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After My Boyfriend Said His Ex’s Name in His Sleep Novel Cover

After My Boyfriend Said His Ex’s Name in His Sleep

The thermometer read 103.2. I pulled it from Rhys's mouth and set it on the nightstand next to the bottle of Tylenol, the glass of water I'd refilled three times, and the bowl of lukewarm broth he hadn't touched. The digital clock beside the lamp said 2:47 a.m. I'd been sitting on the edge of his bed for five hours. His face was flushed. Sweat darkened the collar of his t-shirt and made his hair stick to his forehead. I wrung out the cloth in the bowl of cool water, folded it into a neat rectangle, and pressed it against his skin. He flinched but didn't wake. His breathing was shallow and fast, like a dog panting in summer heat. I watched him the way I always watched him.
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Chapter 2

The call came at 4:23 a.m.

I was already there when his phone rang. I had followed the thread back to the apartment like a dog finding its way home. Rhys was sitting on the edge of the bed. Not sleeping. The sheets were still tangled from his fever. The bowl of broth was still on the nightstand. The cloth I'd used to cool his forehead was still damp.

He picked up on the second ring.

"Mr. Andrews?" A woman's voice. Professional. Careful. "This is Detective Morales with Seattle PD. I'm calling about Alanna Richards. You're listed as her emergency contact."

I watched his face. I watched it the way I had always watched it. Looking for something. Any shift. Any crack.

"Yes," he said.

"Sir, there was an incident at Westlake Center earlier this morning. A mass stabbing. I'm sorry to tell you that Ms. Richards was among the victims. We need you to come to the King County Medical Examiner's Office for identification."

A pause. One second. Two.

"I'll be there in twenty minutes," he said.

He hung up. He sat there for a moment. Then he stood, pulled on his jacket — the same jacket from yesterday, the one that still smelled like fever sweat — and picked up his keys. He didn't change his clothes. He didn't wash his face. His hair was still damp and matted from the night.

He drove.

I sat in the passenger seat. The place I had always sat. The streets were empty and wet. The wipers moved back and forth. He didn't turn on the radio. He didn't call anyone. His hands were steady on the wheel. His jaw was set. He looked like a man driving to a meeting he hadn't prepared for but intended to handle.

The morgue was in a low concrete building south of downtown. Fluorescent lights. Linoleum floors. The smell of disinfectant so strong it had a texture. A woman in scrubs met him at the front desk and led him down a hallway. Her shoes squeaked on the floor. His didn't.

The room was cold. I could see the cold even though I couldn't feel it anymore. Steel table in the center. White sheet. The shape underneath was small. Smaller than I thought I would be.

The medical examiner was a man in his fifties with kind eyes and a clipboard. He introduced himself. Dr. Patel. He explained that the injuries were extensive. That visual identification of the face would not be possible. That they would use other identifying markers.

Rhys nodded once.

Dr. Patel pulled back the sheet. Not all of it. Just the left side. Just the arm.

My arm. My forearm. The skin was pale under the fluorescent light, almost blue. But the tattoo was there. The wild rose vine. The thorns curling around two letters. R.A. His initials. Inked into my skin the week after his grandmother's funeral because he had sat on the church steps and said I have no one left and I wanted to give him proof that he did.

Now you have proof, I had told him. I'm not going anywhere.

Rhys looked at the tattoo.

He looked at it for a long time. The room was silent except for the hum of the ventilation system. Dr. Patel waited. The woman in scrubs waited. I waited.

His face didn't change. Not a flicker. Not a tremor. Nothing.

"That's her," he said. His voice was flat. Like confirming a delivery. Like checking a box.

Dr. Patel handed him a clipboard. Rhys signed where the man pointed. His handwriting was steady. He didn't ask questions. He didn't ask to see more. He didn't touch my hand. He didn't say my name.

He set the pen down on the clipboard and walked out.

