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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.
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Chapter 4

Caiden's apartment was exactly what I expected and nothing like what I was used to.

Small. Warm. A kitchen that had clearly been cooked in, not staged. The kind of place where the dish towel was actually damp and the cutting board had real marks on it. He had made pasta — something with brown butter and sage that smelled like fall — and we ate at a table that was only half a table, the other half buried under stacked manuscripts with handwritten notes crowding the margins in two different colors of ink.

'Sorry,' he said, moving a stack to the floor without ceremony. 'I keep meaning to get a bigger desk.'

'Don't,' I said. 'I like it.'

And I did. That was the strange part. I sat in his mismatched chair and ate his pasta and looked at the annotated pages and the overstuffed bookshelves and the single houseplant on the windowsill that was somehow still alive, and I felt something I hadn't felt in a long time in someone else's space.

At ease.

We finished the pasta. He opened a bottle of red — something modest, a Côtes du Rhône, the same kind Nora always brought — and we moved to the couch, which was small enough that there wasn't much room to pretend we weren't sitting close.

We talked about his dissertation for a while. Unreliable narrators. The way a story can be technically true and still be a lie, depending on who's telling it and what they've decided not to see. I said that sounded less like literary theory and more like a personality diagnosis. He laughed, and it was a real laugh, the kind that reaches the eyes.

Then the conversation slowed. Not uncomfortably. Just — it found a different gear.

He was looking at his wine glass when he said it.

'I've been trying to figure out the right way to tell you something.' A pause. 'I've decided there isn't one, so I'm just going to say it.'

I waited.

'I've had feelings for you since sophomore year.' He said it evenly, like he was reading a fact he had long since made peace with. 'Six years. I never said anything because the timing was never right, and then you were gone, and I told myself that was that.' He looked up. 'And then you walked into that bookstore.'

The room was very quiet.

I didn't know what to do with my hands. I set my wine glass down on the coffee table and looked at it.

'Caiden —'

'I'm not asking you for anything,' he said. Calm. Clear. 'I'm not telling you because I expect something back. I'm telling you because I've been sitting across from you twice a week for two months and it felt dishonest not to.' He paused. 'You can hear it and do nothing with it. That's allowed. I just needed you to know.'

I looked at him. His expression was open in a way that should have felt vulnerable but didn't. It felt like something else. Like a person who had already done the hard work of deciding to be honest and was simply delivering the result.

I thought about Damian. About five years of a man who never once said anything that direct to me. Who spoke in implications and gestures and expensive things that turned out to mean something other than what I thought.

This was the opposite of that. And it terrified me in a completely different way.

'Six years is a long time to carry something,' I said finally.

'It is,' he agreed.

'Why didn't you say anything in college?'

He considered that. 'You seemed like you already knew where you were going. I didn't want to be a detour.'

Something moved in my chest. I pressed it down.

'I don't know what I'm able to give right now,' I said. It came out more honest than I intended. 'I spent five years thinking I was someone's choice. Turns out I was a placeholder. And I'm —' I stopped. 'I'm still figuring out what's real. About myself. About what I actually want versus what I got used to wanting.'

'I know,' he said. 'I'm not asking you to have it figured out.'

'Then what are you asking?'

He was quiet for a moment. Then:

'Three months.' He said it simply. 'Give me three months. I'll show up. I'll be here. I'll ask nothing from you except the chance to be around.' He turned his wine glass slowly in his hands. 'At the end of three months, you decide. Whatever you decide, I'll respect it. No pressure. No fallout.' He looked at me. 'This is my promise. Not yours.'

I stared at him.

It was such a specific, careful, quietly radical thing to offer. Not a grand gesture. Not a declaration designed to overwhelm my defenses. Just — presence. Offered without conditions. With a built-in exit that he was handing me himself.

Damian would never have done that. Damian didn't offer exits. He built rooms with no doors and called it devotion.

'A trial period,' I said.

'If that's easier to call it.'

I thought about Nora's word. Inventory. I thought about the morning I walked out of the penthouse with a number on a piece of paper and a pendant left on the counter and five years of my life folded up and filed away. I thought about how long it had taken me to stop waiting for the grief to arrive and understand that what I was doing instead was something more useful.

I thought about the heron in the shallows, and how we had both just stopped and watched it, and how that had been enough.

'Okay,' I said.

He nodded once. No triumph in it. Just — receipt. Like I had handed him something and he was holding it carefully.

We finished the wine. I helped him carry the glasses to the kitchen. He walked me to the door, and we said goodnight the way people say goodnight when something has shifted but neither of them is ready to name it yet.

I walked home through the November dark, hands in my pockets, the air cold and salt-edged and clean.

Biscuit was waiting by the door when I got in. He looked up at me with the focused attention of a dog who has decided he is owed an explanation.

'Don't look at me like that,' I said.

I hung up my coat. I sat down on the floor cushions. Biscuit climbed into my lap, which he was technically too large to do, and settled there anyway.

'He said six years,' I told him.

Biscuit was unimpressed.

'I know,' I said. 'Me too.'

But I sat there for a long time in the quiet of my small apartment, in my city that smelled like rain and pine and something I still couldn't name, and I did not feel afraid. Not exactly.

I felt like someone standing at the beginning of something, trying to decide whether to call it that.

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