Chapter 128: Chapter- 128. (I Caught Her).
It was her.
She stood in the doorway like she belonged there, poised, calm, almost regal in her silence.
Her presence filled the space in a way it never used to.
The first thing I noticed was her hair.
A soft brown shade now, catching the light in a way that made her look different, older somehow.
Her clothes were modest but elegant in a quiet, commanding way.
This wasn’t the same woman who used to sit nervously, twisting her fingers when things got tense. No. This Elena carried herself like she had seen the worst of life and survived it.
My throat felt tight. "Elena," I managed to say, though my voice came out lower, rougher than I meant.
Her eyes met mine, calm and cold at the same time. "Dave."
Just my name in that off tone. No warmth, no trace of the softness I used to hear in her voice.
Then her gaze moved to Nicole and Grace. "Nicole. Grace."
Nicole’s brows drew together. "So it was you," he said slowly, his tone half-question, half-accusation. "You sent the message?"
Nicole knew about Elena after our visit. And when he did not ask me, instead, he confronted Grandpa Albert, and he told him everything. So, there was no shock on his face, just a raised eyebrow, but Grace.
From looking at he white face, it was obvious she did not know anything. For her, Elena was still a person who betrayed them and ran off with Josh.
Elena tilted her head slightly, that small, unreadable smile flickering across her face. "Yes. I sent the message. To all three of you."
Elena’s gaze swept over Grace, calm and piercing, and for a fraction of a second, something in Grace snapped.
"You!" Grace hissed, stepping forward so fast it almost caught me off guard.
"After everything, you dare show your face here?!" Her hand shot out instinctively, aiming for Elena in anger, her feet carrying her forward like a coiled spring, but Elena was faster.
In one fluid, almost effortless motion, she ducked, and Grace’s fingers barely brushed air. The momentum carried Grace forward, making her lose balance, nearly face-first onto the polished floor.
Time slowed.
But Elena didn’t flinch. She reached out with one hand, catching Grace firmly around the shoulders.
And then, with a controlled, sharp jerk, she pulled her back to her position, forcing Grace to stand straight again.
Grace’s feet hit the floor like a drumbeat, knees trembling from the sudden correction.
Elena’s eyes were icy. "Control yourself," she said softly, but there was no softness in it.
Every word struck like steel. "Or you will hurt yourself before you hurt anyone else."
Grace blinked, chest heaving, hands still trembling slightly at her sides. Her purple hair fell across her face, but the defiance in her eyes didn’t waver.
She had not expected to be physically overpowered, especially not by Elena, the girl she thought had been fragile, broken, gone.
Nicole shifted in his seat, clearly impressed but wary. Then he shot a warning look, making her all silent and back away. For a moment, I almost screamed at Grace that she had the audacity to her again. That she was the sole reason that we found her this late.
But then I controlled as Elena stepped further into the room, her heels clicking softly against the polished floor.
Every sound echoed. She didn’t rush to answer, just let the silence hang for a beat longer before she said, "Relax. It’s just a conversation that’s long overdue."
Nicole crossed his arms again, expression unreadable. "You picked the worst possible place for that conversation."
"I know," Elena replied simply.
"That’s the point." That shut everyone up. Even Grace stopped tapping her foot.
I couldn’t stop looking at her. Everything about her was the same, and completely different.
The way she spoke, the way she held herself. There was no hesitation, no fear. She wasn’t the Elena who avoided confrontation or let people walk all over her.
This was someone who had been burned and decided to stop being fragile. Someone who had rebuilt herself, piece by piece, into something unbreakable.
Nicole exhaled, rubbing the back of his neck. "So, what’s this about then?"
Elena’s gaze didn’t waver. "It’s about clarity, and setting things right," she said casually, as if it were a matter of fact.
The way she said it sent a chill through the room. Grace frowned, but didn’t speak. Nicole looked wary now, no longer irritated.
And me? I just stood there, completely still, feeling the weight of what was coming because I could tell that this was not some emotional reunion or attempt at peace.
This was a reckoning.
And as Elena took her seat at the table, calm and composed, her eyes flicked up to meet mine, and that look told me everything.
Whatever happened next... none of us were walking out of that room the same.
***
Elena’s pov:
The look on their faces was worth every second of this.
Stunned.
Confused.
Uncertain.
That flicker of disbelief curling across their features. Grace’s wide eyes, Nicole’s raised eyebrows, Dave’s clenched jaw.
It all made a small, fleeting satisfaction bloom inside me. For a moment, I let myself feel it.
Not for revenge.
Not to humiliate.
This wasn’t about winning or about making them feel small. This was about taking back control of the parts of my life they had fractured, piece by piece.
That’s why I chose this restaurant. The same one where everything had gone wrong. The private room where the lies had started, where betrayal had grown like poison.
The starting point where I had lost myself, where they had lost me. I wanted them to remember. To feel the weight of those moments again, even if none of them could say it aloud.
I had sent the message earlier that morning.
As they arrived, I watched them. Grace first, with that impulsive spark that had always made her unpredictable. Nicole followed, cautious, calculating. And Dave with his calm, measured mask.
The actor who thought he could control every room he entered. They all reacted exactly as I thought they would. Their surprise was genuine. Their tension was palpable.
Then Grace snapped. I saw it before she did, a quick step forward, a hand lifted, a sharp, angry lunge.
She wanted to strike, to hurt, to make her anger physical.
It was reckless and fast, carried entirely by emotion, but I was faster. I ducked.
Her fingers missed me by inches, and the momentum carried her forward, off balance, nearly collapsing onto the polished floor.
That’s when I caught her.