At Her Ex’s Wedding, She Asked A CEO To Pretend He Loved Her-hothiyenvy_5

“Act like you love me, please.”

Ella Monroe did not know a person could sound that small and still be standing.

She heard the words leave her mouth before she had a chance to pull them back, soft enough to be swallowed by the music coming from the ballroom, but clear enough for Damian Hawthorne to hear.

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Only a few minutes earlier, he had been a stranger in a charcoal suit.

Only a few years earlier, Charles Dorne had been the man who promised to stay.

Neither fact seemed solid anymore.

The night had started with rain.

It had tapped against the café windows all afternoon, turning downtown into streaks of gray glass and red brake lights, while Ella worked through the dinner rush with an apron tied over a black shirt and her hair twisted into a tired knot at the back of her neck.

By six-thirty, the smell of espresso had soaked into her sleeves.

By seven, the floor near the door was slick from customers tracking in water, and her ankle had started that old dull ache that came whenever the weather changed.

She had learned not to rub it in public.

People asked questions when you touched an injury too gently.

So she wiped tables, stacked mugs, smiled when men in expensive coats snapped their fingers for oat milk, and pretended the throb under her skin was just part of the job.

Once, Ella had known a different kind of pain.

Blisters split open under satin ribbons.

Muscles burned after twelve-hour rehearsals.

Toenails bruised, ankles swelled, and teachers corrected her posture with two cold fingers pressed between her shoulder blades.

She had loved all of it.

Back then, pain meant she was becoming something.

Back then, Charles Dorne waited outside rehearsal rooms with vending machine coffee and that easy grin of his, the one that made people forgive him before he even apologized.

He would sit on the floor while she untied her shoes and say, “You know you looked like light out there, right?”

Ella had believed him.

Not because she was foolish, but because he had done the small things that made belief feel reasonable.

He carried her bag without being asked.

He brought ice packs when her ankle swelled.

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