slow and shameless, like he’s done it a hundred times before.And my world; my perfectly color-coded, neatly filed, Pinterest-approved world tilts.
The glass slips from my hand. It doesn’t shatter, just spills quietly onto the tablecloth like it’s trying not to disturb the moment.Unlike my heart, which is pounding so loudly I’m afraid people can hear it.
I feel frozen. Trapped in this strange in-between space where my mind is racing but my body won’t move. My throat tightens, heat burns behind my eyes, and the only thing I can think is—He knew I was coming tonight.He chose to be here with her.A waitress hurries toward me, her smile dimming as she notices the spilled drink. I mutter an apology and rise, grabbing my purse with hands that suddenly don’t feel like mine.
Every step toward the exit is stiff, mechanical.
I tell myself “don’t look back”,
“don’t look back”
But I do only to stop abruptly to the familiar ringtone coming from mason’s booth.“I know that ringtone”, but as I step forward to take a closer look, I am slapped with shock
My sister.
I think my eyes are deceiving me.But they aren’t.Because sitting across from my fiancé, tangled in whispered promises and intimate glances, is my sister. My blood. The same sister who held my hand when I told her I was scared of commitment.
The same sister who helped me pick out the damn engagement dress.I feel like the air has been punched out of my lungs.
No confrontation.
No screams.
No shattered wine glasses.
Just silence.
And the sound of something inside me breaking clean, sharp, final.
I pick a wine glass from a passing waitress, taking a full swige suddenly feeling bold.
I walk up to their table and slap mason across the face.
The restaurant comes to a sudden silence, Lena looks at me with her mouth agape.
" We are so over" I say. Throwing the engagement ring on the floor, I say slowly:
"You both deserve each other", feeling my liquid courage slipping away. I turn and leave as fast as I can.
Because I’m not going to fall apart in front of them.I make it to the street before the first tear slides down my cheek.
Somewhere between the sound of my heels against the pavement and the rush of the city around me, I whisper to myself:
“I won’t let this break me.”
But my voice is a lie.Because it already has.