Audio By Carbonatix
There are moments in life when love arrives gently, almost without warning. That was how it began for Arthur and Lucy. The connection felt easy from the start, laughter came naturally, conversations flowed without effort, and for a while, everything felt right. It was the kind of beginning that makes you believe you have finally found something worth holding onto.
Daniel gave himself fully to it. His time, his energy, his presence, nothing felt like too much. He showed up in the ways he knew how. He spent money where he could, bought gifts not because Lucy asked for them, but because he wanted her to feel valued. He wanted her to know she mattered. In the beginning, she seemed to appreciate it. The gestures were received warmly. There were smiles, gratitude, moments that made the effort feel mutual.
But slowly, something shifted.
The warmth began to fade in ways that were difficult to explain. Messages went unanswered. Calls were no longer returned. Sometimes, days passed without a word, even though Lucy appeared active elsewhere, moving through life as though nothing had changed. When responses came, they were brief and distant, like someone speaking from far away.
Arthur tried to understand. He told himself Lucy was busy. He made excuses for the silence. He convinced himself that love required patience, that consistency would somehow restore what once existed. So he stayed. He kept giving. He kept reaching out, even when it felt like his words were landing in empty space.
There were nights when the weight of it all became too heavy. Nights when confusion turned into quiet pain. Moments when the absence of reassurance felt louder than any argument. Loving someone who had already begun to withdraw emotionally, without ever saying goodbye, created a constant state of uncertainty, a painful search for answers that never came.
What hurt the most was not only the silence, but the growing realisation that while Arthur was still pouring everything into holding the connection together, Lucy’s emotional investment had shifted elsewhere. Loving someone who no longer loves you back has a way of making you feel invisible, foolish, and deeply alone.
Eventually, the truth became unavoidable: the love was no longer there.
When it finally surfaced, Lucy admitted that she appreciated the things Arthur had done, the gifts, the effort, the care. But appreciation is not love. And while that admission brought a sense of clarity, it also confirmed what his heart had already begun to understand.
So Arthur let it be.
He stopped fighting for something only one side seemed committed to. He chose distance, not because it was easy, but because holding on was costing him more than he could afford emotionally. He learned that no amount of effort, sacrifice, or consistency can force love to remain where it no longer exists.
Sometimes, people don’t leave loudly. They don’t explain. They don’t offer closure. They simply withdraw, slowly and quietly, until all that remains is the ache of realizing how much was given to someone who had already let go.
Lucy was worth Arthur’s time. Truly.
But love should never make someone feel foolish for caring.
And when promises fail and hearts break, sometimes the bravest thing a person can do is walk away, with dignity intact.
******
The writer is an online journalist and a freelance graphic designer with The Multimedia Group.
Email: prince.adu-owusu@myjoyonline.comand Linkedin@ https://www.linkedin.com/in/prince-adu-owusu/
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