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And the Sky Broke Open When Love Forgot Where to Belong by Elen Ryn Mora 50

And the Sky Broke Open When Love Forgot Where to Belong by Elen Ryn Mora 50

Chapter

Nora fell ill with a high fever after being caught in the rain. It lasted three full days

The moment she recovered, Chase dragged her to a banquet at the Thai Imperial Hotel in 

Bellwood

At the entrance, she saw Camila, wearing the exact designer gown Nora had begged Chase for- countless timesbut never once received

Their eyes met, the air sparking with unspoken hostility

Mr. Whitmore, Mrs. Whitmore,the concierge said politely, per the hotel’s cultural policy, male guests may only enter with their legal spouse. If you wish to bring a mistress, she must 

kneel and bow at the door.” 

Camila pouted and threw herself into Chase’s arms

Chase! I’m not kneeling for anyone! And I don’t want to be your mistress either, hmph!” 

Nora couldn’t hold back

Too late to worry about that now, isn’t it?” 

Camila’s eyes welled 

up 

with tears in an instant

Chase” 

Chase hesitatedjust for a momentthen turned to the concierge and said flatly

Camila Rae is my wife.” 

Nora froze where she stood, staring at him in disbelief

Chase” 

Just go along with it,he murmured, barely moving his lips. Camila’s young. Sensitive. She couldn’t possibly kneel in front of everyone.” 

And Nora could

Seeing the color drain from her face, Chase made an effort to coax her

35.21

You’ve always wanted that Peninsula Manor house, haven’t you? I’ll buy it for you tonight. All you have to do is enteras my mistress.” 

The guests nearby began whispering, their voices thick with mockery

Wasn’t Mr. Whitmore’s wife the heiress of the Langston family? When did that change?” 

Right? The Whitmore Group only survived that crisis back then because he married into the Langstons. And now he’s turning his back on herfor a mistress?” 

Tsk, honestly? That little canary looks more like the real wife. That Langston girl’s just pathetic.” 

Nora’s face went pale. 

She had never felt this humiliated

Nora drew in a steady breathand pulled out their marriage certificate

Camila was forced to kneel. She stayed on the floor the entire meal, waiting on Chase and Nora

Her dolllike face crumpled in misery, tears trembling at the edge but refusing to fallenough to make anyone’s heart ache

Nora remained expressionless. But Chase was visibly distressed

Gritting his teeth, he hissed

Nora, are you satisfied now? To publicly shame Camila like this??” 

Nora bit her lip

The marriage certificatewas signed willingly. I never forced you. I’ll use it whenever I see fit.” 

Halfway through the meal, Chase kicked the table over and stormed out, carrying Camila in his 

arms

The looks that followed Norapity, mockery, disdainwere enough to drown her

Hor face turned pale again. She lost all appetite and quickly left

35.21

The moment she stepped outside the hotel, her world went black

When she came to, she was tied up in an underground parking garage

Her knees were tied down to the cold concrete, forcing her into a humiliating kneel

A group of masked men circled her, snapping photos from every angle

Nora panicked

What the hell are you doing?! Let me go! I’m Chase Whitmore’s legal wife! If he finds outhe’ll never let you get away with this!” 

But the men only sneered

A moment later, her phone lit up. It was Chase

Do you admit fault now?” 

Nora froze

What?” 

His voice on the line was cold and emotionless

I told you. As my contractual wife, you were supposed to behave. You embarrassed Camila in public today. So now, I’ll punish youtenfold.” 

She knelt for ten minutes

You’ll kneel here for ten hours. On concrete. Alone.” 

Nora felt like her heart had plunged into an icy ravine. Her chest tightened. She held back tears and tried to speakbut was cut off by a saccharine voice on the other end

Chase, ten hours is a bit much, isn’t it? I only knelt for ten minutes and my knees were already bruised” 

What? You’re bruised?His tone changed instantly. Let me seeThat bitchshe deserves worse. Break her kneecaps. Do it now.” 

35.21

The next moment, Nora heard the sound of kissingfollowed by the tear of a condom wrapper

Then came the painwhitehot and blinding, shooting straight through her legs

A sharp, blinding pain surged through her legs

Her kneecaps had been shattered

And the Sky Broke Open When Love Forgot Where to Belong by Elen Ryn Mora

And the Sky Broke Open When Love Forgot Where to Belong by Elen Ryn Mora

Score 9.9
Status: Ongoing Type:
And the Sky Broke Open When Love Forgot Where to Belong by Elen Ryn Mora

“The Woman Who Fell for an Iceberg”

They called her the untamable beauty of Zephyra.
Olivia Westbrook—a name that tasted like champagne and danger.

