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After the Fall: Redemption in His Arms

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  • 7.5
  • 💬 2

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Zoe Marshall looked like she was living the dream, and from the outside, she was. Her career was soaring, her apartment could’ve been torn from the pages of a luxury magazine, and on her arm was the man she once believed she’d grow old with. To the world, it all glittered. Picture perfect. Effortless. But behind the polished smiles and selected memories, was a truth she could barely admit to herself. The fairytale didn’t just fade, it shattered. Quietly, slowly. Until the silence between them became louder than the vows they’d made. What no one saw was the way she cried in the shower just to feel something. Or how the bed, no matter how soft, felt cold even when he was lying right beside her. She had everything. And yet, somehow, nothing at all. Ethan stopped seeing her. The dinners grew quiet. The gestures stopped. And slowly, heartbreakingly, so did their love. So, she left. She chose herself. And then everything changed. Ethan Carter, now her ex-husband, is blindsided by the wreckage. For the first time, the man who always had it together has nothing. Not Zoe. Not peace. Not a clue how he let her slip through his fingers. And in that silence, regret sets in, and grows into something louder than he ever expected: the need to make it right. But can a love that's been wounded, bent, and broken really find its way back? Ethan is fighting like hell to show her he's not the same man who once shattered her heart. Not the man who let the light go out in her eyes. Every step he takes now is heavy with regret, with hope, with the weight of words he never said and the damage they left behind. And Zoe? She’s standing at the edge of the past, staring into the remains of what they were, wondering if love is ever enough. Wondering if a second chance is a blessing… or just another way to bleed. Because sometimes healing brings people closer. And sometimes, it sets them free. So the question remains, when the dust finally settles, will they find their way back to each other? Or will they finally find themselves?

Chapter 1: The Beginning of the End

The delicate tap of metal on ceramic shook the silence, steady, fragile, like a heartbeat afraid to be heard.

Zoe stood barefoot on the cold tile, one hand gently stirring a pot of creamy pasta, the other wrapped around a glass of wine she hadn’t really tasted. Behind her, the city blinked through the tall windows, its lights bleeding into the glass like paint strokes on a restless painting. It used to soothe her, that electric vibration of New York at night. Now, it just felt... loud. Her playlist whispered low in the background, Nina Simone singing softly with that ache in her voice that made everything feel a little more true.

She used to cherish this hour, the breath of calm at the end of the day when everything softened. The world would slow down just enough for her to catch her breath. He’d walk through the door, loosen his tie, press a kiss to her cheek, and for those fleeting, fragile minutes… it almost felt like they hadn’t lost each other yet. Like they still existed.

But not tonight.

“Hey,” Ethan said from behind her, his voice rough, fatigued, like it had been dragged through a day too long.

She didn’t turn around. “You’re late.”

“Investor call ran over.”

She sensed him before he touched her, his presence familiar but no longer warm. His hand found her waist out of habit, not tenderness, and his lips brushed the side of her neck like a faded echo of what used to be.

“You smell like basil and wine,” he murmured.

She didn’t look up. “And you smell like deadlines and exhaustion,” she said, eyes locked on the sauce slowly thickening.

He let out a quiet laugh and rested his chin on her shoulder. For a second, it almost felt like the past hadn’t unraveled. Like the quiet between them hadn’t sharpened into something that could bite.

Her lips curved, just barely, like a secret slipping out. “Dinner’s ready.”

They sat across from each other like tenants of a shared space, not partners. Not lovers. Strangers with history.

He took a bite and nodded in approval. “Pasta’s perfect.”

She nodded back.

“How was your day?” she asked, pushing her food around her plate.

He launched into business talk, acquisitions, user interfaces, pitch decks. His eyes lit up in all the places that had stopped lighting up for her.

Zoe listened, chewing slowly, nodding where it felt appropriate. Something in her chest pulled tight. She tried to remember the last time he’d looked at her and really seen her, but nothing came.

“I landed a new account today,” she said, her voice low, almost hesitant, like she wasn’t sure it mattered anymore.

“Hm?” His attention slide to his phone.

“I said I landed a new account. A national campaign. It’s a big deal.”

He looked up, momentarily unsettled. “That’s amazing. Sorry, just needed to check this message real quick.”

Of course you did.

She watched his thumbs dance across the screen. Watched him smirk at whatever reply he got.

There was a time he’d hang on her words like they were gospel. Now she was just static in the background.

Zoe set her fork down gently. “Ethan?”

He glanced up. “Yeah?”

“When was the last time we made love?”

He blinked. “Uh… last week?”

She shook her head. “No. That was s*x.”

His brows pinched. “I… I don’t understand,” he said, his voice uncertain, like he was already losing his grip.

“I’m talking about the last time you really looked at me. The last time your hands held me like I was still yours.”

