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After My Best Friend Replaced Me with Her Novel Cover

After My Best Friend Replaced Me with Her

I've known Jayceon Ross for twenty years. I know the way he laughs when something actually catches him off guard — this short, surprised sound, like he forgot laughter was an option. I know that he takes his coffee black until October, then switches to something warm and sweet the moment the Seattle rain starts in earnest. I know the exact weight of his silence when he's thinking versus when he's checked out. I thought I knew everything. The restaurant was one of those downtown Seattle places with exposed brick and Edison bulbs and a menu that takes itself too seriously. Eight of us crammed around a long table near the window, rain streaking the glass behind us, the city blurring into amber and gray. I had my coat on the back of my chair and my hand near Jayceon's on the table — not touching, just near, the way we always were. Comfortable. Assumed.
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Chapter 5

The rain hit me the second I pushed through the hospital doors.

Not the soft kind. The cold, driving kind that Seattle saves for the moments when you are already at your lowest — the kind that soaks through your jacket in under a minute and plasters your hair flat against your face and doesn't apologize for any of it. I stood on the wet concrete outside the entrance and looked at my phone and thought, call him.

I always thought that. Twenty years of reflex.

My hands were shaking. I noticed that the way you notice something from a distance — clinically, without surprise. The report was in my bag. My name on it. The date. The words that didn't change no matter how many times I read them.

I called him.

It rang three times. Four. I stood in the rain and counted the rings and told myself he would pick up. He always picked up. Twenty years and he always picked up.

He picked up on the fourth ring.

"Hey." His voice was distracted. Half somewhere else. I could hear noise in the background — the ambient hum of a public space, footsteps, the particular acoustic of a building with high ceilings.

"Jayceon." My voice came out wrong. Too thin. I pressed my free hand flat against my sternum and tried again. "I need — I need to tell you something. I'm at the hospital and—"

"The hospital?" A beat. Not alarm. More like mild recalibration. "Are you okay?"

I opened my mouth. The words were right there. I had them. I just needed to say them.

Then Milani's voice floated in from the background. Light and easy, the way her voice always was — like nothing in the world was ever that serious. *Jay, we need to get there before the reserve desk closes. It's already six-fifteen.*

A pause on his end. Brief. The kind of pause that tells you everything about where someone's attention actually lives.

"Hey, I'm kind of in the middle of something right now," he said. To me. "Can we talk later?"

The rain ran down the back of my neck.

"Jayceon." My voice broke on the second syllable. Just cracked open, right down the middle, and I couldn't stop it. "Please. I really need you to—"

"Wren." His voice had that edge now. The one I'd learned to recognize. The one that meant I was being too much. "I'll call you back tonight, okay? We're just heading to the library."

He hung up.

The line went dead and I stood there with the phone against my ear for a moment, listening to nothing. The rain came down. A car moved through the puddles at the curb and sent a sheet of water across the sidewalk. I lowered the phone slowly.

I pressed it to my chest.

I stood there for a long time.

I didn't cry. I thought I would — I'd been bracing for it, the way you brace for a wave you can see coming. But it didn't come. Instead something happened that was quieter and more permanent than crying. Something inside me went still. Not broken. Not yet. Just — still. The way a room goes still after the last sound has finished echoing and there is nothing left to hear.

The rain kept falling. I let it.

Then I walked home.

---

My apartment was exactly as I'd left it that morning.

I stood in the doorway for a moment, dripping onto the mat, and looked at it. The photos on the wall. The shelf above my desk. The hoodie draped over the back of my chair — his hoodie, the gray one from his sophomore year, the one I'd been borrowing for so long it had stopped feeling borrowed.

I took off my wet jacket. I hung it up. I went to the kitchen and drank a glass of water standing at the sink.

Then I got a garbage bag from under the cabinet and I started.

The photos first. I took them down one by one — the two of us at the waterfront, the group shot from Priya's birthday two years ago, the one from the summer we drove down to Portland and got lost twice and laughed about it for months. I didn't look at them for long. I just placed them in the bag, carefully, the way you handle things that used to matter.

The shelf next. Birthday cards in his handwriting. A small ceramic mug he'd brought back from a conference in Portland. A keychain from the year we were seventeen, some inside joke I couldn't even remember the origin of anymore. Into the box.

The hoodie last.

I picked it up from the chair. It still smelled like him — that cedar soap, the specific warmth of fabric that has been worn and washed and worn again until it holds a person's shape. I stood there holding it for a moment. Just a moment.

Then I folded it. Neatly, the way you fold something you are done with. I set it on top of the box.

I sat down at my desk and opened my phone and typed the message. I didn't draft it. I didn't revise it. I just wrote what was true.

*We're done. Don't contact me.*

I sent it. Then I blocked his number. His Instagram. His email. His Snapchat. Each one a small, clean click. Each one a door closing.

I sat on my stripped bed in my stripped room and looked at the wall where the photos used to be. The paint was slightly brighter in those spots — small pale rectangles where the light hadn't faded it. Evidence of something that had been there a long time and was now gone.

I was going to die.

I was going to die, and I was going to do it alone, and somehow that felt less frightening than it had in the hospital corridor. Less frightening than it had any right to be. Maybe because I had already been alone for months. Maybe because the loneliness had been so gradual, so carefully administered, that I had adjusted to it without noticing — the way you adjust to a room getting colder, degree by degree, until you look up one day and realize you can see your breath.

I lay back on the bed and stared at the ceiling.

---

My phone rang at eight-thirty.

Mom.

I looked at her name on the screen for two full rings. Then I picked up.

"Wren, honey." Her voice was warm and unhurried, the voice she used when nothing was wrong in her world. "I was just thinking about you. I ran into Patricia Ross at the grocery store today — Jayceon's mom. She looks wonderful. We got to talking and she said Jay's doing so well with this research competition, she's just so proud of him."

I lay on my back and looked at the ceiling.

"She asked about you, of course. I told her you two were still thick as thieves." A small laugh. "I always knew those two would end up together, I told her. Some things are just meant to be."

The ceiling had a small water stain in the corner. I'd never noticed it before. Pale brown, roughly circular, the size of a dinner plate.

"Mom," I said. "I'm really tired. I need to sleep."

"Of course, of course. You work too hard, sweetheart. Tell Jayceon I said hi."

"I will," I said.

I hung up.

I lay in the dark for a long time. The rain had softened to a murmur against the window. The apartment was very quiet. The pale rectangles on the wall where the photos had been caught the faint light from the street outside — small bright absences, holding the shape of everything I had taken down.

I did not sleep.

I just lay there and breathed, and let the night be as long as it needed to be.

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