I stood there. Next to my own body. Next to the tattoo I had gotten for him. The proof I had promised would always be there. And I thought: you looked at the only mark I ever made on this world for you, and you signed a piece of paper, and you left.

I followed him out. Of course I did.

---

The parking lot was gray. Seattle gray. The kind of gray that doesn't lift, that sits on the city like a hand pressing down. Rhys walked to his car. He opened the door. He sat down in the driver's seat.

He didn't start the engine.

His hands were on the steering wheel. Ten and two. Perfect form. He stared through the windshield at the concrete wall of the parking garage. His chest rose and fell. Steady. Even.

I stood outside the passenger window and watched him.

One minute. Two minutes. Three minutes. Four.

Then he turned the key. The engine came on. He backed out of the space, pulled onto the street, and drove north. Toward the office. It was 5:48 a.m. He had a 9 a.m. call.

Four minutes. That was what I got. Four minutes of stillness in a parking lot before the day resumed. Before the machine of his life clicked back into gear and I became what I had always been to him — something that happened in the background while he attended to more important things.

I sat in the passenger seat again. I looked at his profile. The sharp jaw. The dark hair. The face I had loved for six years. The face that hadn't changed when he saw my tattoo on a dead arm.

This is what I was worth to you, I thought. Four minutes in a parking lot.

---

He arranged the funeral in forty-eight hours.

Venue. Flowers. Obituary. Logistics. He handled it the way he handled everything — with precision and efficiency and no wasted motion. He called the funeral home from his office between meetings. He picked white lilies because the florist asked what the deceased preferred and he didn't know, so he said whatever's standard. I had loved peonies. He didn't know that. Or maybe he did once and forgot.

The obituary was four sentences. Alanna Richards, 26, of Seattle. Beloved daughter and sister. Died heroically protecting a stranger. Survived by her father, her sister Claire, and her partner Rhys Andrews.

Beloved. The word sat in the newspaper like a stone in a shoe. Wrong shape. Wrong fit.

The service was held at a chapel near Green Lake on a Thursday afternoon. It rained, because Seattle, because November, because the sky understood something Rhys didn't. The pews were half full. Coworkers. A few college friends. My father, who flew in from Portland and sat rigid in the second row with his hands folded and his face carved from something harder than grief.

Claire sat in the front row.

My sister. Two years older. Sharper than me. Louder than me. She had told me once, sitting on her kitchen counter with a glass of wine, that I was disappearing into a man who didn't know I was there. I had laughed and changed the subject. The way Rhys changed the subject when I showed him my tattoo.

Claire watched Rhys stand at the front of the chapel in his black suit. She watched him accept condolences with a firm handshake and a controlled nod. She watched him say thank you for coming with the same tone he used to close conference calls. He delivered no eulogy. He said nothing about me at all.

I saw Claire's face. I saw the way her mouth tightened. The way her eyes went hard and bright. She was not surprised. That was the worst part. She was not surprised at all. Every warning she had ever given me was confirmed in the steady handshake of a man who buried his girlfriend the way he filed quarterly reports.

In the back row, a woman I didn't recognize was crying.

She was young. Pregnant. Her belly pressed against the dark fabric of her dress. Her face was swollen and red and destroyed by a grief that seemed too large for a stranger. She sobbed through the entire ceremony. Loud, messy, uncontrolled sobs. The kind of crying that Rhys should have been doing and wasn't.

I didn't know her name yet. I would learn it later. Julia Thomas. The woman from the mall. The woman I had thrown myself in front of. She had found the funeral notice in the newspaper and come alone and sat in the back row and wept for a woman she had never met.

Rhys didn't notice her. He didn't look at the back row. He didn't look at Claire. He didn't look at the white lilies that should have been peonies. He stood at the front and shook hands and nodded and when it was over he walked to his car and drove away.

No one stopped him. No one ever had.

I stood in the empty chapel after everyone left. The lilies were wilting already. Rain streaked the stained glass. A stranger in the back row had cried harder for me than the man I had loved for six years.

I thought about that for a long time.

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