He Left Me, But I Paid the Price / Chapter 3: Settling Old Scores
He Left Me, But I Paid the Price

He Left Me, But I Paid the Price

Author: Norma Fisher


Chapter 3: Settling Old Scores

His friend snorted: “Now you want to pay her back after all these years? What about interest?”

The joke stung, but I forced a smile. Some wounds never really close.

Eli shot him a glare.

The look he gave could’ve frozen water. For a second, I saw the old Eli—the one who’d stand up for me, no matter what.

“Don’t mind him,” Eli said. “You don’t need to pay me.”

He tried to brush it off, but I could hear the strain in his voice. We both knew it wasn’t that simple.

I scratched my head. “I have to.”

It was more than money. It was about closure. About drawing a line under everything we’d been.

Back then, I spent Eli’s money like it was nothing. When he bought me stuff, I took it for granted.

I’d never thought twice about letting him pick up the check, never questioned where the money came from. We were a team, or so I believed.

I thought we were family. His money was mine, and someday, mine would be his.

We’d talked about sharing everything—bank accounts, dreams, even the future. I’d believed it all.

But now, we’re strangers. Gotta settle the books.

It felt transactional, but maybe that’s all we had left. A final reckoning before we both moved on.

Eli never gave me his account, but I still went to the bank and got a statement.

I stood in line, nervously tapping my foot, the teller giving me a polite but puzzled smile. It was a small town; everyone knew everyone’s business. I just wanted to get it over with.

Next day, I worked up the nerve, brought my card, and went to the hospital.

I rehearsed what I’d say, practiced in the mirror, tried to make it sound casual. My stomach was in knots the whole drive over.

But his room was empty.

The bed was made, flowers wilting on the windowsill. No sign of Eli, just the faint scent of antiseptic and something sweet—maybe the ghost of his cologne. I stood there for a minute, not sure what to do next.

Honestly, I knew he wouldn’t take it. I just wanted an excuse to see him again. Pathetic, I know.

I told myself it was about money, but really, I just wanted to see his face one more time. Maybe say goodbye the right way.

But he didn’t even give me that. The moment he saw me, he vanished.

He was always good at slipping away, leaving before anyone could ask him to stay.

Sometimes I wonder. What did I do wrong?

I replay every argument, every silence, trying to find the moment things broke. Maybe there wasn’t just one. Maybe it was a thousand little cracks I never saw coming.

I never yelled, never made a scene. Just how much does he hate me, to dodge me like that?

It’s a special kind of pain, being ignored by someone you’d have set yourself on fire for.

I never wanted drama, just answers. But Eli never gave me those.

“Honestly? Guys hate it more when a girl won’t let go. Like sticky tape you can’t shake off—it’s just gross.”

My friend’s voice was sharp, cutting through my pity party. She always said what everyone else was too polite to mention.

At the bar, my friend downed her whiskey sour and tapped my forehead. Hard. “I’m talking about you, girl.”

She leaned in, eyes narrowed, the kind of friend who’d drag you out of a burning building or throw you in the lake if you needed a wake-up call.

“Sometimes I want to crack open your head and see what’s inside. How can you be hung up on a guy who’s no good?”

She shook her head, exasperated, but I knew she cared. Her tough love was the only thing that ever got through to me.

I swirled my wine and protested, “First, I’m not obsessed with love. I’ve never loved anyone but Eli. Second, he’s not a bad guy. He was actually really good to me.”

I tried to keep my voice steady, but it wobbled at the edges. It was the truth, or at least the version I still clung to.

She rolled her eyes. “Seriously? After all these years, you still haven’t wised up. Hopeless. You should be buried alive.”

She laughed, but there was an edge to it. I just grinned, letting her words wash over me. I’d heard it all before.

I just smiled. What else could I do?

Every one of my friends has scolded me for not thinking straight.

They mean well, but they don’t get it. Not really. Love makes fools of us all, but I guess I’m the biggest fool of the bunch.

And every time, I’ve told them—I know what I’m doing. Even if I don’t.

I’m not obsessed. Eli really was good to me once.

I hold onto that memory, even when it hurts. Sometimes, it’s all I have.

“That’s what every girl says. But look—he cheated, slept with someone else in your place, blocked your calls, you begged him to come back, waited outside his bar for a week, and he never showed.”

