
After He Chose a Younger Girl
Chapter 1
I've always been methodical about cleaning our apartment, a habit Jackson found endearing if slightly obsessive. Every Saturday morning while he was at the gym, I'd transform our shared space from lived-in comfort to pristine order. The ritual calmed me, providing structure to counterbalance the unpredictability I'd known growing up in foster care. Today was no different—except it would change everything.
The vacuum hummed against the hardwood floor as I worked my way around our gray sectional couch. Jackson had splurged on it when we moved in together three years ago, insisting we needed something comfortable enough for our movie marathons. I smiled at the memory as I lifted the cushions to vacuum underneath.
That's when I saw it—a flash of bright pink lace wedged deep between the cushions.
"What the hell?" I muttered, setting aside the vacuum and reaching for the fabric.
It was underwear. Cheap, garish lingerie that I would never wear. My taste ran to elegant silk and cotton, not synthetic hot pink with tacky rhinestones.
I held the foreign object between my thumb and forefinger, a cold feeling spreading through my chest. The rational part of my brain immediately began cataloging possibilities: a mix-up at the laundromat (we didn't use one), a joke gift from a friend (none that would do this), or the most obvious—another woman.
Jackson wouldn't. Not after five years. Not after pursuing me so relentlessly despite his family's objections to our age difference. Not when we were discussing marriage plans after his graduation next month.
I carefully placed the underwear on the coffee table and sat down, my cleaning forgotten. The apartment suddenly felt too quiet, the silence pressing against my eardrums. I tried to recall if Jackson had been acting differently lately. He'd been busier with his senior project, coming home later, more distracted when we talked. I'd attributed it to graduation stress.
After thirty minutes of circular thinking that led nowhere productive, I moved to his laptop on the dining table. We had an open-device policy—no passwords between us, nothing to hide. I opened his food delivery app, scrolling through recent orders.
There it was. Multiple orders to a university dormitory address, all for expensive sushi and wine that Jackson had mentioned casually as "study group meetings." But the recipient name wasn't Jackson's. It was Ayra Grant.
"Ayra Grant," I said aloud, testing the name on my tongue. It tasted bitter.
I opened a new browser tab and searched social media for the name. It didn't take long to find her—a college senior at Jackson's university with a public profile full of filtered selfies and inspirational quotes about deserving the best in life.
My breath caught as I scrolled through her photos. The resemblance was uncanny—she could have been me ten years ago. Same heart-shaped face, same warm brown eyes, same wavy dark hair. But fresher, younger. Just past twenty, according to her profile.
A cold clarity settled over me as pieces clicked into place. The late nights. The sudden disinterest in our usual intimacy. The way he'd started mentioning how good I looked "for my age"—a compliment that never felt like one.
I was still staring at her photos when my phone buzzed with a notification. A friend request. From Ayra Grant herself.
My hands trembled slightly as I accepted it, giving me access to her private posts. I didn't have to scroll far to find what I was looking for—photos of expensive dinners at restaurants Jackson claimed he couldn't afford to take me to, a close-up of a silver bracelet I recognized as one Jackson had claimed he'd lost last month.
The caption under the most recent post read: "Some men know how to treat a woman right."
I set down the phone and looked at the pink lace underwear still lying on the coffee table like evidence at a crime scene. The apartment we'd made our home suddenly felt foreign, contaminated. Seven years younger than me or not, I had believed Jackson when he said age was just a number. Now I wondered if that number had finally caught up with us.
I didn't cry. Instead, I felt something hardening inside me—a resolve I hadn't needed since my days in the foster system, when I'd learned that the only person I could truly count on was myself.
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