Follow
Chapters
Share
After Love's Betrayal on Our Anniversary Novel Cover

After Love's Betrayal on Our Anniversary

The candlelight flickered across Christopher's face as he reached into his jacket pocket, and for a moment, my heart stopped. Seven years. Seven years of birthdays, anniversaries, quiet Sunday mornings, and shared dreams. Tonight felt different—charged with the kind of anticipation that makes your skin tingle. "Bella, I—" Christopher's words were cut short by the sharp trill of his phone. His face went pale as he glanced at the screen. "Sylvie." The name hit me like ice water. Sylvie Wagner. Christopher's childhood friend who had taken a knife for him during a mugging years ago. The woman who had just returned from studying abroad last month and had already begun weaving herself back into our lives with surgical precision.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The candlelight flickered across Christopher's face as he reached into his jacket pocket, and for a moment, my heart stopped. Seven years. Seven years of birthdays, anniversaries, quiet Sunday mornings, and shared dreams. Tonight felt different—charged with the kind of anticipation that makes your skin tingle.

"Bella, I—" Christopher's words were cut short by the sharp trill of his phone. His face went pale as he glanced at the screen. "Sylvie."

The name hit me like ice water. Sylvie Wagner. Christopher's childhood friend who had taken a knife for him during a mugging years ago. The woman who had just returned from studying abroad last month and had already begun weaving herself back into our lives with surgical precision.

"Don't answer it," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "Please. It's my birthday."

But Christopher was already swiping to answer, his hand trembling slightly. "Sylvie? What's wrong?"

I watched his expression shift from concern to alarm as her voice carried through the phone—high, breathless, panicked. Even from across the table, I could hear her sobbing.

"I can't... I can't breathe, Chris. The panic attack... it's so bad. I think I might hurt myself. I need you. Please, I need you right now."

Christopher's eyes met mine across the flickering candles, and I saw the exact moment he made his choice. The same choice he'd been making for weeks now. The guilt in his expression was almost worse than the abandonment.

"I have to go," he said, already standing, his hand still clutching whatever had been in his pocket. "She saved my life, Bella. I owe her everything."

"What about us?" The words escaped before I could stop them. "What about my birthday? What about—" I gestured helplessly at the romantic setup, the carefully chosen restaurant, the moment that had been building for months.

"I'll make it up to you, I promise. But she's in crisis. She could hurt herself." He leaned down and pressed a distracted kiss to my forehead. "You understand, right? You always understand."

And there it was. The expectation that I would be the understanding girlfriend, the one who always smiled and nodded while he ran to his childhood friend's rescue. Again.

I sat frozen as Christopher hurried away, leaving me alone with two untouched dinner plates and a table full of birthday roses that suddenly felt like funeral flowers. The other diners glanced at me with mixtures of pity and curiosity, their whispered conversations creating a buzz of humiliation around me.

My phone buzzed. A text from Meadow Hill, my best friend: "How's the birthday dinner? Did he finally pop the question?"

I stared at the message, unable to type a response. How could I explain that my boyfriend of seven years had just abandoned me on my birthday for another woman? How could I put into words the crushing realization that I would always come second to Sylvie Wagner and her endless parade of emergencies?

Twenty minutes passed. Then thirty. The waiter approached hesitantly.

"Miss, would you like to order, or..."

"Just the check, please," I managed.

As I waited, my mind replayed the past month since Sylvie's return. The mysterious headaches that required Christopher's immediate attention. The panic attacks that always seemed to coincide with our date nights. The way she'd lean on him during their coffee meetings, her hand resting on his arm just a beat too long.

My phone rang. Meadow.

"Bella? I'm outside. I saw Christopher leaving in a hurry and you weren't with him. What happened?"

I couldn't speak. The tears I'd been holding back finally spilled over as Meadow found me at our table, still surrounded by the remnants of what should have been a perfect evening.

"Oh, honey," she said, sliding into Christopher's abandoned chair. "Let me guess. Sylvie?"

I nodded, not trusting my voice.

Meadow's jaw tightened. "That manipulative little—" She caught herself, reaching across to squeeze my hand. "I'm so sorry. On your birthday, of all days."

"She saved his life," I whispered, repeating Christopher's words like a mantra I'd been forced to memorize. "He owes her everything."

"And what does he owe you?" Meadow's voice was fierce. "Seven years of your life? Your devotion? Your understanding?"

I looked at her through my tears, seeing my own doubts reflected in her eyes. For the first time, I allowed myself to wonder if understanding was just another word for accepting the unacceptable.