With a single glance, she could silence a room. Her beauty wasn’t delicate or soft; it was the kind that burned. People said men lined up like moths to her flame, each ready to lose everything just for her attention. But Olivia never cared. She moved through high society like a wild wind—dazzling, distant, untouchable.

Until the night her best friend made a careless bet that would rewrite her life.

“Liv, if you can make my uncle Damien fall for you, I’ll give you any of my cars. Name your prize.”

Olivia laughed, amused.
Damien Harrington—the man in question—was a legend.
CEO of Harrington Group, brilliant and ruthless, his mere signature could shift the market. He was also famous for his frost: cold, disciplined, impossible to tempt. No woman had ever lasted in his orbit long enough to melt him. Rumor had it he didn’t even look twice at anyone at the endless charity galas thrown in his name.

For Olivia, that made him irresistible. She’d never failed a challenge.
She accepted the bet with a confident smile and no hesitation.


The Beginning of the Bet

What she didn’t expect was fate’s cruel sense of humor.

On the very first night she crossed paths with him, she found Damien not in his usual composed state but drugged—his control stripped away, eyes glazed with pain and heat. She’d only meant to tease him, to start the game. Instead, she became his unwilling salvation.

That night changed everything.

By dawn, the infamous iceberg of the business world had cracked. And from that single accident, a storm began—three years of passion that consumed them both.

Behind closed doors, their chemistry was explosive.
In his office with its floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city.
In his jet’s private cabin high above the clouds.
In places no one dared to imagine.

The man who was once distant now couldn’t get enough of her. And Olivia—so sure of her independence—found herself falling. Slowly, deeply, helplessly.

She told herself it was just fun, just the thrill of winning.
But love crept in quietly—through small gestures, quiet moments, and the rare softness in his eyes when he looked at her.

She began to believe that maybe she had done the impossible.
That Damien Harrington, the untouchable king, might actually belong to her.


The Sapphire Cufflink

Three years passed like a fever dream.
Then, one ordinary night, the illusion shattered.

After a stolen hour together in his car, Olivia noticed one of his sapphire cufflinks had fallen onto the seat. Smiling, she picked it up, intending to return it before leaving the hotel. She could already picture his small, almost imperceptible smirk when she handed it to him.

Down the dim hallway, she heard laughter behind a half-open door—the low, masculine sound of Damien’s associates. Then came a voice she knew too well, teasing and sharp.

“Damien, just finished with her, huh? Olivia’s always been a wildcat. Around you she turns soft. Makes me want to steal her away.”

More laughter followed.

And then someone asked the question that froze her blood.

“When are you going to marry her?”

For one suspended heartbeat, the world stopped.
Olivia’s breath caught.
Her heart, suddenly weightless, waited for his answer.

It came cold and clear, the same voice that had once whispered against her skin.

“It was just a fling. Why would I marry her?”

Ten words—light, casual, devastating.
They cut through her like ten shards of ice.

Silence followed, awkward and heavy. Even his friends seemed stunned.
Someone finally murmured, almost disbelieving:

“No way. Three years? You can’t still be hung up on your first love…”

First love?
The words rang in Olivia’s ears, foreign and cruel.
He has a first love?

Before she could process, Damien spoke again, his tone indifferent but tinged with something dangerous—nostalgia.

“When we broke up, she asked for three years. Time to try other people. If we still felt the same after that, we’d get back together.”

“She’s always been dramatic,” he continued. “Insecure. I went along with it. It’s been three years. I’ve tried.”
“She should be back by now.”

The floor seemed to tilt beneath Olivia’s feet.
Her body went cold, her fingertips trembling.

Three years.
The same three years she had spent giving him everything—her time, her pride, her heart—had all been just a placeholder.
He had been waiting for someone else.
And she… she had merely filled the gap.


The Confrontation

A hot roar filled her ears. Before she realized it, her hand was on the door.

Bang!
The heavy door slammed open.

Conversation stopped. Heads turned.
And there she was—Olivia Westbrook, standing in the doorway, her eyes wild, face pale, beauty turned feral with pain.

The laughter died instantly.
At the far end of the table sat Damien Harrington, immaculate in his tailored suit, posture perfect, eyes calm. He didn’t even flinch.

That calmness—the same stillness that once made her feel safe—now gutted her. If he felt anything for her, even an ounce, he would have looked startled, guilty, human.
But he only watched her, unreadable.

She took a step forward.
Her heels clicked like gunshots on marble.

“Damien,” she said, her voice raw, trembling. “Don’t you have anything to say to me?”

His gaze didn’t waver.

“Nothing to say,” he replied, voice smooth and detached. “Just what you heard.”

Each word sliced cleanly, leaving no room for hope.

“We were just a fling. I thought you knew that.”

