
1 My suitcase stood packed by the bedroom door. Tonight, I was leaving the place I had called home for three years for good. Living with Frederick, the hardest part wasn't the love fading away. It was the Ragdoll cat named Cotton, who belonged to his ex-girlfriend Sophie. It had become the unbearable, constant burden of my life. I followed every fussy instruction about imported cat food, tofu litter, and special baths, despite my severe cat allergy. Every morning, I woke with swollen eyes. Frederick would just hand me an allergy pill and say, "Hang in there a little longer. Sophie will take the cat back as soon as she finds a pet-friendly apartment." That "little longer" stretched into fourteen months. Sophie moved three times, each with the same excuse: no pets allowed. So, Cotton stayed. My allergies turned from seasonal to a year-round nightmare. Yesterday, the doctor warned me clearly: if I didn't get away from the cat, I could develop asthma. I sent the diagnosis to Frederick. He saw it but never replied. That night, I saw Sophie's new post: a screenshot of her video-calling the cat. The caption read, "Long-distance parenting! Big thanks to Frederick for being the best cat-sitter an ex could ask for." In that moment, everything became clear. I packed the empty allergy medication boxes into my suitcase, alongside a relationship that had long since spoiled. ... The suitcase was waiting by the bedroom door. Zipped tight, it was filled with clothes and art supplies I’d bought for myself. Not a single thing in it was a gift from him. It wasn't out of spite. It’s just that in three years, I could count the gifts he’d given me on one hand. Two boxes of macarons, a cheap silk scarf for my birthday, and an endless supply of allergy pills. Cotton, at some point, had leaped onto my suitcase. With a flick of her tail, a cloud of fine white fur drifted into the air and straight into my nose. I sneezed three times, hard. My eyes immediately began to swell, my vision shrinking to a slit. I lifted the cat off and placed her on the imported cat tree in the living room. The cat tree cost five hundred dollars. The allergy pills, twenty dollars a box. I'd been doing that math for fourteen months. The lock clicked. Frederick was home. The first thing he did after slipping on his house shoes was check the cat’s food bowl. It was empty. He frowned, tore open a bag of the expensive cat food, and poured it into the bowl. The kibble rattled, and Cotton came running. Only then did he notice the suitcase by the bedroom door. "Going on a trip?" "Moving out." His hand froze. Kibble spilled from the bag, scattering across the floor. He ignored the mess and walked over, his hand closing around my wrist. My eyes were swollen, tears of allergic reaction clinging to my lashes. For the first time, a flicker of panic crossed his face. "Ava, I know this has been hard on you." He pulled out his phone, showing me his chat history with Sophie. His last message to her: "Sophie, you have to pick up Cotton this weekend. No more excuses." She’d replied with a string of crying emojis. "Frederick, the new landlord really won't allow it. Can you just give me one more month? Please? I'm already looking for a new place." Frederick put his phone away and looked at me, his expression earnest. "Just one more month, Ava. I promise, this is the last time." I almost laughed. I opened the notes app on my phone and pulled up a file titled "The Last Time." Entry 1: Last March. "She'll be moved in by next month." Entry 2: Last April. "Just a bit longer, she's waiting on her security deposit." Entry 3... Entry 4... There were fourteen entries in total, spanning fourteen months. Each one was dated. I didn’t show him. He pulled me into a hug, resting his chin on the top of my head. His sweater was covered in cat hair. Where my bare arm touched the wool, a red, itchy rash began to form. I didn't push him away. "I'll take you to the doctor tomorrow," he murmured. "We'll get the best imported medicine." I pushed the suitcase back into the bedroom. It wasn't because I'd softened. It was because I couldn't let my anger derail my life. My drafting table was still here, and I had three original pieces for a brand collaboration due next week. A one-point-two-million-dollar contract. I wasn't about to jeopardize that over a move. It was 2:43 AM. I woke up unable to breathe. My chest was tight, each inhale a struggle, a thin wire pulling taut in my throat. Cotton was curled up next to my pillow, her fur tickling my lips. I scrambled out of bed and rushed to the bathroom, splashing cold water on my