Sixteen Days Before The Wedding, He Asked For The Ring Back In Public-heyily

I had not even slid into the booth before Jason ended our engagement.

The café was crowded in that late-afternoon way, all low jazz, forks tapping plates, warm espresso, and the sweet smell of little desserts that cost too much for what they were.

I had come straight from the hospital, still wearing the kind of tired you cannot hide with lip balm and a clean coat.

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My hands smelled faintly like sanitizer.

The cuffs of my sleeves were damp from the cold wind outside.

I thought we were meeting to talk about flowers, final guest count, and whether his mother had successfully found something wrong with the seating chart.

Sixteen days.

That was how close we were to the wedding.

Jason looked up from his untouched cappuccino and said, “We need to talk.”

I remember the exact sound the cup made when his finger brushed the saucer.

I remember the little gold spoon lying beside it.

I remember knowing, in some animal part of myself, that my life had already changed before he said another word.

He reached into his coat pocket and took out a velvet ring box.

For one foolish second, my mind tried to make it romantic.

Then he set it on the table between us, not like a gift, but like something he expected me to put back where it belonged.

“I can’t marry you, Emily,” he said.

Seven words.

Quiet words.

Words polite enough for the couple in the next booth not to turn around, but sharp enough to split the future I had been carrying in my chest.

I sat there with my coat still on.

I waited for him to look devastated.

I waited for some grief, some apology, some sign that whatever had brought us to that table had hurt him too.

Instead, Jason talked like a man canceling a reservation.

He said we were moving in different directions.

He said he had made important connections.

He said this was not about me, which is something people say when they are about to make it very much about you.

Then he said Megan Langley’s name.

The room seemed to tilt.

Megan Langley was the kind of woman people made room for before she reached the door.

Her father’s money had a way of opening things, and Jason had always been impressed by doors that opened for other people.

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