
After Friends' Cruel Betrayal
After Friends' Cruel Betrayal Chapter 1
The envelope feels heavy in my hands, though it contains nothing but paper and the last of my dignity. Three years of weight condensed into this single moment. I sit in the corner booth of the coffee shop, the cracked vinyl seat familiar against my threadbare coat—the only decent thing I own anymore, though "decent" is generous. The fabric has thinned at the elbows, and there's a stain near the hem I can never quite wash out, no matter how many times I scrub it in the mortuary's industrial sink.
My fingers trace the envelope's edge, and I catch sight of my hands. Calloused. Rough. The skin around my knuckles has thickened from three years of kneeling on cold mortuary floors, preparing the dead for their final rest. I used to have soft hands. Piano player's hands, my mother called them. Now they look like they belong to someone else entirely.
I touch the scar on my forehead without thinking, a habit I've developed whenever anxiety creeps in. The tissue is still slightly raised, a permanent reminder of the day I slipped on the mortuary floor during my first month. Six stitches. I'd been so tired I hadn't seen the wet patch.
Reid and Elijah are twenty minutes late. I check my phone again, though I heard it the first twelve times I looked. No messages. They're probably just running behind. They've been so busy lately, both of them working hard to rebuild after I helped clear their debts. Pride warms my chest despite the coffee shop's chill. Three years of sacrifice, but it was worth it. They're my oldest friends. My only friends, really, after I walked away from my father's world.
I've been rehearsing what I'll say when they arrive. Maybe we could celebrate, just the three of us, like old times. Remember when we used to sneak into the campus music hall after hours, and I'd play piano while they'd make up ridiculous lyrics? Before everything got complicated. Before Ophelia and the plagiarism incident that shattered our college friendships. Before the debts that nearly destroyed them.
But we can start over now. Clean slate. No more obligations hanging over our heads.
The door chimes. Reid walks in first, Elijah behind him. My heart lifts, and I start to stand, but something in their body language stops me. They're not smiling. Reid's eyes scan the coffee shop with the impatient air of someone checking off an errand. Elijah won't meet my gaze at all.
"Hey," I say, hating how small my voice sounds. "I got it. The final payment."
Reid slides into the booth across from me. Elijah takes the seat beside him. Neither of them removes their coats. They're not staying long, then.
"Great," Reid says, extending his hand.
I pass him the envelope. He doesn't open it to check, just pockets it immediately. The gesture feels wrong, too casual for the moment. This is the end of three years. Doesn't it deserve more acknowledgment than this?
"I thought maybe we could celebrate," I venture, trying to inject warmth into the frigid atmosphere. "You know, now that it's all done. We could grab dinner, or—"
"Can't," Reid interrupts. He exchanges a glance with Elijah. "We've got plans."
"Oh." The word falls flat. "Maybe tomorrow, then?"
Elijah shifts in his seat. "We're pretty busy, Nina."
Something cold settles in my stomach. "Right. Of course. You've probably got a lot going on now that you're getting back on your feet."
Reid stands abruptly. "Yeah. Thanks for this." He pats his pocket where the envelope sits. "We've gotta run."
They're already moving toward the door before I can respond. I watch them go, confusion clouding my thoughts. No gratitude. No relief. No emotion at all, really, except vague impatience. Like I'm an inconvenient transaction they needed to complete.
I sit there for a long moment after they leave, staring at the cooling coffee I'd ordered to make the meeting feel less transactional. The waitress refills it without asking, and I don't have the energy to tell her I don't want more.
Then I see them through the window.
Reid has his phone out. He's laughing. So is Elijah. They're standing right outside, not even bothering to walk away first. Something compels me to move. I leave money on the table—my last few dollars until next week's mortuary paycheck—and push through the door.
The November air bites at my face as I approach them. They don't notice me yet. Reid's voice carries clearly in the crisp afternoon.
"Yeah, Ophelia, we got the last payment." His tone is light, celebratory. "Three years—can you believe the little snitch actually did it?"
The world tilts. Little snitch. The words from college, when I'd exposed Ophelia's plagiarism. When I'd found my compositions submitted under her name for the scholarship competition.
Elijah's laugh cuts through my paralysis. "Your idea was brilliant. She really thought she was saving us."
The sidewalk seems to drop away beneath my feet. Saving them. Thought. Past tense. As if it had never been real.
"What did you say?" My voice doesn't sound like mine. It's hollow, distant.
They turn. Reid's expression doesn't even flicker with guilt. Instead, something like satisfaction crosses his face. The mask is off. He doesn't need to pretend anymore.
"You heard us," he says simply.
My hands start to shake. "The debts. Your family businesses. You said—"
"There were never any debts, Nina." Reid's voice is flat, almost bored. "Come on. You can't actually be this naïve."
The scar on my forehead begins to throb. "Three years. I gave you everything for three years."
"And we appreciated it," Elijah adds, though his tone suggests otherwise. "Ophelia's really enjoyed all those designer bags. The jewelry. That trip to Paris last spring? Your April through June payments funded that."
I can't breathe. The air has turned solid in my lungs.
Reid checks his phone again. "Look, it was revenge. You ruined Ophelia's reputation in college when you exposed her. You made us look bad by association. She wanted payback, and honestly?" He shrugs. "You deserved it. Three years of mortuary work seems like fair payment for being such a self-righteous snitch."
Pedestrians flow around us. Someone bumps my shoulder. I don't move.
"We've got dinner reservations," Reid continues. "Treating Ophelia with the final installment. Thanks again for your contribution to her happiness."
They walk away. I hear them laughing.
I stand there as the city moves around me, a statue in a threadbare coat. My calloused hands hang at my sides. Three years. Every dollar I earned scrubbing death from cold metal tables. Every meal I skipped. Every night I cried from exhaustion. Every time I touched my mother's bracelet—the only thing she left me—and promised myself it was worth it because I was helping the people I loved.
It was all entertainment. All revenge. All a lie.
The weight of my coat becomes unbearable. I look down at my ruined hands, and the truth settles over me like a burial shroud: I have nothing. No savings. No dignity. No friends. Just scars and calluses and the echo of their laughter fading into the November afternoon.
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