face. A drop of blood, then another, hit the white porcelain of the sink. A nosebleed. I stuffed some tissue up my nose and went back to the bedroom. Frederick was fast asleep. His phone screen lit up. A new message. From Sophie. "Thank you for sticking up for me today, Frederick. Sometimes, knowing Cotton is still with you makes me feel like we're still connected, you know?" It was followed by a heart emoji. I placed the phone back where it was. The tissue was soaked through. I replaced it with a fresh one. The streetlight outside cast a glow into the room, making Cotton's eyes shine in the dark. She tilted her head, looking at me, so innocent. She didn't know she was the string. One end tied to Frederick, the other to Sophie. And I was just the inconvenient knot tied in the middle. 2 The doorbell rang early Saturday morning. I wasn’t even out of bed yet. By the time I stumbled into the living room, wrapped in a robe, Sophie was already sitting on our sofa. Cotton was curled in her lap, her tail swaying gently. She was wearing a linen housecoat. My linen housecoat, the one that had been hanging on the hook in my bathroom. "Cotton scratched Sophie's clothes, so I let her borrow yours," Frederick explained, poking his head out from the kitchen. Three breakfast plates were set on the coffee table. Eggs Benedict, avocado toast, and pour-over coffee. All of Sophie’s favorites. My oat milk latte was made with whole milk. I'm lactose intolerant. After three years of living together, he remembered every detail of Sophie's palate but couldn't remember that whole milk would make me sick. Sophie saw my swollen eyes and immediately set the cat down, standing up. "Ava, I'm so sorry! Did Cotton bother you again? I can put her in her carrier if you want." Her voice was soft, her eyes brimming with apology. Frederick quickly stepped in. "Cotton’s never been in a carrier. It’ll stress her out, and the vet bills for that are even worse." He turned to me. "Why don't you take one of your pills, Ava?" The cat's stress was more important than my allergic reaction. I sat down and reached for the latte. But Sophie was faster. She picked up the mug from the coffee table and took a long drink of water. It was my mug. The one with the stardust pattern I’d hand-painted myself. A one-of-a-kind piece. She smiled after her drink. "This mug is so pretty." Frederick chimed in, "Ava painted it. I'll have her make one for you, too." No one asked me if I wanted to. I went to my workspace to get my draft illustrations. Sophie followed me. She stood behind me, watching for a moment, her eyes lighting up. "Ava, you're so talented! Frederick sent me your new 'Moonlight Jellyfish' series, and I tried copying it for practice, but I just can't get the same feeling." My hand, holding the drafts, froze. The Moonlight Jellyfish series. The core visual for next month’s brand collaboration launch. The contract explicitly stated, "Under no circumstances shall the work be disclosed in any form prior to the official launch." I turned and looked at Frederick. He was on the sofa, scratching his nose. "Sophie's learning illustration, so I thought she could use your work as a reference. It's not like she's using it commercially. It's no big deal." The confidentiality clause of a $1.2 million contract was "no big deal"? The doorbell rang again. Frederick's mother had arrived. The first person she hugged was Sophie. "Sophie, you've gotten so thin! It must be hard living all by yourself." Then, she glanced at me. "Oh, Ava's here too." I didn't answer, heading to the kitchen to pour her a cup of tea. In the living room, Frederick’s mother held Sophie’s hands, chatting warmly. "You two were such a perfect match. If only Frederick hadn't been so focused on his career back then..." She glanced my way and trailed off. She didn't have to finish. I knew the rest. The rest was: he wouldn't have settled for someone else. Before she left, Frederick's mother pulled him aside. "The company's brand launch is next week. Bring Sophie with you. It's not easy for her out there on her own. You should help her network with people in the industry." Frederick nodded. "Okay." I stood in the kitchen doorway. I had drawn every single visual for that launch. Seven months, twelve original pieces. No one had asked if I was going. Sophie stayed for dinner. She and Frederick stood side-by-side in the kitchen, laughing about old stories of raising Cotton. The cat weaved around her legs, purring. She bent down, scooped Cotton into her arms, and kissed her. The scene was perfect. Standing there in the kitchen, she looked like