Follow
Chapters
Share
After He Loved Her, I Learned I Was Second Choice Novel Cover

After He Loved Her, I Learned I Was Second Choice

The restaurant had one Michelin star and no sign on the door. That was the kind of place Damian liked. You had to know it existed before you could find it. I wore a black dress, simple, fitted at the waist. The sapphire pendant sat against my collarbone the way it always did. Damian had given it to me for our third anniversary. He called it a one-of-a-kind piece. I touched it in the elevator on the way up, a habit I had developed over two years of wearing it every single day. Damian was already at the table when I arrived. He stood when he saw me, but his eyes moved past me almost immediately to the entrance.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The restaurant had one Michelin star and no sign on the door. That was the kind of place Damian liked. You had to know it existed before you could find it.

I wore a black dress, simple, fitted at the waist. The sapphire pendant sat against my collarbone the way it always did. Damian had given it to me for our third anniversary. He called it a one-of-a-kind piece. I touched it in the elevator on the way up, a habit I had developed over two years of wearing it every single day.

Damian was already at the table when I arrived. He stood when he saw me, but his eyes moved past me almost immediately to the entrance. He was waiting for someone else.

"We're having a guest tonight," he said. He pulled out my chair, but his attention was still on the door. "An old friend. She just got back from London."

Before I could ask, she walked in.

Chandler Romero was tall, with dark hair that fell past her shoulders in a way that looked effortless and probably was. She wore a cream silk blouse and gold earrings. She smelled like jasmine and bergamot.

I knew that scent. I wore it every day. I had worn it since college, long before I met Damian. It was a niche fragrance from a small perfumer in Brooklyn. I always thought it was a coincidence that Damian once told me he loved it. That he said it reminded him of someone.

He never said who.

Chandler smiled at me, polite and easy. "You must be Esme. Damian's told me almost nothing about you." She laughed like it was a joke. Maybe it was.

Damian pulled out her chair first. I noticed that. He poured her wine before mine. I noticed that too.

The dinner was three courses. I remember every one of them, not because of the food, but because of what happened between the plates.

Damian leaned toward Chandler when she spoke. Not a little. His whole body shifted, like she was a magnet and he was something that had no choice. He asked about London, about her work, about people I had never heard of. He laughed at things that were not particularly funny.

I sat across from them and ate my salad.

"Esme writes novels," Damian said at one point, almost as an afterthought. He turned to Chandler. "Romance novels. You'd like them. She has this habit of reading her drafts out loud to herself. You used to do that with your scripts, remember?"

Chandler tilted her head. "Did I?"

"You did. Sophomore year. In the library. You'd whisper the lines under your breath." He smiled at the memory. Then he looked at me. "You do the same thing. Isn't that funny?"

I set my fork down. "Funny," I said.

He didn't hear the flatness in my voice. Or he did, and it didn't register.

The main course arrived. Chandler folded her napkin into a neat triangle and set it on her lap. I watched Damian's eyes follow the movement.

"You do that thing with your napkin just like Chandler," he said to me. He said it warmly, like it was a compliment.

I looked down at my own napkin. I had folded it the same way. I always folded it that way. It was just how I did it.

But now I understood why he had noticed it five years ago, on our first dinner together. Why he had smiled at me across a table much like this one and said, "I like a woman who pays attention to the details."

He hadn't been talking about me.

Chandler ordered a glass of the Sancerre. Damian turned to me with a small, pleased expression. "She orders the same wine. Isn't that funny?"

I didn't answer. My hand went to the sapphire pendant at my throat. I had always thought it was unusual — the deep blue stone, the antique setting. One of a kind, he had said.

But now I looked at Chandler's bare neck, at the way Damian's gaze lingered there for just a moment, and a thought arrived that I could not push away.

This pendant was not made for me.

The thought was quiet. It didn't crash. It settled, the way sediment settles at the bottom of a glass. And once it was there, everything else began to settle with it.

The perfume. The habits. The way he had chosen me — not stumbled into me, not fallen for me, but chosen me, the way you choose a paint color that matches a swatch you already have in your hand.

Five years.

I had spent five years in a relationship he kept secret. I told myself the secrecy was sophistication. That powerful men needed discretion. That what we had was private, not hidden.

But sitting at that table, watching Damian refill Chandler's glass with the attentiveness he used to show me, I understood. I was not his partner. I was not even his second choice. I was a copy. A stand-in. A woman selected because she reminded him of the woman he actually wanted.

Chandler said something about a restaurant in Mayfair. Damian laughed. I excused myself to the restroom.

In the mirror, the sapphire pendant caught the light. I stared at it. I thought about every time Damian had touched it, adjusting it against my skin with his thumb. I thought about how tender that gesture had always felt.

Now I wondered if he had been looking at the stone or at me.

I washed my hands. I dried them. I went back to the table and finished my dinner.

I did not say anything unusual. I smiled when it was appropriate. I laughed once, at something Chandler said about the weather in London. Damian looked pleased that we were getting along.

The car ride home was quiet. Damian checked his phone. I looked out the window at the Manhattan skyline, all those lit-up buildings, and thought about how a city could be full of people and still feel like a place where no one knew your name.

Damian went to bed. I told him I wasn't tired.

I sat at the kitchen counter. I made a pot of Earl Grey in the proper pot, not a bag in a mug. I poured a cup and held it with both hands.

Then I started counting.

The perfume. He had complimented it on our first date. I thought he liked it because it was unusual. He liked it because it was hers.

The napkin fold. A small thing. But he had noticed it immediately, and I remembered the way his eyes had softened, like he was seeing something familiar.

The reading aloud. He used to stand in the doorway and listen to me read my drafts. I thought he found it charming. He found it familiar.