Her voice was gentle now, not judgmental. She was just tired of seeing me hurt.

“You don’t get it. Without Eli, I wouldn’t have made it to college. Might not even be here.”

I stared into my wine, remembering late nights in our tiny apartment, Eli counting crumpled bills on the kitchen table, promising me a future I couldn’t see for myself.

I took a big gulp of wine. Over the years, my tolerance has grown, but tonight I’d mixed red, white, and beer, so I felt the buzz.

My head spun, the world going soft around the edges. I didn’t mind. It was easier to talk when things were a little blurry.

I lay on the bar, tugged my friend’s sleeve, and pointed at the male dancers on stage: “Four years of college tuition and living expenses—all from Eli, dancing every night.”

The bar was loud, music thumping, lights spinning. I watched the dancers, half-jealous, half-amused. Eli had done what he had to, and I never asked questions I didn’t want answered.

He made two grand a month. Five hundred for rent, five hundred for food, the rest went to me.

I did the math out loud, surprising myself with how easily the numbers came. It was a survival game, and Eli played it for both of us.

“He actually got into college, but my folks wouldn’t pay for me to go. Eli said his school wasn’t that great anyway, so he’d work and send me instead.”

He’d shrugged it off, told me not to worry. But I knew it cost him more than he let on.

“When I graduated, my parents wanted me to marry for a dowry. Eli borrowed from everyone he knew to scrape together the money.”

He went door to door, called in every favor, just to make sure I had what I needed. It wasn’t about tradition—it was about giving me a shot.

So I’m Eli’s wife. He even paid, so I have to marry him. It’s not like a real dowry or anything, but that’s how it felt.

The music thumped on, but my friend was out cold, sprawled beside me.

She snored softly, head on the sticky bar top. I smiled, grateful for her stubborn loyalty.

I was quiet for a long time. Then I said, “It’s normal for Eli to want out. I dragged him down too long.”

The words floated into the noise, lost in the haze of neon and spilled drinks. Maybe I believed it, or maybe I just needed an excuse.

My friend was out. I finished my wine and paid the tab on my phone.

The bartender nodded, sliding me my card back with a wink. I tucked my friend’s purse under her arm, made sure she was safe, then stood up, swaying a little.

As I got up, I glanced toward the bar entrance—and my heart skipped. No way.

