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After His Fiancée Tried to Drown Me Novel Cover

After His Fiancée Tried to Drown Me

The cream-colored envelope arrived on a Tuesday morning, slipped under my apartment door like a small, elegant thief. I picked it up from the floor, my fingers brushing against the heavy paper stock, and immediately recognized the Hunt family's embossed crest in the corner. My heart did that familiar, painful skip it always did when anything connected to Maddox crossed my path. I sat at my kitchen counter, coffee cooling beside me, turning the envelope over in my hands. The formal invitation inside was written in calligraphy I didn't need to read to understand. Maddox Hunt's engagement party. Aboard his family's yacht in the Hamptons. This weekend. I pressed my fingertips together, a habit I'd developed as a child when trying to hold myself together. Eight years of loving him in silence, of being his closest friend but never quite his love, had led to this moment.
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Chapter 3

He came back the next morning.

I heard the door before I saw him — that same shoulder-first push, the chart already open. He didn't say good morning. He just walked to the foot of my bed, scanned whatever he was reading, and then looked at my breakfast tray.

The eggs had gone cold. The toast was still wrapped in its little square of plastic. I hadn't touched any of it.

He didn't say anything about that either. He just picked up the tray, moved it from the windowsill to the bed table, and set a plastic fork directly in my hand. The way you'd hand a tool to someone who'd forgotten they were holding one.

'Malnutrition,' he said, still reading the chart, 'is a poor follow-up to near-drowning.'

I looked down at the fork in my hand.

I ate.

He made a note on the chart, checked the IV line, and left. He didn't wait for me to finish. He didn't wait for me to thank him.

I sat there with a forkful of cold eggs and thought about how strange it was — to be handled so matter-of-factly. No softness in his voice, no careful eyes watching to see how I was holding up. Just the fork. Just the fact of the food. Just the quiet, practical assumption that I would take care of myself if someone simply removed the distance between me and the doing of it.

I finished the eggs. I even ate the toast.

* * *

The nightmare came back that night.

The ocean. The cold that wasn't just temperature but weight — the kind that pressed into your chest and told you it was permanent. The lights from the yacht receding above the surface, getting smaller, the way stars look when you're falling away from them. My own hands, reaching for something that wasn't there.

I woke rigid, the blanket twisted around my legs, my breath coming in shallow pulls that I had to consciously slow down. The room was dark. The monitor beeped its steady, indifferent rhythm. I stared at the ceiling and counted the beeps until my hands unclenched.

Then I turned my head.

Scott was in the chair by the door.

He wasn't watching me. He was looking at his phone, the screen casting a faint light across his face, one ankle crossed over his knee. His white coat was gone — just scrubs now, the end of a long shift or the beginning of another, I couldn't tell. He looked like a man who had simply ended up in that chair. Like sitting there at two in the morning was a thing that had happened to him rather than a thing he had chosen.

He didn't look up.

I didn't say anything.

I pulled the blanket straight and turned onto my side, facing the window. The city beyond the glass was doing what cities do at night — glowing faintly, indifferent to the specific griefs happening inside specific rooms. I listened to the quiet sounds of the hallway. I listened to the occasional soft shift of movement from the chair by the door.

At some point, I fell back asleep.

When I woke in the morning, the chair was empty. The door was slightly ajar, the way it always was. There was a fresh cup of water on the nightstand that hadn't been there before.

I didn't ask him about it. He didn't offer.

* * *

Discharge paperwork took most of the morning. I signed things, nodded at instructions, accepted a printed sheet of follow-up care that I folded and put in my bag without reading. The nurse who processed me out was efficient and kind and asked twice if there was someone coming to pick me up.

'I have a cab,' I said both times.

I had one carry-on. I'd had it sent over from the hotel I'd booked for the weekend — the weekend that was supposed to be a party, a yacht, a final act of witnessing something I'd been dreading for years. The bag felt light. I traveled light these days. I had been practicing.

The transfer to Seattle had been arranged weeks ago. A new position at a hospital there, a fresh start I'd been quietly building while still going through the motions of my old life. I had signed the paperwork before the party. Before the ocean. Before Maddox stood at the foot of my bed and told me to disappear.

It turned out I had already been disappearing. I just hadn't known it yet.

The cab to JFK took forty minutes. I watched Long Island give way to the highway, the highway give way to the airport's familiar sprawl. I had my boarding pass on my phone. I knew my gate. I had done this enough times that the motions were automatic, which was good, because the part of me that usually managed logistics was still somewhere at the bottom of the Atlantic.

I was almost at the gate when I saw them.

Gate 14. A corner turn, the kind you take without looking because you've walked a hundred airport corridors and they're all the same. And then they weren't.

Maddox was standing near the window, a coffee in his hand, his coat folded over his arm. Rylie was beside him, her hand through his elbow, her dark hair down today. They were seeing someone off — a man I didn't recognize, shaking Maddox's hand, laughing at something.

Rylie saw me first.

Her whole body went still. That particular stillness of someone who has been caught doing something they can't name. Her hand tightened on Maddox's arm — I saw it, the small white pressure of her fingers — and then Maddox turned.

Something crossed his face.

It was fast. He controlled it fast. But it was there — a flicker of something unguarded, something that in another life, in another version of this story, I might have spent days turning over in my hands, trying to read.

I didn't spend any time on it.

I raised my hand. A single, calm wave. The kind you give someone you used to know.

Then I walked to the gate, handed over my boarding pass, and stepped through without looking back.

Behind me, I heard nothing. No voice calling my name. No footsteps.

Just the gate closing.

I found my seat, put my bag in the overhead bin, and sat down. I pressed my fingertips together once, briefly, in my lap. Then I let them go.

The plane began to move.

I watched the runway lights blur past the window and thought about nothing in particular. About Seattle. About the new hospital, the new position, the new city where no one would know my face or my history or the eight years I had spent loving the wrong person.

About a pair of yellow socks on a hospital chair.

About a chair by a door at two in the morning.

I didn't know yet what any of it meant. I only knew that somewhere behind me, a gate had closed, and I had not looked back.

That felt, for now, like enough.

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