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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 3

Nathan called on a Tuesday.

I was at my desk, halfway through a revised proposal, when my phone lit up with his name. I picked up on the second ring.

"Braelyn." His voice was the same as always — direct, no preamble, the voice of a man who billed by the hour and meant it. "Just confirming you're still our point of contact for the signing next week. My team wants continuity on this one. They've gotten used to you."

I felt something warm move through my chest. Four months. Weekly calls. Two site visits to their distribution center in Tacoma, where I'd stood in a loading bay in a hard hat taking notes on their bottlenecks. A proposal I'd rebuilt three times until it fit them like a glove.

"I'll be there," I said. "Same as always."

"Good." A pause. "You've been solid on this, Braelyn. I want you to know that."

I thanked him. I set the phone down.

I should have known then. The warmth in my chest should have been a warning. Good things, in this office, had a shelf life.

---

The reassignment notice came Thursday morning.

Formal memo. Jerry Graham's signature at the bottom, Chelsea's name in the body. *Seniority protocols. Client relationship continuity. Effective immediately.*

I read it twice. Then I read it a third time, the way you re-read something when your brain keeps rejecting the words.

Nathan called that afternoon.

"What happened?" He didn't sound angry. He sounded confused, which was somehow worse. "I got an email from someone named Howard. Said she'd be handling the account going forward. I thought we had an agreement."

"We did," I said.

"So what changed?"

I stared at the memo on my screen. At Jerry Graham's signature. At the phrase *seniority protocols*, which meant nothing and covered everything.

"I don't have an official answer for you right now," I said. "I'm sorry, Nathan."

He was quiet for a moment. "That's not good enough, Braelyn."

"I know."

He hung up. I sat with the dead line for a few seconds. Then I opened the notebook.

---

The contract closed on Friday.

I knew because Chelsea sent the email at four-fifty-eight, two minutes before end of day, timed for maximum visibility. *Thrilled to announce the successful close of the Meridian supply chain contract. Grateful for the incredible effort of my team.* Three paragraphs. CC'd to the regional director, to Jerry Graham, to the VP of sales in Chicago.

My name did not appear once.

I read the email. I saved it to the drive. I logged it in the notebook. Date, time, subject line, distribution list, notable omissions.

Then I closed my laptop and went to get coffee.

---

Dash found me at the break room counter.

I heard him before I saw him — that particular cadence of footsteps, unhurried, deliberate, the walk of a man who had already decided how the conversation would go.

"Hey." He stopped beside me, close enough to be casual. He had his own coffee. He'd already poured it. This wasn't a coincidence. "No hard feelings about the Meridian account, right?"

I looked at him.

His face was doing the thing. The careful, reasonable thing. The expression he wore when he wanted to be witnessed being decent.

"Chelsea's just better positioned for those kinds of clients," he said. "Seniority, relationships, that kind of thing. It's not personal."

Not personal.

Four months of calls. Two trips to Tacoma. A proposal I rebuilt from scratch at eleven o'clock on a Wednesday night while he was asleep in the next room. Nathan Cole asking for me by name.

Not personal.

I looked at Dash's face. The practiced softness of it. The way his eyes were already moving past me, already calculating whether this conversation was going the way he needed it to.

Something happened then. Not anger — I'd felt anger before, and this wasn't it. This was quieter. Cleaner. Like a room after all the furniture has been moved out and you can finally see the shape of the walls.

I picked up my coffee.

I threw it in his face.

Not a splash. Not a fumble. I picked it up and I threw it, and it hit him full across the cheek and jaw, and the sound it made was very satisfying.

The break room went silent.

Then the floor went silent.

Dash made a sound — something between a gasp and a curse — and grabbed the edge of the counter. Coffee dripped from his chin onto his collar. His eyes went wide, and for one unguarded second, the careful expression was completely gone. There was nothing underneath it but shock.

Good.

I set the empty mug down on the counter.

Chelsea was already moving. I heard her heels on the floor before I turned — that metronome click, faster than usual. She came through the break room doorway and stopped, taking in Dash's face, the mug, the stillness of the entire open floor watching through the glass.

Her expression cycled through several things very quickly. Then it settled into something cold and controlled.

"Lawrence." Her voice was quiet. Dangerous. The voice she used when she wanted everyone to hear her being restrained. "I think you need to take a breath."

I turned to face her.

The whole floor was watching. Twelve, fifteen people. Marcus Webb at his desk, pen down, not pretending to look away. Priya Anand near the printer. Two of Chelsea's team members frozen by the copier.

I looked at Chelsea Howard — her red blazer, her ring catching the light, the small private smile that had finally, finally dropped — and I spoke quietly enough that she had to hold very still to hear me.

"You can steal my clients," I said. "You can steal my boyfriend." I held her gaze. "But you cannot make me disappear."

The silence in the room had a texture to it. Dense. Held.

Chelsea's jaw tightened. Something moved behind her eyes — not quite fear, but the thing that lives next door to it.

I picked up my bag from the break room chair.

I walked to my desk. I took the notebook. I took the encrypted drive from my coat pocket. I took nothing else.

Then I walked to the elevator, pressed the button, and waited.

The doors opened. I stepped in.

I did not look back.

But in the reflection of the elevator doors, just before they closed, I saw the floor behind me — the stillness of it, the watching faces, Chelsea standing in the break room doorway with coffee on her boyfriend's collar and nothing left to say.

I straightened my cuffs.

The doors closed.

I took out my phone and called Fallon.

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