Gasps rippled around the room. Olivia’s vision blurred.
But he wasn’t done.

He reached into his jacket, pulled out a sleek black card, and placed it on the table, the motion deliberate and slow.

“Here. A hundred million dollars.”

Her eyes widened.

“Consider it payment for the last three years at my beck and call.”

Then came the faintest curve of his lips—mocking, final.

“From now on, it’s over between us.”

He stood, ready to walk away as if she were a business deal concluded, a file closed and archived.


“But I’ve Fallen for You”

Rage, disbelief, heartbreak—all collided inside her.
As he brushed past, she reached out instinctively and clamped her hand around his wrist.

Her grip was iron, trembling yet unyielding. Her skin felt cold, bloodless.
He stopped but didn’t look at her.

And then came the words—shaking, desperate, tearing through the suffocating air.

“But… I’ve fallen for you!”

Her voice cracked, raw and naked.
Every eye in the room turned toward her, but she didn’t care. The proud, invincible Olivia Westbrook—who had never begged anyone for anything—was now pleading for the one thing she couldn’t buy.

“Damien, I’ve fallen for you!”

Memories flooded her mind like a cruel montage:

The winter morning he’d knelt to slip warm slippers onto her frozen feet because she was too lazy to move.
The night of her appendectomy when she’d opened her eyes to see him slumped beside her hospital bed, dark circles under his eyes.
The thunderstorms she feared—how he’d always pull her into his arms, whispering that the sound couldn’t hurt her.

She’d mistaken those moments for love.
Every laugh, every glance, every brush of his fingers—she’d built a world out of them.

And now, with one sentence, he had torn that world apart.

“Damien,” she whispered, voice trembling. “You’re so cruel.”

For a fleeting instant, something flickered in his eyes—pity, perhaps—but it vanished just as quickly when his phone buzzed.


The Message

He glanced at the screen, and Olivia caught the name before he could hide it.

[Damien, it’s been three years. I tried, but I still only love you. Let’s get back together.]

The words glowed like fire in the dim room.

Everything inside Olivia went silent.
So she was back—the first love, the woman who had left him with promises of reunion. The reason Olivia had been nothing more than a temporary distraction.

Damien stared at the message for a heartbeat longer, then sighed softly.
When he finally looked at Olivia again, his gaze held no warmth, no guilt—only weary detachment.

He reached for her hand, pried her fingers from his wrist one by one.

“Sorry,” he said quietly. “I haven’t fallen for you—ever.”

And with that, he turned and walked away.


The Fall

The sound of his footsteps echoed until it faded into silence.
Olivia stood frozen, her chest heaving, tears burning hot trails down her cheeks. Around her, no one moved—his friends stared at the floor, too cowardly to meet her eyes.

The black card still gleamed on the table between empty glasses and half-finished cigars.
A hundred million dollars.
Three years of love priced, packaged, and dismissed.

She laughed—harsh, hollow, disbelieving. The sound of someone who had just watched her own heart being auctioned off.

Slowly, she walked to the table, picked up the card, and snapped it cleanly in half. The sharp plastic edges cut into her palm, drawing blood. She didn’t even feel it.

“Keep your money, Damien,” she whispered to the empty room.
“You can’t pay off love.”

Then she left—head held high, though her legs trembled with every step.

Outside, the cold night air slapped her face, the city lights blurring through her tears. She finally let herself collapse against the hood of her car, her shoulders shaking silently.

For three years she had believed she’d tamed the unbreakable man.
But in truth, she had only been a chapter in his waiting story.


The Aftermath

Back in the suite, Damien’s phone buzzed again, but he ignored it. He poured himself a drink, staring out the window at the glittering skyline of Zephyra. The taste of her name lingered at the edge of his thoughts, though he’d never admit it. He told himself he felt nothing.

Down in the street below, Olivia’s car sped away into the darkness. She didn’t know where she was going—only that she needed to escape the weight pressing on her chest. Each passing streetlight carved streaks of gold across her tear-streaked face.

In that moment, she made a silent vow.
Never again would she be anyone’s experiment.
Never again would she mistake control for affection, or attention for love.

The next time Damien Harrington saw her, she promised herself, she wouldn’t be the woman who begged for his heart. She would be the woman who made him regret losing hers.


The Symbolic Ending

When dawn finally touched the city, Olivia was still awake—standing barefoot on her balcony, wind whipping her hair. Her mascara had run, but her eyes were fierce, defiant.

She took a long breath, letting the icy air fill her lungs.
Somewhere inside, amid the pain, a spark was lighting—a spark that would one day become fire.

Love had made her weak.
Betrayal would make her strong.

And though Damien had walked away without looking back, she knew something he didn’t: no man walks away from Olivia Westbrook unscarred.

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