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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 3

The reception was held in a room with beige walls and folding tables covered in white cloth. Someone had put out a coffee urn and a tray of sandwiches with the crusts cut off. The lilies from the chapel had been moved here, arranged in a vase near the door. They were already browning at the edges.

I stood three feet from my own casket.

It was closed. Mahogany. A small framed photo of me sat on top — my work headshot, the one where I was smiling at something off-camera. I remembered that day. I'd been thinking about what to make for dinner. Rhys had texted asking if we had any of the leftover pasta. I'd said yes. He'd said good. That was the whole conversation.

The room was warm and low-voiced. People held paper cups of coffee and spoke in the careful, measured tones of people who didn't know me well enough to be destroyed but knew me well enough to show up. Coworkers. A few college friends. My father's business associates who had come out of obligation to him rather than love for me.

Rhys moved through the room like he was working it.

That was the only word for it. Working. He moved from cluster to cluster with his hand extended, his chin up, his voice at the right volume. Thank you for coming. She would have appreciated this. Yes, it was very sudden. He accepted condolences the way he accepted meeting agendas — efficiently, without letting anything land too deep.

I watched him.

I had spent six years watching him. Looking for the version of him that would finally turn and see me standing there. I was still doing it. Even now. Even dead. Old habits.

Claire was near the window. She had a cup of coffee she wasn't drinking. She was watching Rhys too, and her face was doing the thing it did when she was too angry to speak — jaw tight, eyes very still, the particular stillness of a woman holding something back with both hands. She had warned me. More than once. Sitting on her kitchen counter, wine in hand, telling me I was disappearing into a man who didn't know I was there.

I had laughed. I had changed the subject.

Now she stood at my reception and watched my boyfriend shake hands with people he barely knew, and she was not surprised. That was the thing that cut deepest. She was not surprised at all.

Rhys checked his phone.

He did it quickly, the way people do when they're trying to be discreet about it. A small tilt of the wrist. A glance down. His expression didn't change but I saw his thumb move — scrolling, reading, processing. Something from the office. Something that needed a response.

He slid the phone back into his pocket. He said something to the man beside him — a short, polite closing — and shook his hand. Then he moved toward the door.

He was leaving.

I looked at the clock on the wall. The reception had been going for forty minutes.

He stopped near the door to say goodbye to my father. Two men in dark suits. A handshake that lasted exactly as long as it needed to. My father's face was stone. Rhys said something. My father nodded once. Then Rhys walked out.

The door swung shut behind him.

I stood in the middle of the room and looked at my casket and thought about the tattoo underneath the mahogany lid. The wild rose vine. His initials. Now you have proof. I'm not going anywhere.

I had meant it as a declaration. It turned out to be a prophecy.

He was gone in forty minutes. I was still here.

---

Three days later, he flew to New York.

I know because I followed him. The thread in my chest pulled and I followed it, the way I had always followed him — without being asked, without being wanted, out of pure stubborn habit.

Sea-Tac Airport. Tuesday morning. The first-class lounge. He was already there when she arrived.

Anastasia Gray.

She came through the lounge door in a camel coat and dark trousers, a carry-on rolling behind her, her hair pulled back in a way that looked effortless and wasn't. She spotted him immediately. Her face did something small and controlled — not quite a smile, but the preparation for one.

"Rhys." She sat down across from him. Set her bag down. Crossed her legs.

"Anastasia." He looked up from his laptop. "I didn't know you were on this flight."

"Daniel mentioned the Hargrove meeting. I thought it made sense to be there." A pause. "How are you holding up?"

He looked back at his screen. "Fine."

She nodded. She didn't push. She knew him well enough not to push. That was the thing about Anastasia — she always knew exactly how much to give and exactly when to stop. It was a skill. I had never had it. I had always given too much and never known when to stop.

They boarded together. First class. Row two. She had the window. He had the aisle. I sat in the empty seat across from them and watched the city fall away beneath the clouds.

Anastasia slept for the first hour. Rhys worked. His laptop screen reflected in the dark window. Spreadsheets. Projections. The architecture of a future that was already moving forward without me in it.

I looked at his hands on the keyboard. These were the hands that had held me. That had touched the tattoo on my arm the day I showed it to him and then reached up and kissed my forehead and changed the subject. These were the hands that had signed the paperwork at the morgue without shaking.

I thought: you are on a plane to New York three days after my funeral and you are working.

I thought: of course you are.

---

The client dinner was at a restaurant in Midtown. Dark wood and low lighting and the kind of menu that didn't list prices. Rhys sat at the head of the table. Anastasia sat to his left. There were four other people — clients, I assumed, men in expensive suits who laughed at the right moments and refilled their own wine glasses.

Anastasia was good at this. She always had been. She knew when to speak and when to let Rhys speak. She asked the right questions. She laughed at the right things. She was polished and present and exactly the kind of woman who belonged in a room like this.

I had never belonged in rooms like this. I had always been more comfortable in the kitchen. Making lasagna. Leaving notes. Checking menus for mangoes.

Halfway through the main course, Anastasia leaned toward Rhys to say something. Her hand moved across the table and settled on his forearm. Light. Easy. The touch of a woman who had done it before and expected to do it again.

He didn't pull away.

He didn't pull away.

I stood against the wall of that restaurant and watched his face and waited for something. A flinch. A hesitation. Some small physical memory of me. Nothing came. He listened to whatever she was saying and nodded and the hand stayed on his arm and the dinner continued.

Outside afterward, they walked back to the hotel. The November air was sharp. Their breath made small clouds. Anastasia's shoulder brushed his as they walked. He didn't move away from it.

I walked behind them. Three feet back. The same distance I had stood from my own casket.

I had spent six years telling myself that I was the one he chose. That Anastasia was the past and I was the present. That the fact that he stayed — that he ate my food and slept in my bed and let me sit beside him in hospital waiting rooms — meant something. That presence was the same as choice.

Watching them walk through the cold Manhattan night, I finally understood the difference.

Anastasia was the woman he wanted.

I was the woman who was there.

The thread in my chest pulled tight. I stopped walking. I stood on the sidewalk and let them move ahead, their figures shrinking in the distance, and I felt something inside me go very quiet. Not broken. Not angry. Not yet.

Just clear.

For the first time in six years, I saw it without the distortion of hope. The whole shape of it. What I had been. What I had never been. What I had given and what it had cost and what it had bought.

Nothing. It had bought nothing.

The cold didn't touch me. I was already past the point where cold could reach.

I stood on that sidewalk in the dark and I thought: good. Now I know.

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