You may also like

Left Behind for His First Love
Left Behind for His First Love
4.7
Caleb promised me forever, but when success called, he took our son and his first love—leaving me with nothing but broken vows and a silent house. In my last life, I waited years for a family that never came back; this time, I’ll walk away before they can shut the door on me again. He chose ambition and another woman—now I choose myself, no matter how much it hurts.
He Loved Her, Not Me
He Loved Her, Not Me
4.9
He loved her—just not me. On the night of our fourth anniversary, I watched Carter Langley slip further away, his heart claimed by another while our marriage became nothing but a headline. I was supposed to smile, play the perfect wife, and pretend not to notice the pitying looks or the silence that suffocated our home. But pain demands a witness. When betrayal cuts deeper than bone, how far will a woman go to make her absence felt? Carter’s indifference is legendary—until my final act leaves him with a haunting question and a secret he can never bury. If love is dead, what’s left for the living to regret?
He Left Me Ruined, Then Returned
He Left Me Ruined, Then Returned
4.9
I fell for Julian Pierce the summer I turned eighteen—and by the time he left me ruined on my front porch, my world was already crumbling. Ten years later, I’m no longer the golden girl of Maple Heights, but the secret nobody dares mention, forced to survive as a kept woman in a city where dignity costs more than rent. When Julian—now a war hero—returns and crosses my path at the Magnolia Club, old wounds flare in front of the powerful Hamilton family, and I become the target of their wrath. But humiliation is only the beginning. In a world ruled by secrets, betrayal, and debts that can never be repaid, how much must I lose to protect the one person I still love? When your name is only whispered in shame, is there any way to rewrite your story before the final page turns?
Bought by the Heiress, Left for Her Crush
Bought by the Heiress, Left for Her Crush
4.7
Noah was always Rachel’s loyal backup, her doormat with a price tag, clinging to scraps of her glittering world. She paid him to be her boyfriend, but his heart broke every time she chased after the boy she truly wanted. When she finally tossed him aside—apartment and all—Noah must decide if he’ll stay her paid shadow or risk everything for a love that won’t leave him behind.
He Loved My Sacrifice, Not Me
He Loved My Sacrifice, Not Me
4.7
Natalie gave up everything—even her Olympic dreams—to protect Caleb, only to discover years later that he never loved her, only repaid a debt. Betrayed by the boy she trusted most and humiliated by his cruel friends, she finally reads the journal that shatters her last hope. Now, with his first love back in town, Natalie must choose: cling to the ghost of his gratitude, or walk away and reclaim her pride before she loses herself forever.
He Left Me Blind—And Watched
He Left Me Blind—And Watched
4.9
He broke my heart on my birthday—and made it public. When Mason, my childhood sweetheart, showed up at my twenty-fifth with another woman on his arm, the world I’d built around his promises shattered in front of everyone who ever believed in us. I was the girl who lost her sight to save him, the one his late mother wanted as a daughter-in-law, but tonight, that wasn’t enough. Betrayed and humiliated, I’m left clinging to the last shreds of dignity—until Ryan Whitaker, my once-forgotten childhood protector, steps in to defend me and offers a glimmer of hope I thought I’d lost forever. But as secrets unravel and my chance at healing resurfaces, I have to wonder: can I learn to love again—or will the scars Mason left behind blind me to my own second chance?
Bought His Love, Lost His Heart
Bought His Love, Lost His Heart
4.7
I paid his rent, funded his dreams, and still, Sean gave his heart to someone else. Now, as a new, eager sugar baby tries to buy my affection with charm and ambition, I wonder if I’m just another transaction in this city of deals. When love is bought and loyalty is always for sale, who’s really using who?
She Sold Our Love for a Condo
She Sold Our Love for a Condo
4.7
Five years of love—gone the moment my fiancée tasted money. Her family’s run-down trailer became a golden ticket, and suddenly I was just another bidder for her heart. When she demanded $150,000 or five condos to marry her, I realized: I was nothing but a price tag, and the girl I loved was already gone.
He Cheated With My Best Friend While I Was Pregnant
He Cheated With My Best Friend While I Was Pregnant
4.7
Three years into my marriage to Chicago’s golden boy, I found out I was pregnant—then caught him in bed with my best friend. Humiliated, betrayed, and blamed by everyone, I faced an impossible choice: keep a baby for a man who never truly loved me, or finally break free. This time, I’m divorcing him and choosing myself, no matter what anyone says.
I Lost Him, But Not My Memories
I Lost Him, But Not My Memories
4.9
Love doesn’t end when someone leaves—it lingers in the empty spaces, the silences, the things unsaid. For Maya, Adam was more than an ex-boyfriend—he was half her history, the echo in every memory, the ache she couldn’t shake. When news of his sudden death reaches her, Maya is pulled back to Maple Heights and into the orbit of his grieving family, forced to navigate the blurry line between ex and almost, between old wounds and what might have been. As she sorts through the pieces of their on-again, off-again love, Maya must confront the envy, regret, and longing that kept them entangled—and decide what it means to remember, and to let go. But when every goodbye feels unfinished, can you ever truly move on? Or does some part of you always belong to the past?
He Killed Me, But I Won’t Stay Gone
He Killed Me, But I Won’t Stay Gone
4.9
My own father strangled me to death—but that’s not where my story truly begins. Emily Walker spent her whole life as the family scapegoat, blamed for her father’s failures and haunted by the loss of the only person who loved her: her mother. After years of tiptoeing around Leonard’s rage, Emily claws her way out with nothing but determination and her mother’s last words echoing in her heart. But freedom comes with a price, and Leonard isn’t done with her—not when there’s money on the line, and not when the past refuses to stay buried. When your own blood is your biggest threat, how far would you go to break the cycle? And what if the only way to survive is to become the villain in your own family’s story?
He Cheated, I Gave Away the Ring
He Cheated, I Gave Away the Ring
4.7
On my birthday, my fiancé’s mistress crashed the party—pregnant and desperate, while the whole town waited for me to break. Instead, I slipped the engagement bracelet onto her wrist and walked out, leaving Maple Heights and my old life behind. But when Ethan tries to win me back with public humiliation and a new 'apology' bracelet, I’m forced to choose: reclaim my dignity, or let him—and my family—destroy what’s left of my heart.