/0/98448/coverbig.jpg?v=59108945e260d4ecf44133fc14a349c1)
ed him, until I saw him tenderly caress another woman-his ex-girlfriend, Annis. When I was later left bleeding on th
elp. He just looked at me with disgust and said,
he truth: Corbin only married me for my family's
wife; I was a
ght was a template for a friend. It was our divorce agreement. He's about to find out he's not just sin
pte
edy
o touch me because of his severe mysophobia and OCD. But that lie shattered today,
nce" of the Manhattan DA's office, a man whose cold precision in the courtroom was legendary. I was Kennedy Pitts, a socialite a
e, preceded by three years of dating,
fabric, and season, each hanger precisely one inch apart. My side was... well, it was a closet. We had separate bathrooms, s
ourly. He wore gloves to handle the mail. He never touched doorknob
er, ever t
ked in Central Park. Our wedding kiss had been a brief, sterile press of his lips to my foreh
had tried. Oh,
in were poison ivy. "Kennedy, please," he would murmur, his voice tight with a discomfort that I mistook for a s
to watch him politely decline, explaining he could only eat food
oks. They would be accepted with a cool, "Thank you, Kennedy," and then d
inely tuned instrument and his phobias were the unfortunate side effect. I believed that beneath the l
s a
certainty of a lightning strike
Corbin was supposed to be in court, delivering the closing arguments on a high-pr
wasn'
ity that seemed to command protection. Corbin's entire posture, which was usually ram
Corbin immediately shrugged off his tailored suit jacket-a jacket I knew cost more than
ring his customary gloves. His bare fingers, long and elegant, gently brushed a wisp of her dark hair from h
he cameras, but a genuine, soft smile that reached his
tilted o
at had defined our entire relationship... it was a lie. Or, at the very le
focus. I zoomed in, the image pixelated but undeniable. Corbin, my husband, care
ic
like a gunshot in the
ped me back to reality as she slid into the chair
t swiveled my phone and
hot up. "Whoa. Is that... Corbin? Who's
Who was she? Who was the woman
raw whisper.
.. she looks familiar. Hold on." She pulled out her own phone, her thumbs flying across the s
Corbin stood with his arm around the same woman, both of them beaming. The c
ar, a blank space in the six years of
ce gentle. "They were... intense. The 'it' couple of
?" I asked, my
's ancient history, Ke
cold washing over me. He had
as this one time, during a mock trial competition, she got a paper cut. Just a tiny little thing. Corbin stopped the entire proceeding, carried her out of the room, and
t. He had thrown away a schola
haking with pain and fear. He' d been in the middle of a deposition. "Kennedy, I'm busy," he had said, his tone
rm raging inside me. "I think her family moved away. No one ever knew the real
the same af
as at a charity ball. He stood alone by the French doors, a drink in his hand, exuding an aura of such profound lon
ragedy. I fell f
e refused. I left notes on his car, which he ignored. I once waited for him outside his office in a downpour, just to offer him
that made him so distant. I thought my love
ory party for him, inviting all his colleagues. He showed up, but he stood in the corner, looking uncomfortable. When I we
it around me. "Are you alright?" he asked, his voice low.
me from the public humiliation, a calculated move to preserve the decorum
riety for a flicker of warmth. I t
ver thawed. He would explain his aversion to touch was a clinical diagnosis. "I
rms couldn't possibly be faking it. His condition was real. I had seen the endle
ed I was the germ h
devotion, my patient waiting, my endless excuses
s the pu
thing that made her laugh, a light, tinkling sound that carried on the w
resolve settl
had t
r scraping against the pavem
ny,
n and fury. I walked blindly, bumping into people, n
us of shouts erupted from above. I looked up to see scaffolding on
pounding, when someone col
familiar, fragi
Annis
g shudder and a large metal pole brok
bed Annis by the arm and shoved her hard, sending
ain exploded in my leg as the pole crashed do
ps. A figure knelt, not beside me, but beside An
as C
terror I had never heard before. He frantically checked her o
pointing a trembling finger at me. "
eyes was instantly replaced by a glacial fury. He strode
was okay. He didn
r morgue. "Why did you push her?
ty. He was asking if I understood
saving the life of his true love, and all he saw was a t
heart finally cracking into a million irreparable pieces. "Corbin,"
. "Corbin, it's not her fault! She saved m
know, I know. But we can't risk you getting hurt." He glanced down at me, his expression one of pure
ority
h sentence to the las
on the dirty concrete. But the physical pain was no
ne, away from me. He paused, pulling out his phone. H
nds of the city, the shouts of concerned on
as Corbin Franco's back as he walked away, leaving me

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