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The Night the Rivers Sang to the Stars and Forgot Their Own Names by Kaelion Dres Marven 20

The Night the Rivers Sang to the Stars and Forgot Their Own Names by Kaelion Dres Marven 20

 

Chapter 20 

 

A metallic taste rose in his throat, and Ethan desperately wanted to pull Eleanor into his arms

Honey, stop joking with me. You’re my wife, I’m your husband” 

He kept repeating the word honeyin desperation

Even Eleanor’s good temper had its limits

If your memory is failing you, Mr. Cole, I can show you the divorce papers again.” 

I didn’t sign it!” 

Eleanor looked at him coldly. Even if you didn’t sign, our marriage was void the moment you married Chloe over- 

seas.” 

Mr. Cole, I hired a lawyer to file for divorce a long time ago.” 

The settlement for an amicable divorceyour mother signed it.” 

Ethan froze

He suddenly remembered those days when he was sick. His mom had him sign something, telling him Eleanor would come back if he did

So she tricked him into signing this

Overwhelming anger washed over him. Eleanor, I didn’t sign it! My mom tricked me!” 

I’d rather go to jail than sign that!” 

Eleanor watched him coldly. For the years she was married to him, no one in his circle wanted them to be together

She had put up with so much from his mother for his sake

But all that compromising and tolerance, all that love, was repaid with nothing but a brutal betrayal

I have a new husband now. If you feel any guilt at all, then please, don’t bother me.” 

Ethan had imagined so many possibilities

He could accept Eleanor hating him, resenting him, even hitting him. But he could never accept her not loving him

That was far more painful than death

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Honey, stop playing around. I know you’re still mad at me. I was wrong, I really was. I’ve already dealt with Chloe. I’ll never do something like that again.” 

If you still don’t feel secure, we can see a lawyer as soon as we get back. I’ll give you everything I own. Honey, let’s just go home, okay?” 

He forced a smile that looked worse than a grimace and tried to take Eleanor’s hand

Julian timed it perfectly, stepping in front of him. He looked down at him, his eyes icecold

Mr. Cole, am I invisible to you

Calling another man’s wife honeyover and over. Is that how the Coles raise their children?” 

Who the hell do 

you think 

you are

I’m talking to my wife. Who the hell are you to say anything?” 

Ethan was trembling all over

Honey, let’s go home” 

He cautiously looked past Julian to Eleanor

The next second, he was met with a pair of utterly indifferent eyes

She raised her hand, tightly clasped with Julian’s, and gave him a cruel smile

Ethan, he’s my husband. If he doesn’t have the right, then you have even less.” 

I don’t think our future conversations about the site relocation will be productive. To avoid wasting your time, I’ll ask my boss to assign someone else. We won’t be seeing each other again.” 

After saying that, she didn’t spare Ethan another glance and pulled Julian away

Ethan was about to go after her when a sharp pain shot through his head

He fought through it and took a few steps before his body gave out, and he collapsed heavily on the floor

In the last second before he lost consciousness, he saw Eleanor turn her head at the sound

But she only turned her head

Even after seeing him on the ground, she just looked, then turned away indifferently. 

The eyes that once overflowed with love for him no longer held his reflection

The next time she saw Ethan was a few months later

Lucy tearfully told her that Ethan was terminally ill and didn’t have much time left

Eleanor was stunned when she heard the news. She remembered him collapsing in the hotel hallway that day, and her 

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But Julian quickly wrapped his arms around her waist and asked jealously, You feel sorry for him?” 

Eleanor, you already agreed to give us a try. You can’t just dump me for your dying exhusband. It’s not fair.” 

After Julian pulled her away that day, he had confessed his feelings to her

But she was too upset at the time and turned him down

But Julian kept pestering her every day, begging her to say yes

Then one night, coming home from work, she saw him waiting in the dark with a bottle of freshly made Rose Tea for her

Her heart softened, and she agreed to give him a chance

Eleanor frowned. What are you talking about?” 

