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After My Boyfriend Mocked Me in His Friends’ Chat Novel Cover

After My Boyfriend Mocked Me in His Friends’ Chat

I couldn't sleep. It was one of those nights where my body was tired but my brain wouldn't shut off. I lay on my side, staring at the thin line of light under the bedroom door. Dillon was breathing slow and heavy next to me, dead to the world. His phone sat on the nightstand between us, screen down. It buzzed once. Then again. I didn't think much of it. People get late texts. But then it buzzed a third time, and a fourth, rapid little pulses like a heartbeat, and something in my chest tightened.
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Chapter 3

The rain started around five and didn't let up.

By the time we wrapped the Harmon deck and sent it off, the windows were streaked and the streets below were slick and dark. I was pulling on my coat when Zayne appeared at the edge of my desk.

"I'll drive you."

My first instinct was to say no. I had the word halfway formed before I caught it. I thought about the bus stop two blocks over, the rain, the forty-minute ride home with wet shoes and a laptop bag digging into my shoulder.

"Okay," I said.

His car was warm. It smelled like cedar and something faintly citrus, and the seats were the kind of soft that made you realize how tired you were. He pulled into traffic without asking for my address — he already had it from the project files, he said, which should have felt strange but somehow didn't.

We were stopped at a light on Fifth when he said, "There's a ramen place two blocks up. Nothing fancy. Just good."

I looked at the rain on the windshield. I thought about my apartment, the quiet, the succulent on the windowsill that didn't talk back.

"Sure," I said.

The place was small and warm, the kind of spot with fogged-up windows and wooden stools and broth that smelled like it had been going since morning. We got a corner table. I ordered the spicy miso. He got the tonkotsu. The conversation moved the way it had at the office — easy, no gaps that needed filling. He told me about Portland, about the transfer, about a project that had gone sideways in ways that were genuinely funny in retrospect. I told him about the time I'd accidentally sent a client the wrong version of a deck with all my internal comments still in it. He laughed — the real kind, not the polite kind.

For the first time in weeks, something in my chest loosened. Just slightly. Just enough.

I was reaching for my water when the door opened and the cold air came in.

I heard him before I saw him. That laugh. The one that was always slightly too loud, always performing for whoever was nearby.

Dillon walked in with Sabrina Powell on his arm.

She was exactly what I'd expected from the photos — tall, polished, wearing a coat that cost more than my rent. She was laughing at something he'd said, her hand tucked into the crook of his elbow. He looked good. He'd dressed up. He was doing the thing he always did in public, the thing I used to mistake for confidence.

He saw me in about three seconds.

I watched his face move through surprise, then something uglier. He steered Sabrina toward our table like it was his idea, like he'd planned it.

"Elaina." He said my name the way you'd say gotcha. His eyes moved to Zayne. "Didn't take long."

I set my water glass down.

"Moving on fast," he said, louder now, the way people get when they want the room. "Or — what is he, like, twenty-four? Is this a work thing? Is he the new intern?"

Sabrina smiled at her menu. She didn't look up.

I felt the heat move up my throat. Not embarrassment. Something older and more familiar — the reflex to shrink, to smooth it over, to say something that would make him stop without making a scene. Three years of muscle memory.

Zayne stood up.

Not fast. Not aggressive. He just — stood. He was taller than Dillon by two inches, and he used none of them. He looked at Dillon the way you look at something you've already assessed and found unimpressive.

"She doesn't owe you a timeline," Zayne said. His voice was quiet. That was the thing — it was so quiet. "And you're embarrassing yourself in front of your date."

Dillon's smirk flickered.

"So here's what's going to happen," Zayne continued, same tone, same stillness. "You're going to walk to your table, and we're going to finish our dinner, and this is the last time you speak to her in public like that. Because the next time, I won't be this polite."

The room had gone the particular quiet of people pretending not to listen.

Dillon opened his mouth. Closed it. His jaw worked. He looked at me — I think he was waiting for me to intervene, to soften it, to do the thing I always did. I picked up my chopsticks.

He left.

Zayne sat back down. He didn't make a thing of it. He just picked up his spoon and said, "The broth's getting cold."

I looked at my bowl. My hands were shaking — not from fear, not from anger, but from something I didn't have a clean word for. The unfamiliar sensation of someone stepping in front of me. Of not having to absorb it alone.

We didn't talk about it in the restaurant. We didn't talk about it in the car. He walked me to my building door, said goodnight, and left. No performance. No waiting for credit.

I stood in my lobby for a moment before I hit the elevator button.

---

Lena cornered me in the break room the next morning before I'd finished my first cup.

"Okay," she said, planting herself between me and the exit with the energy of someone who had been waiting since dawn. "I need everything."

"Good morning, Lena."

"Don't 'good morning' me. I saw you two leave together last night. Mia from accounting saw you at that ramen place on Fifth." She leaned against the counter. "Details. Now."

"We got dinner after the project wrapped. It was ramen."

"Elaina."

"It was very good ramen."

"He moved departments," she said. "Did you know that? He put in the transfer request three months ago. From Portland. He specifically requested this floor." She let that sit. "I'm just saying."

I poured my coffee. I kept my face neutral. I was good at that.

"I've worked here two years," Lena said, quieter now, the teasing dropping out of her voice. "I have never seen him look at anyone the way he looks at you. Not once." She paused. "Whatever you're telling yourself right now — just stop."

I didn't answer. I picked up my mug and walked back to my desk.

I lined up my pens. Squared my papers. Opened my laptop.

But I thought about it for the rest of the afternoon. The way he'd stood up without raising his voice. The way he'd said the broth's getting cold like nothing had happened. The transfer request, three months ago, from Portland.

The exact coffee order he'd never been told.

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