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After He Chose Her Over Me, I Took Everything Back Novel Cover

After He Chose Her Over Me, I Took Everything Back

Chelsea dropped the file on my desk at five-forty on a Friday. "Portland. Monday morning meeting with Hawthorne Logistics. You're flying out tonight." I stared at the folder. Then at her. "Tonight is my anniversary." "Then I guess you'll have to celebrate when you get back." She was already turning away. Her heels clicked on the polished floor like a metronome. "Three days. Don't come back without the contract." I opened my mouth. Closed it.
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Chapter 2

Dash moved his things out on a Sunday.

By Monday morning, he had already found his new posture. Three desks from mine, close enough that I could hear him laugh at something Chelsea said through the glass wall of her office. Close enough that when he walked to the break room and she followed, I could see exactly where his hand landed — low on her back, fingers spread, a gesture so practiced it made my stomach turn.

He stopped by my desk at nine-fifteen.

"Hey." He leaned against the partition, coffee in hand, voice pitched at a frequency designed to sound gentle. "How are you doing? With everything."

I looked up from my screen.

His face was arranged into something careful. Concerned. The expression of a man who wanted witnesses to see him being decent.

"Fine," I said.

"Good." He nodded slowly, like my answer required processing. "I told a few people we ended things amicably. I hope that's okay. I just — I don't want it to be weird around here."

I held his gaze for exactly two seconds. "It's not weird."

"Good," he said again. "I really do wish you the best, Brae. I mean that."

He walked away. I watched him go. He paused at Marcus Webb's desk, said something that made Marcus give a short, uncomfortable laugh, then kept moving.

I reached into my bag and pulled out the notebook.

---

I'd bought it sophomore year of college. Dark green cover, college-ruled, the kind you find in a drugstore for two dollars. I used to write things in it I never said out loud — observations about Dash, mostly. The way he looked when he was thinking hard. Lines I wanted to say to him but couldn't find the moment for. Embarrassing, in retrospect. The kind of thing you do when you're twenty and convinced you've found the person.

The last entry before this week was dated three years ago. *He remembered I hate cilantro. He ordered around it without asking. I don't know why that made me want to cry.*

I read it once. Then I turned to a fresh page.

At the top I wrote the date. Below it: *9:15 a.m. D.R. stopped at my desk. Stated we ended things "amicably." Stated he "wishes me the best." Performed for the open floor. Witnesses: Marcus Webb, Priya Anand, two members of Chelsea's team whose names I'm getting.*

I wrote it the way I'd learned to write everything these past few years. Flat. Precise. No adjectives.

Then I kept going.

I went back through my email and pulled every thread where Chelsea had forwarded my completed work to a client under her own signature. Every meeting recap where my analysis appeared under her name. Every commission report where the numbers had been quietly redistributed before they reached HR. I had screenshots already — I'd been saving them to the encrypted drive for weeks, a habit I'd developed without fully understanding why, the way you sometimes prepare for a disaster you can't yet name.

Now I understood why.

I printed nothing. I saved everything to the cloud, to the drive, and to a second drive I kept in my coat pocket. I logged each item in the notebook with a case number I invented myself. Date. Description. File name. Location of backup.

The notebook filled faster than I expected.

I also started recording.

Not secretly — Washington was a two-party consent state, and I knew it. But I had a habit now of setting my phone on the desk face-down before any conversation with Chelsea or Dash, and saying clearly at the start of any meeting, "I'm recording this for my own notes, hope that's fine," in a tone so mild that no one ever objected. Chelsea had waved her hand at it twice. She didn't think I was a threat. That was the most useful thing about me, from her perspective. I had never looked like a threat.

I was starting to think that had been my greatest advantage all along.

---

The team meeting was Thursday at two.

Chelsea stood at the front of the room with a slide deck and a laser pointer and the particular energy of someone who had been looking forward to this.

"Quarterly numbers," she said, clicking to the first slide. "Let's talk about where we are."

The room was the open-plan conference area — glass on two sides, visible to the entire floor. Twelve people around the table. Dash at the far end, a legal pad in front of him that he wasn't writing on.

Chelsea moved through the slides. Regional performance. Team benchmarks. Individual metrics.

She paused on mine.

"Lawrence." She said my name the way you'd say a word you'd already decided the meaning of. "Forty-one percent of target. Six weeks running." She tilted her head. "I want to be transparent with this team. When someone consistently can't keep up with the pace we've set here, it affects everyone."

Someone shifted in their chair. I heard it.

"I think we all want to be supportive," Chelsea continued, her voice taking on a texture that was almost kind, which was worse. "But support has limits when the gap keeps widening."

I looked at her.

She looked back at me with the small, private smile she'd been wearing since Monday.

I did not look away. I did not look down at the table. I did not reach for my water glass.

I held her gaze and I let her finish.

Around the table, people were studying their laptops, their phones, the middle distance. Marcus Webb had his pen pressed flat against his legal pad, not moving. Dash was looking at the window.

When Chelsea moved to the next slide, I uncapped my pen.

I wrote: *Thursday. 2:07 p.m. Team meeting, open-plan conference room. C.H. cited my Q3 numbers — numbers reflecting accounts she reassigned and commissions she redirected — as evidence of underperformance. Direct quote: "when someone consistently can't keep up with the pace we've set here, it affects everyone." Witnesses: full team, twelve people. Recording: active.*

I capped the pen.

I straightened my cuffs.

The meeting ran another forty minutes. I took notes on everything.

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