I just didn’t expect him to be dying” 

The man she had been entangled with for 10 years was just going to die

On the day Ethan was close to the end, Eleanor went to see him after all

The once vibrant and confident man was now painfully thin, lying in the hospital bed and staring blankly at the ceil- ing

I thought you’d never come to see me again.” 

Eleanor looked at him, her eyelashes fluttering. I despise you now, but you saved my life when we were children, Ethan. I’m still grateful for that.” 

Ethan’s pale lips twitched as he looked at her. Eleanor, do you still have any feelings for me at all?” 

Eleanor shook her head

Pain shot through Ethan’s heart as if it had exploded, and his eyes turned red. I’m dying, and you won’t even lie to 

me” 

Eleanor lowered her head and remained silent

Ethan looked away, telling himself to be content. At least he could see her one last time before he died. That was enough

You should goI’ve left you something in my will. Don’t refuse it. Just think of it as my way of making it up to our unborn child.” 

Take it and leave. Don’t come see me again.” 

Eleanor’s heart ached, but she still nodded without saying a word

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Times had changed. Everything was in the past. The Eleanor of today was no longer the girl who would wait for him

The moment Eleanor stepped out of the room, she heard Ethan’s voice wishing her well from behind

Eleanor, you have to be happy.” 

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The Night the Rivers Sang to the Stars and Forgot Their Own Names by Kaelion Dres Marven

The Night the Rivers Sang to the Stars and Forgot Their Own Names by Kaelion Dres Marven

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The Night the Rivers Sang to the Stars and Forgot Their Own Names by Kaelion Dres Marven

Summary 

Eleanor Vance was known in the New York art-restoration community as a quiet, gifted woman—devoted to her work, graceful in demeanor, and deeply admired for her integrity. To the public, she lived a dream life: married to Ethan Cole, one of the city’s youngest and most powerful CEOs, a man who appeared to love her beyond measure. People whispered about their romance as if it were a fairytale. Yet behind this image of perfection, Eleanor’s heart carried a private wound, a betrayal that had silently dismantled the world she once believed in.

The chapter opens in the laboratory of a cultural-relics research institute. Eleanor stands among her colleagues, carefully brushing dust from an ancient artifact. The head researcher, watching her, asks a question that freezes the room:

“You’re really going to follow in your mother’s footsteps and go to Egypt to restore cultural relics?”

Eleanor lowers her eyes, fingers tightening around the small brush in her hand. Her answer is quiet but firm:

“Yes.”

The next question hits closer to her heart.

“Does Ethan Cole know?”

She shakes her head. “He doesn’t know.”

The researchers exchange uneasy glances. Everyone in New York knows about Ethan Cole’s obsession with his wife. He is the kind of man whose affection has no limits. To think that Eleanor could disappear into the Egyptian desert for three to five years—cut off from communication—seems almost impossible. One researcher voices what everyone is thinking:

“Would he really agree to that?”

Eleanor’s gaze drops again. What she wants, in truth, is the exact opposite of his approval. She wants distance. She wants silence. She wants to end everything that ties her to him.

Around her, whispers begin to ripple through the room.

“Eleanor’s leaving Ethan?” someone murmurs. “No way. To marry her, Ethan knelt before Harold Cole for three days and nights—his knees still bother him now.”

Another researcher adds, “He spent a billion renovating the institute just because she said the heat made her uncomfortable.”

“And when she got sick,” someone else says softly, “he took care of her day and night, refused to eat, and even donated one of his kidneys.”

Their voices blend into a chorus of disbelief. How could Eleanor leave a man like that?

But Eleanor remains silent. She knows the version of Ethan Cole the world worships: the ruthless businessman turned gentle husband, the man whose fierce love is reserved for only one woman—her. But she also knows another side, the one no one sees. The side that shattered her trust a month ago.

It began with an anonymous email. Ninety-nine photographs were attached. In every one of them was Ethan Cole—the same man who once promised Eleanor eternal devotion—locked in intimate embraces with another woman. The woman was Chloe Jensen, Ethan’s young intern secretary, and more painfully, the impoverished student Eleanor herself had sponsored for five years.