Her words landed between them, soft, but sharp enough to cut.

He stared at her, stunned, as the silence stretched wide and heavy, pressing in from all sides.

“Where is this even coming from?”

Zoe pushed back her chair, rising slowly, like the weight of it all had aged her in an instant. She crossed the room, quiet and deliberate, and reached for the manila envelope on the console. She held it carefully, like it held both an ending… and a truth she’d carried alone for far too long.

“Zoe…” his voice shifted, urgent now.

She turned to him, eyes clear. “These are divorce papers.”

He stood halfway. “What the hell are you talking about?”

“I already signed.”

“No, Zoe, wait. What the f*ck?”

“I’m tired, Ethan.” Her voice didn’t rise, but it carried the weight of every unspoken ache, steady, quiet, and blooming with heartbreak. “Tired of carrying this marriage alone. Of crying in the shower because that’s the only place you won’t see me fall apart.”

“Don’t do this,” he said, stepping toward her, panic creeping into his voice.

“Every time I reached out, there was nothing there. Just space. Just silence.”

He dragged both hands through his hair, pacing like movement could somehow rewind time. “Okay, alright, you’re angry, I get it. Work’s been insane, I’ve been stretched thin, but divorce? You can’t be serious.”

Her lips trembled, but she didn’t step back. She stood steady in the storm. “I begged you, Ethan.” Not with words, but with silence. With distance. With nights spent facing the wall.”

“That’s not fair,” he snapped. “I’ve killed myself building this life for us. You have everything you could ever want.”

“No,” she whispered. “I had everything but you.”

He flinched. Visibly.

“You’re really doing this?”

She moved closer and gently laid the envelope on the table between them, like setting down the truth.

He just stood there, hands at his sides, staring at it, like touching it would make it real. He just stared.

“I didn’t know you were this unhappy,” he said, voice barely holding.

“That’s the point. You never asked.” She looked at him, eyes shining but steady. “I got tired of being unheard in a place that was supposed to feel like home.”

“I can fix this,” he said quickly, his voice catching on the edge of panic, thick with desperation. “I’ll step back from the company. Go to therapy. Whatever it takes.”

Her throat tightened, but she stood tall. “Why did it take losing me for you to see me?”

He opened his mouth but nothing came. He looked down at the envelope like it might catch fire.

“Zoe…”

She shook her head slowly. “I don’t need promises anymore. I need peace.”

“You still love me.”

“I do,” she admitted. “But love without presence? That’s just pain dressed up in poetry.”

He looked like the wind had been knocked out of him, like her words had emptied something inside.

“I can’t keep waiting for the man I fell in love with to show up,” she said, her voice low but certain.

She turned and walked toward the bedroom, each step carrying the weight of everything unsaid.

At the doorway, she stopped. “Don’t come after me. Not tonight.”

He stayed frozen.

She closed the door gently behind her, let the silence settle, and slowly slipped out of her dress. Then she sat at the edge of the bed, shoulders heavy, heart louder than the room around her. Her eyes landed on a framed photo from Paris, honeymoon. Gelato. Laughter. Her head thrown back while he held her hand like it was the most precious thing in the world.

She remembered that girl. She missed her. And she missed the version of him who saw her like that.

But that man hadn’t come home in a long, long time.

The morning came slow. Sunlight spilled over the sheets like an apology.

Zoe woke with a dull ache behind her eyes, the kind born from too much crying and finally telling the truth. Grief and clarity shared the same space in her chest.

She moved through the morning in silence, showered, got dressed, and made her coffee. The envelope was still there on the console, untouched.

She didn’t move it.

She didn’t have to.

Just as she stepped into the hallway, her phone vibrated in her hand. One new email. From: Ethan Carter

She hesitated. Her thumb hovered.

Then, she opened it.

Subject: You were right. I wasn’t there. But I’m not done fighting for you.

Chapter 2: His Turn to Bleed

Zoe, I’m not done fighting for you.His own words rang in his head long after he pressed send.

Ethan Carter sat at the kitchen island, staring down at his phone like it might burn through his hands. His laptop was open in front of him, but he couldn’t bring himself to look at it. Not when everything that actually mattered was slipping away. He hadn’t slept. Couldn’t. Not after the way she looked at him last night, like a stranger she had already buried.

He replayed it all. Her voice. Her eyes. He couldn’t stop seeing it, the way her fingers shook as she handed him the envelope.

Divorce.

The word kept slicing through his thoughts, over and over, blunt and brutal, refusing to let him breathe.

He hadn’t even opened the d*mn thing. Couldn't. It was still there on the console, accusing him. Mocking him.

She’d actually gone through with it.

God. He never thought she would. Not Zoe.

His Zoe.

He used to think her silence w

Heroes

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