
After Love's Betrayal on Our Anniversary
Chapter 2
The notification sound had become my personal form of torture. Each ping from my phone meant another carefully crafted post from Sylvie Wagner, another reminder of how seamlessly she was inserting herself into Christopher's life—and erasing me from it.
I stared at the latest photo on my screen: Christopher's hand gently steadying Sylvie as she stepped out of his car, her face pale and fragile under the harsh hospital lighting. The caption read: "Another check-up with my guardian angel. Some days I can barely stand, but Chris never lets me fall. Grateful every day for the man who continues to save my life. #Blessed #GuardianAngel #StrongerTogether"
The comments were already pouring in. Heart emojis. "You two are so sweet together!" "He's such a good man for taking care of you!" "True friendship goals!"
My hands trembled as I scrolled through more posts from the past week. Sylvie at a cozy café, Christopher's jacket draped over her shoulders: "Too weak to eat alone today, but my hero made sure I got some nourishment." A photo of their hands side by side on a restaurant table: "When panic attacks hit, only one person can calm me down. Thank you for always knowing exactly what I need."
Each image was a masterpiece of manipulation—intimate without being obviously romantic, vulnerable without seeming calculated. But I could see the careful staging: the way she angled herself closer to him in every shot, how her fingers always found reasons to brush against his, the soft lighting that made her look ethereal and fragile.
"Bella?" Christopher's voice made me jump. He stood in my apartment doorway, keys still in his hand. "I brought dinner. Thai from that place you like."
I held up my phone, the screen still displaying Sylvie's latest post. "We need to talk."
His expression shifted immediately, guilt and defensiveness warring across his features. "What about?"
"About this." I gestured at the phone. "About the fact that your 'friend' is posting pictures of you two together like you're a couple. About how she has a medical emergency every time we make plans."
Christopher set the takeout bags on my counter with more force than necessary. "She's documenting her recovery journey. It helps her process the trauma."
"The trauma of what? Being back in the same city as you?"
"The trauma of nearly dying for me!" His voice cracked. "Do you have any idea what it's like to watch someone's blood pool on concrete because of you? To hear them whisper 'I'd do it again' while paramedics are trying to stop the bleeding?"
I'd heard this story before, but never with such raw detail. Christopher's hands shook as he continued.
"Her blood was warm, Bella. It soaked through my shirt, my hands—I can still feel it sometimes. She looked up at me with this peaceful smile and said she was glad it was her instead of me. How do I repay that kind of sacrifice?"
"By living your life!" I stood, my own voice rising. "By being happy! Not by abandoning your girlfriend every time she snaps her fingers!"
"She's not snapping her fingers. She's struggling. The doctors say her panic attacks are getting worse, and I'm the only one who can calm her down. I'm the only constant she has from before the attack."
"And what about me? What about us? I've been constant too, Christopher. For seven years."
He looked at me with something that might have been pity. "That's different. You chose to be with me. She didn't choose to get stabbed."
The words hit me like a physical blow. I sank back onto my couch, suddenly understanding the hierarchy in Christopher's mind. Sylvie would always come first because her connection to him was forged in blood and trauma. I was just the woman who loved him by choice.
"You're jealous," he said quietly, and I heard the disappointment in his voice. "I never thought you'd be jealous of someone who's suffered so much."
"I'm not jealous of her suffering. I'm hurt that my boyfriend prioritizes another woman over me. There's a difference."
"She saved my life, Bella. She took a knife meant for me. How can you ask me to turn my back on that?"
I looked at him—really looked at him—and saw a man drowning in guilt, unable to see how that guilt was being weaponized against us both. "I'm not asking you to turn your back on her. I'm asking you to remember that you have a life worth living, and people who love you for who you are, not for what you owe them."
But even as I said the words, I could see they weren't reaching him. Christopher was lost in a debt he believed could never be repaid, and Sylvie was making sure he never forgot exactly how much he owed.
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