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After My Boyfriend Posted Our Private Texts Online Novel Cover

After My Boyfriend Posted Our Private Texts Online

The blue glow of my phone illuminated my tear-stained face as I scrolled through Instagram at 1:37 AM. Sleep had eluded me again—a common occurrence when Ryan didn't bother to text goodnight. Five years of this routine, and I still couldn't break the habit of waiting up for him. My thumb paused on a post that made my heart stutter. Ryan had tagged Madison in a photo. Nothing unusual there—they were always together. But something about the caption made my stomach twist: "Some conversations are just too good not to share..." I tapped on it, and my world collapsed. Screenshots. My texts to Ryan. The private, desperate ones I'd sent during our worst fights.
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Chapter 2

I waited until Ryan left for his weekend golf tournament with his father before I made the call. My fingers trembled slightly as I booked a room at the Vineyard Vista Inn in Napa Valley—the same boutique hotel Ryan and I had planned to visit for our anniversary next month. The irony wasn't lost on me; the trip we'd discussed for months would now be my first act of liberation.

"Will anyone be joining you, Ms. Mitchell?" the cheerful receptionist asked.

"No," I replied, surprised by the steadiness in my voice. "Just me."

Just me. The words felt foreign yet strangely empowering.

I packed quickly, selecting clothes I actually liked rather than the outfits Ryan preferred. Into my suitcase went a sundress he'd once called "too bohemian," and sandals he thought were "unflattering." At the last minute, I spotted my old sketchbook gathering dust on the top shelf of my closet. I hadn't drawn anything in years—not since Ryan had dismissed my cityscape sketches as "amateur hobby work." I hesitated, then tucked it into my bag.

When Ryan called that evening, I answered with practiced casualness.

"Hey," I said, forcing my voice to remain steady. "My aunt Ellen isn't doing well. I'm going to visit her for a few days."

"Your aunt in San Diego?" he asked distractedly. I could hear Madison laughing in the background.

"Yes," I lied. Aunt Ellen was real, but she was perfectly healthy and lived in Phoenix. Ryan wouldn't know the difference—he'd never bothered to learn anything about my family.

"Whatever. Just be back by Thursday. We have dinner with my clients, remember?"

"Of course," I said, though I had no intention of being there.

The next morning, I drove north on Highway 101, windows down, playing music Ryan had always hated. With each mile marker, the knot in my chest loosened incrementally. By the time the vineyards of Napa Valley came into view, stretching across rolling hills under a clear blue sky, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years: possibility.

The Vineyard Vista Inn was even more charming than the website photos—a renovated Victorian mansion surrounded by lavender gardens and panoramic views of vineyards. I checked in with a strange sense of unreality. No one here knew me as Ryan's girlfriend. No one was watching to report back to him or Madison. I was just Claire—a woman on her own.

My momentary confidence faltered when the concierge informed me that my luggage had been mistakenly routed to another hotel across town and wouldn't arrive until tomorrow. The old Claire would have panicked, called Ryan for advice, or simply cried in frustration.

Instead, I thanked him, accepted the complimentary toiletry kit, and headed to my room with just my purse and the carry-on containing my sketchbook.

The room was beautiful—a four-poster bed, French doors opening onto a private balcony, and vineyard views that stretched to the horizon. I stepped onto the balcony and took a deep breath of air scented with lavender and earth.

With nothing else to do, I retrieved my sketchbook and a pencil. My first strokes were hesitant, rusty from disuse. But as the afternoon light shifted across the vineyards, something awakened in me. I lost myself in the gentle curves of the hills, the geometric patterns of the grapevines, the play of shadows across the landscape.

Three hours later, I had filled several pages. They weren't perfect—my technique had suffered from years of neglect—but looking at them filled me with a quiet joy I'd almost forgotten existed.

That evening, rather than hiding in my room as I might have done before, I made my way to the hotel's boutique winery. A communal tasting was in progress, and the host smiled warmly as I approached.

"Just one?" he asked.

"Just one," I confirmed, and this time the words felt like freedom.

I joined the table of strangers, accepting a glass of cabernet—my favorite, though Ryan always insisted I order pinot noir to "appear sophisticated." The wine was rich and complex, and as I savored it, I realized something profound: I couldn't remember the last time I'd made a choice purely for my own pleasure.

As I raised my glass to the sunset painting the vineyards gold, my phone buzzed with a text from Ryan: *Where are those client files I asked you to organize?*

I watched the notification fade from my screen without opening it, took another sip of my cabernet, and smiled.

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