You may also like

Arranged Marriage To The Billionaire Heir Novel Cover
8.0
Elena never planned on marrying a stranger, especially not someone engaged to her sister. But when her sister disappears days before the wedding, Elena is forced into an arrangement she never agreed to, with a man she knew nothing about. Nathaniel Sinclair, billionaire heir with his dreamy looks and charming attitude is just as unenthusiastic about the situation as she is. Their marriage begins with distance, awkward silences and the quiet understanding that neither of them asked for this. But as days turn into weeks and forced proximity becomes a regular thing, Elena starts to wonder: what happens when two people trapped in an arrangement begin to fall for each other? It was never meant to be love. But love has a way of rewriting the rules.
Charity Gala Scandal Novel Cover
7.8
Every inch the image I'd helped her craft. My chest swelled with that familiar mixture of pride and something else I didn't want to examine too closely. This was our work. Our success. Victoria's speech began exactly as we'd rehearsed. She spoke about the power of women lifting each other up, about mentorship and sisterhood. She made eye contact with me in the wings, her smile soft and genuine, and I felt my eyes prick with unexpected tears. See? I told myself. Everything's fine. "None of this would be possible," Victoria continued, her voice rich with emotion, "without the incredible team behind our foundation. Particularly my dear friend and colleague, Amelia Clarke." Warmth flooded through me. Public recognition was rare from Victoria. I smiled, wiping at my eyes. Then her tone shifted. The change was subtle at first—a slight hardening around her eyes, a shift in her posture. "But tonight, with great sadness, I must address something that weighs heavily on my heart." The warmth in my chest turned to ice.
Choosing Austin's True Love Novel Cover
8.8
The crystal glasses gleamed under the chandelier light as I carefully arranged them on the silver tray. Each one had to be perfectly positioned—not too close, not too far apart. Mr. Wallace was particular about these things. Tonight was his birthday, and everything had to be flawless. I smoothed down my plain black dress, the fabric worn thin at the elbows from years of scrubbing and cleaning. It was the nicest one I owned, though it paled in comparison to what the other guests would be wearing. "The napkins should be folded like this, Kenna," I whispered to myself, demonstrating the intricate fold Mr. Wallace preferred. "Not like that." Three years.
Escaping the Hamilton Mansion Novel Cover
9.1
The small cupcake sat on my nightstand like a monument to my own foolishness. Thirty candles would have been too much for the tiny space of my room—the servant's quarters tucked away in the mansion's forgotten corner—so I'd settled for a single white candle, unlit and mocking in the dim evening light. I'd bought it myself during my weekly grocery run, slipping it into the cart alongside Aidan's favorite cereal and Bryson's imported coffee. The cashier had smiled when she saw it. "Someone's birthday?" she'd asked. "Mine," I'd whispered, and the word had felt foreign on my tongue. My fingers traced the pendant at my throat, the small silver locket containing my mother's photo—the only witness to this pathetic celebration. Six years. Six birthdays in this house, and not once had anyone remembered. Not Bryson, who barely acknowledged my existence except to issue curt instructions.
I Carried Her Labor, He Stole My Life Novel Cover
9.1
Pain sliced through me like a hot blade, driving me to my knees against the cold hospital wall. I bit down on my fist to muffle my scream, tasting blood as another contraction tore through my body. My vision blurred, sweat plastering my hair to my forehead as I struggled to breathe through the agony. "Please," I gasped to a passing nurse, reaching out with trembling fingers. "Help me." Her eyes flickered to mine, a flash of pity quickly replaced by practiced indifference. She stepped around my crumpled form without breaking stride, her shoes squeaking against the polished floor as she disappeared down the corridor. They'd been told to ignore me. All of them. Nathan's orders. I dragged myself up using the wall for support, my legs quivering beneath me.
I Signed the Divorce, He Lost Everything Novel Cover
9.8
My wealthy husband, Nathaniel, stormed in, demanding a divorce to be with his "dying" first love, Julia. He expected tears, pleas, even hysteria. Instead, I calmly reached for a pen, ready to sign away our life for a fortune. For two years, I played the devoted wife in our sterile penthouse. That night, Nathaniel shattered the facade, tossing divorce papers. "Julia's back," he stated, "she needs me." He expected me to crumble. But my calm "Okay" shocked him. I coolly demanded his penthouse, shares, and a doubled stipend, letting him believe I was a greedy gold digger. He watched, disgusted, convinced I was a monster. He couldn't fathom my indifference or ruthless demands. He saw avarice, not a carefully constructed facade. His betrayal had awakened something far more dangerous. The second the door closed, the dutiful wife vanished. I retrieved a burner phone and a Glock, ready to expose the elaborate lie he and Julia had built.