The pendant. A one-of-a-kind piece. I turned the phrase over in my mind. One of a kind. But not made for me. Made for her. Rejected by her. Recycled.

The secrecy. Five years, and I had never met his colleagues, never attended a company event on his arm, never been introduced as anything other than a friend. I told myself it was his preference. Now I understood. You don't introduce the understudy.

I drank my tea. I poured another cup. The apartment was silent except for the hum of the refrigerator and the distant sound of traffic far below.

By three in the morning, I had traced every detail. Every compliment that was actually a comparison. Every habit of mine he praised because it matched a habit of hers. Every moment I had mistaken for intimacy that was actually recognition — not of me, but of the woman I resembled.

The picture was complete. It was clear and sharp and irreversible.

I did not cry. I had spent five years giving this man my whole heart, and he had spent five years holding it up to the light to see if it looked like someone else's.

I found a notepad in the kitchen drawer. I picked up a pen.

I wrote three things:

The condo.

Ten million dollars.

A clean NDA.

I set the pen down. I folded the paper once and left it on the counter next to my empty teacup.

Then I went to the guest room, lay down on top of the covers, and closed my eyes. Not to sleep. Just to wait for morning.

You may also like

Abandoned by Unfaithful Husband Novel Cover
8.0
The Lincoln Center glittered like a diamond against Manhattan's night sky. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city lights winked at us, as if sharing in the celebration of Aurora Tech's most ambitious product launch to date. I smoothed the lapels of my white tailored suit, the one Alexander had called 'too severe' this morning. Too severe for the wife of a tech mogul, perhaps, but perfect for the co-founder who had poured three years of her life into developing the neural interface technology we were unveiling tonight. I caught my reflection in the polished chrome of a nearby pillar—my dark hair swept into a sleek chignon, pearls at my throat, the heirloom from my grandmother that Alexander always dismissed as 'old-fashioned.' The woman staring back at me looked confident, successful. If only she knew how hollow I felt inside. "Isabella, darling, you should be closer to the stage," Ava Chen, our marketing director, whispered as she passed by with a tray of champagne flutes. "It's your night too." I smiled tightly. "Alexander prefers to take the spotlight. I'm fine right here." The truth was, I'd grown accustomed to the shadows.
After Leaving, Her Three Brothers Beg For Forgiveness Novel Cover
9.5
Kathryn was the true daughter, but Jolene stole her life and set her up for ruin. After a brutal kidnapping scheme, Kathryn's loyalty to her brothers and fiancé was met with cruel betrayal. Narrowly escaping, she chose to cut all ties and never forgive them. Then she shocked the world: the miracle doctor for the elite, a top-tier hacker, a financial mastermind, and now the untouchable star her family could only watch from afar. Her brothers begged, her parents pleaded, her ex wanted her back-Kathryn exposed them all. The world gasped as the richest man confessed his love for her.
Babysitting Mr. Powers' Daughter Novel Cover
9.3
After a life-changing event, Grace found herself at the most luxurious hotel in Manhattan with the hope of getting a babysitting job. But the moment she stepped out of the elevator, her entire life changed track. And that was because of Dominic Powers, her employer, the father of a five-year-old. The man who possessed an air of prideful gloom, and appeared hard to approach, the man whose piercing ocean-blue eyes haunted her ever since their first, brief encounter. Will Grace be able to focus on babysitting his daughter? Or will she get distracted and intensely tangled with the irresistible Dominic Powers?
Everything But Love  Novel Cover
8.1
One contract. Two worlds. Zero room for the heart. ​Elena "Ellie" Morrison is a master of the mask. By night, she's the witty, guarded bartender at the city's most exclusive lounge. By day, she's a woman drowning in debt, fighting a losing battle against her brother's mounting medical bills and a past that haunts her every step. She doesn't have time for romance, especially not with a man like Alexander Hartley. ​Alexander Hartley is a man who buys what he wants. ​As the icy CEO of a global empire, Alex lives by logic, duty, and the rigid expectations of his powerful family. He's already engaged to a woman who matches his status-a marriage of convenience designed to secure his legacy. But when he sees the fire behind Ellie's eyes, he makes her an offer she can't afford to refuse: ​Become his mistress. He will pay for everything. But he will give her nothing. ​The rules are simple: No public appearances. No expectations. And absolutely no feelings. ​But as the lines between their agreement and their reality begin to blur, Ellie discovers that Alex is hiding more than just his engagement. Behind his storm-gray eyes lies a man as lonely as she is. In a world of gilded cages and corporate secrets, they must decide if they are willing to burn down their lives for the one thing that wasn't in the contract... ​Love.
His Contracted Temptation; Velvet Lies Novel Cover
8.2
She married him for safety. He married her for strategy. Neither expected obsession. Valeria Torres is a woman with no past-because she buried it. But when her fake identity lands her in the arms of Dante Morello, billionaire mafia heir and the man everyone fears, the game changes. He offers her a deal: a two-year marriage to clean up his image and silence his enemies. She agrees-until the ghosts she ran from kidnap her daughter and force her back into the life she burned to escape. Now, she has to outwit killers, deceive her husband, and survive the one thing she never planned for-falling for him.
I Canceled Our Wedding When He Chose Her Novel Cover
9.0
On the eve of our wedding, Alan's ex, Izabella, posted a picture of her sapphire engagement ring on Instagram. I gave the photo a closer look. It was the same ring Alan and I had designed together—one of a kind, crafted with my own hands. Now, it's on her finger. After pondering it all night, I calmly suggested we part ways the next morning. Alan, seemingly unmoved, said, "Inaya, we're about to tie the knot. Think it over. Don't make a decision you'll regret." "I won't." Later, Alan called me in the middle of the night, clearly drunk. "Inaya, where are you? You're not home." --- After Izabella's Instagram post, I told Alan I wanted to break up.