The photos were explicit, leaving no room for denial. They showed the pair in offices, in hotels, on private islands—everywhere Ethan and Eleanor had once shared memories. At first, Eleanor refused to believe what she saw. She thought someone was trying to sabotage the Cole Group by forging evidence of an affair. She hid the photos away, waiting for them to fade from her mind.

But one night, everything changed.

Ethan was on a business trip. Every night, no matter how busy, he called her to say goodnight. But that night, the phone stayed silent. Hours passed, then midnight came, and still no call. A cold unease crept into her chest. Unable to fight the dread, Eleanor took her car keys and drove straight to his company headquarters.

The elevator carried her to the top floor—the floor reserved for Ethan alone. When the doors opened, the lights were off. The office seemed empty. Relief washed over her. Maybe she had overreacted.

Then she heard it—a faint, rhythmic sound coming from deeper inside. She followed it, her heels soft against the marble floor. A door was slightly ajar. Through the narrow crack, she saw a man’s suit vest lying carelessly on the floor. Her breath caught.

She pushed the door open a little wider—and her world collapsed.

Ethan was there, his body pressed against Chloe Jensen’s, their silhouettes framed against the floor-to-ceiling window. The woman’s soft gasps mingled with his low, hoarse voice:

“Stay still. Don’t move.”

Tears streamed silently down Eleanor’s face. Her heart felt as if dull knives were carving it apart piece by piece. She couldn’t look away. She saw Ethan’s hands trace Chloe’s skin, saw him pull out a delicate necklace and clasp it around her neck with a tenderness that once belonged to Eleanor.

“Do you like it?” he murmured. “I bought it at the auction—just for you.”

That single moment destroyed everything Eleanor had believed in. The necklace he gave Chloe was the very one Eleanor had admired at that same auction. Ethan had once promised to buy her everything she liked. Now he offered that promise to another woman—the one Eleanor had mentored, sponsored, and brought into their lives.

Standing outside that door, Eleanor realized her marriage was already dead. The love she thought invincible had become nothing more than a beautiful lie.

Back in the present, in the institute, one of her colleagues notices how pale she looks. “Eleanor,” he says gently, “we’re not trying to interfere. But this project—once you sign the confidentiality agreement, you can’t go back. You’ll be isolated for years.”

Without hesitation, Eleanor picks up the pen. “I’ve made up my mind. I request the institute’s approval.”

Just as the ink dries, the door opens.

Ethan walks in, carrying a box of cake. His presence changes the air in the room—calm, confident, effortlessly charming. “Requesting approval for what?” he asks lightly, setting the cake down beside her.

He smiles, the same gentle smile that used to melt her heart. “Don’t overwork yourself,” he says, opening the box. “It’s your favorite—gardenia flavor. Freshly made.”

The researchers exchange knowing glances. “Who would’ve thought the cold CEO could be so caring?” one whispers.

Eleanor stares at the cake, her chest tightening with unbearable pain. If she hadn’t known Chloe lived right next to that bakery, she might have believed his kindness was genuine. But now she can see the pattern in everything he does.

She swallows her emotions and says quietly, “It’s nothing—just regular work.”

When they leave the institute together later that evening, Ethan goes to fetch the car. People passing by point and smile, whispering about how devoted he is—how lucky Eleanor must be. The billionaire who rushes to pick up his wife after every business trip, who never lets her lift a finger.

Eleanor forces a faint smile. They don’t know. They only see the surface, the glittering illusion. They don’t know that the same man who once vowed to love her alone has betrayed her again and again.

Standing by the curb, she realizes her hands are trembling. Her nails have dug into her palm so hard that tiny drops of blood appear. She opens her bag to take a tissue—and her phone buzzes.

It’s a message from the research institute:

[Ms. Vance, your application has been approved. We will send someone to pick you up for Egypt in ten days.]

