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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.
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Chapter 3

The anniversary dinner was supposed to be perfect. Christopher had chosen La Bernardin, the same restaurant where we'd had our first official date seven years ago. The soft lighting cast golden shadows across his face as he reached for my hand across the white tablecloth.

"Seven years," he said, his thumb tracing circles on my palm. "Sometimes it feels like yesterday, sometimes like a lifetime."

I smiled, feeling the familiar warmth of his touch. "The good kind of lifetime, I hope."

"The best kind." His eyes held that soft look I'd fallen in love with, the one that made me believe we could weather any storm. "Bella, I—"

A commotion near the entrance cut him off. I turned to see a familiar figure stumbling through the restaurant, her pale hand pressed to her chest, face drawn with what looked like genuine pain. Sylvie Wagner, moving between tables with the careful steps of someone fighting to stay upright.

My stomach dropped as she approached our table, her breathing shallow and labored. "Chris," she whispered, her voice barely audible above the restaurant's gentle murmur. "I'm so sorry to interrupt, but I—" She swayed slightly, catching herself on the back of an empty chair.

Christopher was on his feet instantly, his hand abandoning mine to steady her. "Sylvie? What's wrong?"

"My doctor... he called about the test results." Her voice cracked with what sounded like terror. "There might be complications from the old injury. Internal scarring, possible nerve damage. He wants to see me at the hospital right now."

I watched this performance unfold with a mixture of horror and fascination. Every detail was perfect—the way she leaned just slightly into Christopher's chest, the tremor in her hands that could have been fear or calculation, the tears that gathered in her eyes without quite spilling over.

"I tried to call a cab, but the panic attack started, and I couldn't breathe, and I remembered you mentioned this restaurant..." She looked around as if just realizing where she was. "Oh God, I'm ruining your dinner. Your anniversary. I'm so sorry."

The other diners were staring now, their conversations dropping to whispers as they took in the drama unfolding at our table. I felt heat rise in my cheeks as I recognized the looks—pity for the fragile girl, curiosity about the woman sitting alone at the table, speculation about what kind of relationship could produce this scene.

"Don't apologize," Christopher said, his arm now fully supporting her weight. "We need to get you to the hospital right now."

"Christopher." My voice came out sharper than I intended. "Maybe we should call an ambulance if it's really that serious."

Sylvie's eyes met mine for just a moment, and I saw something flicker there—not pain, but satisfaction. "No, no ambulance. I just need... I need someone I trust with me. Someone who understands what this injury means."

Christopher was already pulling out his wallet, throwing cash on the table without counting it. "I'll drive you. Bella, I'm so sorry, but—"

"But she saved your life," I finished, the words tasting bitter on my tongue. "I know."

He looked at me with that same guilty expression I'd seen too many times lately, but also with something else—relief that I was being understanding again. That I was making this easy for him.

"I'll make this up to you," he promised, helping Sylvie toward the exit. "We'll do something special tomorrow, just the two of us."

I nodded, because what else could I do? Make a scene? Demand that he choose between his girlfriend and the woman who'd bled for him? Force him to abandon someone who might be having a genuine medical emergency?

As they disappeared through the restaurant doors, I sat alone at our anniversary table, surrounded by the curious stares of strangers and the weight of my own complicity. The waiter approached hesitantly.

"Miss, would you like me to box up the gentleman's meal?"

"No, thank you." I reached for my purse, my hands steady despite the chaos in my chest. "Just the check, please."

As I waited, my phone buzzed. A text from Meadow: "How's the anniversary dinner? Please tell me he finally proposed!"

I stared at the message, unable to form a response. How could I explain that our anniversary had become another emergency starring Sylvie Wagner? How could I put into words the growing certainty that I was losing a battle I hadn't even realized I was fighting?

The check arrived, and I paid it in silence, leaving the restaurant where my relationship had begun seven years ago, wondering if tonight had marked its end.

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