Chapter 3
672words
"What's wrong with you? Why are you targeting him like this? Do you have no empathy at all?" she demanded. "You accused him of framing you in front of everyone. How is he supposed to live with that? Couldn't you just swallow it for once?"
These words came from the woman I had loved for years.
I looked at her again and again, and for the first time, she felt like a stranger.
I did not want to keep fighting. I shook off her hand and turned toward the bedroom, but she stepped in front of me and blocked my path. She demanded an explanation, and we went back and forth, again and again. At last, something inside me snapped.
"And what about me?" I said. "Am I not allowed to feel wronged? You heard what they said about me. What am I supposed to be? If he hadn't used such a dirty trick to frame me, would things have turned out like this?"
She had no answer. She stood there, stunned, her lips parting and closing as she searched for something to say.
After a long pause, she muttered, almost petulantly, "Why are you like this? You never think about other people…"
That told me everything.
Maybe she did not care who was right or wrong at all. She only cared about how Matthew felt.
The air between us grew tight and strange. Then her phone rang, sudden and jarring.
Matthew's weak, unsteady voice came through the speaker. "Lena, am I bothering you? I don't know anyone else here… I fell while getting off the bus on the way home. I twisted my ankle. It's really dark here. Can you come help me?"
A faint sniffle followed, the kind that made your chest ache just hearing it.
Selena's expression changed instantly. Concern flooded her face. "Okay. Stay where you are. Don't move. I'm coming right now."
She hung up without even looking at me. She grabbed her coat from the couch and rushed for the door.
On instinct, I caught her wrist. "It's the middle of the night. Where are you going? Are you even coming back? If something's wrong, he can call a cab or an ambulance. Why does it have to be you?"
She yanked her hand free, as if I had deeply offended her.
"What is wrong with you?" she snapped. "He only knows me in this city. If he doesn't call me, who is he supposed to call? And after how you treated him today, this is me making it up to him for your sake. Stop being ungrateful."
Every word sounded like a verdict. And yet, at that moment, I needed her too.
My hand fell back to my side. I stood there in silence for a long time. In the end, I asked just one thing. "Do you believe me?"
That was all I needed. One sentence. If she said she believed me, I could let everything that happened today go.
I had never wanted an answer more in my life.
What I got instead was disgust.
She picked up a napkin and wiped her hand, as if she had touched something filthy. Then she flicked it at my face.
"You think I don't know you've been bullying him behind my back?" she said coldly. "If I hadn't found out myself, I'd never have known you were this kind of person. And now you're acting pitiful? You make me sick."
The front door slammed hard enough to shake the walls. She was gone.
My vision swam. I braced myself against the couch to keep from collapsing.
I could not accept it.
Was this really the outcome of everything I had held onto for all these years? I had even turned down my family's chance to send me abroad for her. Was any of it ever worth it?