
After His Fiancée Cut the Brakes, He Chose Me
Chapter 1
The Manhattan skyline greeted me like an old enemy. Three years. Three years since I’d breathed this air, thick with memory and regret. My hands trembled slightly as I checked into the boutique hotel, deliberately using a fake name. The clerk didn’t notice. No one here knew me anymore. Or so I thought.
I’d chosen a room on the eighth floor—high enough to see the city, low enough to feel its pulse. The elevator hummed as I ascended, each floor bringing me closer to a past I’d spent three years trying to outrun. But you can’t outrun your own heart. You can only pretend it doesn’t exist.
Carmen was waiting for me in the hotel café, two black coffees already ordered. My one true friend from my years away, she was the only person who knew I was back. Her dark eyes narrowed when she saw me, taking in the changes time had carved into my face.
“Forty-eight hours,” I said, sliding into the seat across from her. “That’s all I’m staying.”
Carmen’s laugh was sharp. “You think he won’t find you in forty-eight hours? Judith, he’s been looking for you for three years.”
I wrapped my hands around the coffee cup, letting its warmth seep into my skin. “I’m not here for him. I’m here to close an old bank account and collect my parents’ storage box. Then I’m gone. Again.”
“And if he finds you?”
I looked out the window at the city that had once been my entire world. “He won’t.”
But even as I said it, I knew it was a lie. Lennox Matthews had always been able to find me, even when I didn’t want to be found.
Less than forty-eight hours later, I was proved right in the worst possible way.
I’d just finished showering, my hair still damp, when I heard it—the unmistakable sound of a key sliding into my hotel room lock. My body went rigid. I’d specifically requested no housekeeping. No one should have had access.
The door swung open with a decisive click, and there he stood.
Lennox Matthews. My best friend. My greatest mistake. The man I’d spent three years trying to forget and another lifetime loving in silence.
“Hello, Jude,” he said, his voice exactly as I remembered it—deep, commanding, familiar. His dark hair was shorter now, his jawline more defined, but his eyes were the same. Those piercing blue eyes that had always seen right through me.
“How the hell did you get a key?” I demanded, grabbing the nearest thing—a hotel robe—and wrapping it around myself.
He stepped inside, closing the door behind him with a soft thud that somehow felt more final than a slam. “Did you really think I wouldn’t know you were back? That I wouldn’t be watching every airport, every hotel?”
“You need to leave.” My voice was steady, but my heart was hammering against my ribs.
“No.” He moved further into the room, his presence filling the space like it always had. “I’m not going anywhere. Not this time.”
I lunged for the door, but he was faster—always had been. His hand caught my wrist, and suddenly we were inches apart, the air between us crackling with three years of unspoken words and suppressed longing.
“Let me go, Lennox.”
“Never.”
What happened next was a blur of motion and emotion—my elbow connecting with his chest, his grip tightening, the two of us stumbling backward. We crashed into the coffee table, wood splintering under our weight. Pain shot through my side, but I barely registered it.
Then came his sharp intake of breath, his face contorting as his ankle twisted beneath him. We tumbled to the floor, a tangle of limbs and history, both of us panting.
“Damn it, Jude,” he gasped, clutching his ankle. “You still fight like you’re trying to kill me.”
I sat up, my heart racing, looking down at him. Even in pain, he was beautiful—devastatingly so. “You shouldn’t have come here.”
He looked up at me, his blue eyes suddenly serious. “I’m never letting you disappear again.”
The words hung in the air between us, heavy with meaning and threat. And in that moment, I knew my carefully constructed walls were about to crumble.
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