
After Meeting His Ex, I Knew He’d Never Love Me
Chapter 3
The weekend at Fletcher’s Hamptons house was supposed to be a reset. The sun beat down on the blue tiles of the pool. The water sparkled in the bright afternoon light. Nolan sat on the edge, kicking his feet. He was cautious, but he was trying. I stood waist-deep in the water. The smell of chlorine and expensive sunscreen filled the air.
“You're doing great,” I told him. I smiled big. I wanted him to trust me so badly.
He nodded slowly. He pushed himself up to stand on the wet concrete edge. He wanted to jump in. But his wet foot slipped. A sharp squeak of skin against wet stone echoed in the quiet yard. A loud splash followed. He went under. It was the shallow end, but he panicked. His arms thrashed. Water flew everywhere.
I lunged forward. I grabbed him right under the arms and hauled him up. He gasped for air, coughing up water. I pulled him tight against my chest. His small, wet body shook violently against mine.
“I've got you,” I whispered into his wet hair. “You're okay. I'm right here.”
He didn't hug me back. He just shivered.
That evening, the house felt too big and too quiet. I stood in the guest bathroom. The hairdryer hummed loudly in my hand. I turned it off to brush out my hair. That’s when the sound of Nolan’s voice drifted down the hallway. He was on his regular Sunday phone call with Jolene.
“Dad's girlfriend let me fall,” he said.
His voice was tiny. It held no malice. It was just a child's version of the facts. But it felt like a physical blow. My chest tightened. I stopped breathing.
Then, I heard Fletcher. He had taken the phone.
“It won't happen again.”
His voice was low. It was perfectly controlled. I stared at my reflection in the mirror. My eyes looked wide and tired. Did he mean the swimming? Or did he mean me? I gripped the edge of the marble sink. I didn't ask him. I didn't want to know the answer.
Back in the city, the distance between Nolan and me turned into a solid wall. He refused to be in the same room as me alone. If I walked into the kitchen, he slipped out the other door. If I sat on the sofa, he went straight to his bedroom. He wasn't rude. He didn't throw tantrums. He just disappeared. He only existed in the apartment when Fletcher was there to anchor the space.
I hated it. I wanted to fix it.
One afternoon, I sat at the marble island. I took out a small piece of blue stationery. I wrote carefully. *I'm sorry the pool was scary. I'd like to be your friend if you ever want one.*
I walked into his empty room and left it right on his desk. I felt a tiny spark of hope in my chest.
The next morning, I walked into the kitchen for coffee. The blue paper sat right in the middle of the counter. It was folded exactly the way I left it. Unopened.
A heavy lump formed in my throat. I stared at my own handwriting. Fletcher walked in behind me. He wore a crisp white shirt and a dark tie. He stopped. He looked at the blue note on the counter. Then, he looked at me.
He walked past me, picked up the coffee pot, and poured himself a cup. He didn't say a word. His silence wasn't protective. It was a boundary line I wasn't allowed to cross.
It was our hundred-day anniversary. Fletcher took me to a candlelit restaurant in the West Village. The lights were low. The air smelled like roasted garlic and expensive red wine. I wore a black silk dress. I wanted to reclaim our space. I wanted to forget the unopened note and the cold kitchen.
Fletcher reached across the white tablecloth. His warm fingers brushed my knuckles. It was a rare, tender gesture. I smiled at him. I felt the tension in my shoulders start to drop.
Then, the air shifted. I smelled jasmine perfume. It was heavy and sweet.
A woman stopped at our table. She had perfect blonde waves and a tailored silk blouse. Jolene. She smiled. It was a bright, practiced curve of her lips. It didn't reach her sharp blue eyes.
“Fletcher,” she purred.
She rested her hand on the back of his chair. Fletcher didn't flinch. But his hand pulled away from mine. He sat back.
“Jolene,” he said.
His voice was absolute ice. There was no warmth. No anger. Just a terrifying, blank coldness.
Jolene turned to me. Her eyes slowly scanned my face, my hair, my dress. She was measuring me.
“And you must be Waverly,” she said softly. “I've heard so much.”
She made my name sound small. She made it sound temporary. My heart hammered against my ribs, but I kept my face perfectly still. I wouldn't give her the satisfaction of looking away.
“Hello, Jolene,” I said evenly.
Fletcher didn't let the conversation breathe. “We are having dinner, Jolene,” he said. He didn't raise his voice. He didn't even look up at her. He just stared at his wine glass. “Enjoy your evening.”
It was a dismissal. Precise and total.
Jolene’s smile didn't waver. She didn't look embarrassed at all. “Of course. Happy anniversary.”
She turned and walked away to a table across the room. I watched her go. My hands shook in my lap. I gripped my linen napkin until my knuckles turned white under the table.
Fletcher picked up his wine glass. “Ignore her,” he said quietly.
He had defended our table perfectly. He shut her down with zero hesitation. But as I watched Jolene sit with her friends and laugh, a cold clarity settled deep in my bones. The wine in my mouth tasted like ash.
She didn't come over to win him back tonight. She came over to show me she could interrupt us whenever she wanted. She wanted me to know that she was the ghost haunting this table. And as I looked at the empty space on the tablecloth where Fletcher’s hand used to be, I knew she was right.
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