the lady of the house. I retreated to my bedroom and shut the door. My phone buzzed. It was my best friend, Zoe, with a screenshot. It was an Instagram post from Sophie, dated three days ago. The photo showed the floor-to-ceiling window of her new apartment, bathed in sunlight. A cat tree stood by the window. Cat toys were scattered nearby. The caption: "Finally got the new place all set up. The sunlight is perfect for all-day napping." Her apartment was pet-friendly. Fourteen months. Every single "the landlord won't allow it" was a lie. I heard the jingle of the cat's bell from the living room. And Sophie’s voice as she left. "Frederick, today was so wonderful. It felt just like old times." She was right. This home had always been their "old times." I was just a temporary guest. 3 Monday. Three days until the brand launch. I put the final stroke on the last piece at my drafting table. Twelve original collaboration pieces. Seven months of work. Each one was hand-drawn with a 0.03mm pen, each with a collector's value in the six figures. The entire contract was worth $1.2 million. I stretched, rubbing my aching fingers. The door opened. Frederick walked in, with Sophie trailing behind him. "Ava, the company decided to add a last-minute showcase for an emerging artist at the launch. We want to give Sophie a chance to display some of her practice pieces." He walked up to my table, his tone casual. "We'll just use the last twenty minutes of your exhibition slot. It's a great opportunity for her to get some exposure." "No," I said, flatly. Seven months of my heart and soul. Not even for twenty seconds. Frederick frowned. "Ava, can you see the bigger picture for once? Sophie is just starting out. What's the harm in helping her out?" Sophie lowered her head. "It's okay, Frederick. If it's inconvenient for Ava, we shouldn't bother her. I'll find another opportunity..." Her voice trailed off as she turned to leave. Frederick sighed, watching her go, then turned back to me. "See? Now look how you've made her feel." I ignored him and began carefully gathering my originals. Just then, Cotton slipped into the studio from somewhere. She leaped onto my drafting table. I reached out to lift her down. The cat, startled, kicked out with her back legs, her claws digging into the table's surface. Her claws raked across three of the twelve originals I had laid out to dry. Deep gashes tore through the paper, severing the delicate ink lines. They were ruined, beyond repair. I stood there, frozen. Seven months. Every single line drawn by hand, one by one. Sophie rushed in from the doorway and scooped up the cat. "I'm so, so sorry! Cotton didn't mean to do it!" she sobbed. Frederick's first move was to check the cat’s paws, turning them over and over to make sure she wasn't hurt. Only then did he look at the shredded artwork on my table. "Can you fix them?" "No." "Then just print out digital copies to replace them. The client will never know the difference." He said it so calmly. The originals had a six-figure collector’s value. The prints were worthless. But to him, there was no difference. I said nothing. That evening, the head of the brand called me. Her voice was ice. Three of my line-art illustrations, she said, were "highly similar" to a submission in a competition for new artists. She asked me if I had plagiarized the work. I told her it was impossible. She sent me the side-by-side comparison. The name of the "new artist" was Sophie. The submission date was two weeks before I had delivered my final drafts. She had used the files Frederick had secretly sent her to enter a competition in advance. The brand representative's words were sharp. "Ms. Reed, this raises a serious dispute about originality. We have to suspend the collaboration and launch an investigation." The $1.2 million contract was frozen. I called Frederick. In the background, I could hear Sophie’s voice. "Thanks for taking me to get Cotton's paw checked today." He was dropping her home. The cat's paw was more important than my $1.2 million contract. I didn't waste words. I sent him the recording of my call with the brand. He was silent for a full five seconds. "I'll handle this," he said finally. "Sophie wouldn't do this on purpose. She just doesn't know the industry rules. I'll talk to her. Don't worry." He hung up. I stared at the three ruined originals and the "contract suspended" notification on my phone. Seven months of work. Three years of a relationship. And he wanted to brush it all away with a simple, "She didn't mean to do it."
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