Her vision blurs for a moment. She takes a deep breath, feeling both the ache of loss and the faintest glimmer of liberation.

The first chapter ends with Eleanor’s quiet decision—to leave New York, to leave Ethan, to vanish into the sands of Egypt where time and silence might finally erase what love had destroyed.


Deeper Summary (Character and Emotion Analysis)

The opening chapter of Eleanor Vance and the Sands of Separation establishes the emotional core of the story: betrayal, loss, and rebirth through escape. Eleanor’s decision to go to Egypt is not merely a career move; it is her act of survival, a desperate attempt to reclaim the self she lost in her marriage.

Her mother, we learn indirectly, once worked in Egypt as a restorer of cultural relics. Following in her footsteps symbolizes a return to roots, to a purer form of life untouched by deception. The irony is clear—while Eleanor restores broken artifacts for a living, her own life and marriage are in ruins. Her work becomes a metaphor for her emotional state: she will go to a land of ancient ruins to restore what time has shattered, perhaps hoping she can do the same with her heart.

Ethan Cole, in contrast, is portrayed as the archetypal powerful man with a dual nature. To the outside world, he is the perfect husband—devoted, romantic, protective. Every gesture reinforces this image: kneeling before his father for love, spending fortunes for his wife’s comfort, donating a kidney when she was ill. But behind closed doors, he is a man of appetites and control, whose affection has become possessive rather than pure. His relationship with Chloe Jensen reveals not only infidelity but a deeper moral decay.

Chloe herself represents betrayal of a different kind. Once a poor student whom Eleanor sponsored and guided, she becomes the vessel of Eleanor’s humiliation. Her involvement with Ethan transforms her from a symbol of gratitude into one of treachery. Her presence in the narrative deepens the pain—Eleanor isn’t just betrayed by her husband but by the young woman she helped rise.

The anonymous email that exposes the affair functions as the story’s inciting incident. Its precision—ninety-nine photographs—suggests calculation. Someone wanted Eleanor to know the truth, but in the cruelest way possible. The photographs, explicit and undeniable, force her to confront what she has long ignored: that love, when idealized too much, can blind.

The confrontation scene in the office is written like a cinematic climax within the chapter. The slow build—the silent walk, the crack in the door, the fallen vest—draws the reader into Eleanor’s pain. The physical detail of her tears hitting the floor underscores the helplessness of witnessing a betrayal you can’t interrupt.

When Ethan later arrives at the institute with the cake, the contrast between image and reality is excruciating. To everyone else, he is still the loving husband. Only Eleanor and the reader know the truth. This duality heightens the theme of appearances versus reality—a motif that likely continues throughout the novel.

Eleanor’s signing of the confidential project agreement is the emotional turning point. In that single act, she severs herself from the life she once lived. It’s both an escape and an act of defiance. She doesn’t confront Ethan or seek revenge; she simply chooses absence. The research mission to Egypt offers her anonymity, isolation, and time—a place where no one will know her as Ethan Cole’s wife.

The final text message from the institute confirms her departure. It also mirrors the impersonal tone of modern communication—cold, official, detached—just like the end of her marriage. The simple notification carries immense emotional weight: in ten days, she will leave everything behind.

Through this chapter, the author skillfully builds sympathy for Eleanor. She is neither naive nor weak; she is a woman who endures quietly, who allows truth to break her before she decides to rebuild. Her silence, her composure in front of colleagues, and her refusal to confront Ethan in public all underline her dignity. Yet beneath that calm exterior lies an ocean of grief.

Thematically, Chapter 1 intertwines love and betrayal, appearance and reality, ruin and restoration. The title’s emphasis on Egypt and cultural relics foreshadows a larger narrative about recovering what is lost—not just ancient treasures, but one’s own soul.

As the chapter closes, Eleanor’s world has shifted irrevocably. She is no longer the adored wife of New York’s prince but a solitary woman preparing to face the deserts of another continent. Her story, from this point forward, becomes one of rediscovery—whether through archaeology, memory, or the quiet strength born of heartbreak.

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