
After My Boyfriend Mocked Me in His Friends’ Chat
Chapter 2
The cup was just sitting there when I got in.
Iced latte, condensation already beading on the plastic, a black straw poking through the lid. No note. No name. Just sitting on the corner of my desk like it had always been there.
I looked around. The floor was half-empty — early enough that most people were still shaking off their commutes, still peeling off jackets and logging in. Zayne was already at his desk across the room, head down, typing something. He didn't look up.
I picked up the cup. Turned it. Oat milk, two pumps of vanilla, light ice. The exact order I put in every afternoon without thinking about it. I had never said that out loud to anyone in this office. Not once.
He passed my desk about ten minutes later, moving toward the printer, not slowing down. "You looked like you needed it," he said, eyes still forward, and kept walking.
I stared at the cup for a long moment.
Then I drank it. I didn't say thank you. But I didn't throw it away either.
---
Dillon texted at 2:17 a.m. that night.
I know you're awake. You always sleep with your phone on.
I was awake. He wasn't wrong. I lay in the dark and watched the notification glow on my screen and did not touch it.
By morning there were four more. The first was long — a paragraph about how I'd misread everything, how the group chat was just guys being stupid, how Sabrina meant nothing and I was throwing away three years over a joke. The second was shorter. The third was just my name. Elaina. Like a question. The fourth said: you'll regret this.
I read them all in the elevator on the way up to the office. Then I opened my contacts, found his number, and moved it to a folder I labeled Do Not Open After 10pm. I screenshotted the folder and sent it to Cassandra.
Her response came back in under a minute: a string of crying-laughing emojis followed by I am FRAMING this.
I put my phone away and went to my desk. Lined up my pens. Squared my papers. Opened my laptop.
The iced latte was already there.
---
The Harmon account deadline hit us both on Thursday.
Our manager had paired us on the presentation deck — me on the data analysis, Zayne on the client-facing slides. By six o'clock, the floor had emptied out. The overhead lights had switched to their dim after-hours setting, leaving just the glow of our screens and the city lights pressing in through the windows.
We worked in parallel for a while. Quiet. Efficient. He sent me slide drafts, I sent back notes, he revised without argument. It was easy in a way that made me slightly suspicious.
Around seven, I pulled up the slide deck he'd built from our manager's original brief and stopped.
"He put the revenue projections in the executive summary," I said.
"I know."
"That's not — the executive summary is supposed to be the overview. The projections go in section three."
"I know," Zayne said again. He leaned back in his chair and looked at the ceiling with the expression of a man who had made peace with something. "He does it every time. I've seen four of his decks. The projections are always in the wrong place. I think he genuinely believes that's where they go."
I looked at him. "Has anyone told him?"
"Derek tried once." He paused. "Derek now puts the projections wherever Marcus tells him to."
Something in my chest loosened. I laughed — a real one, short and sudden, the kind that catches you off guard. It came out before I could decide whether to let it.
Zayne looked at me. Not with surprise. More like satisfaction, quiet and unhurried, the way someone looks when something they expected finally happens.
I caught myself. I'd been leaning toward him without noticing — elbows on the desk, shoulders angled in. I straightened up. Pulled back. Picked up my coffee cup and found it empty.
He saw it. All of it. The lean, the correction, the cup I used as a prop. He didn't say anything. But the corner of his mouth lifted, just slightly, and he turned back to his screen.
"I'll move the projections to section three," he said. "We can tell him the template updated automatically."
"That's a lie."
"It's a mercy."
I pressed my lips together to keep from smiling and lost the fight.
From across the room, near the elevator bank, I heard the soft chime of the doors opening. Lena Park stepped out, bag over her shoulder, clearly on her way home from a late meeting. She slowed as she passed our cluster of desks. Her eyes moved from Zayne to me, then back to Zayne, then to the two coffee cups and the shared screen and the particular quality of the silence between us.
She said nothing. She just smiled — wide, private, the smile of someone filing something away for later — and kept walking.
The elevator doors closed behind her.
Zayne didn't look up from his screen. "She's going to tell everyone."
"There's nothing to tell."
"Sure," he said.
I turned back to my monitor. The city hummed outside the glass. My pens were parallel. My papers were squared. The cursor blinked in the spreadsheet, waiting.
I thought about the iced latte. The exact order. The way he'd said you looked like you needed it without stopping, without making it a thing, without asking for anything back.
I thought about Dillon's texts sitting in a folder I'd named like a boundary I was finally learning to keep.
I thought about the nail hole in my wall where his jersey used to hang, and the quiet that had moved into my apartment like a tenant I was still getting used to.
Zayne sent me the revised deck. Projections in section three. Clean, precise, exactly right.
I approved it without comment and started shutting down my station.
Some things, I was learning, you didn't have to say out loud.
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