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After My Boyfriend Slept with My Best Friend Novel Cover

After My Boyfriend Slept with My Best Friend

The key turned in Enzo's lock with a familiar click. I'd heard that sound a thousand times over seven years, but tonight was different. Tonight, I was early. I had a surprise for his birthday—a vintage watch I'd spent months tracking down, the same model his grandfather wore in all those old photographs he loved. I wanted to see his face light up. The penthouse was quiet except for the faint sounds drifting from the bedroom. Soft moans, the rustle of sheets. My hand froze on the doorknob. I pushed the door open. Time stopped.
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Chapter 1

The key turned in Enzo's lock with a familiar click. I'd heard that sound a thousand times over seven years, but tonight was different. Tonight, I was early. I had a surprise for his birthday—a vintage watch I'd spent months tracking down, the same model his grandfather wore in all those old photographs he loved. I wanted to see his face light up.

The penthouse was quiet except for the faint sounds drifting from the bedroom. Soft moans, the rustle of sheets. My hand froze on the doorknob.

I pushed the door open.

Time stopped.

Enzo's Upper East Side bedroom—the one I'd helped him choose paint for, the one I'd left countless mornings before work—was bathed in the golden light of his bedside lamp. And there, tangled in his Egyptian cotton sheets, was my boyfriend of seven years and my best friend Jocelyn.

But it wasn't just the affair that hit me like a physical blow. It was the details. Jocelyn's hair, styled in the exact beachy waves I'd been wearing for months. Her perfume—Jo Malone Nectarine Blossom & Honey, the one I'd introduced her to last spring. And worst of all, the lingerie.

'You like?' she'd said two weeks ago when I showed her the brand. 'It's so comfortable,' I'd told her. Now she was wearing the same pale pink set, the same delicate lace I'd chosen for myself.

My vision tunneled. The room went silent except for the roaring in my ears.

I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I walked to the dresser, picked up the heavy crystal vase Enzo had given me for our fifth anniversary, and hurled it at his head. It missed by inches, shattering against the wall in an explosion of crystal and water.

'What the fuck?' Enzo bolted upright, eyes wide.

I crossed the room in three strides, my hand connecting with Jocelyn's cheek with a sharp crack. The sound echoed in the sudden silence. She gasped, her hand flying to her face where my handprint was already forming.

'Araya!' she started, but I was already turning away.

Seven years of my life, seven minutes to end it. I set my key on the dresser with deliberate calm, my hands steady as stone.

'See you around,' I said, and walked out the door.

* * *

The next morning, I sat on my Brooklyn apartment floor surrounded by the wreckage of a life I'd built around the wrong man. Seven years of photographs, gifts, shared memories—all of it now poisoned. My phone had been buzzing with texts from Enzo all night, but I'd turned it face-down on the coffee table.

When the doorbell rang, I almost didn't answer. But Aliyah's voice came through the intercom, steady and sure. 'It's me. I brought coffee.'

She let herself in with the key I'd given her years ago and took one look at my face before setting the coffee down and sitting cross-legged on the floor beside me. She didn't ask questions. She didn't offer platitudes. She just sat, solid and real, in a world that had tilted off its axis.

'I threw a vase at his head,' I said finally, my voice hoarse.

'Good,' she replied without hesitation.

I stared at the wall, at the engagement photos from my cousin's wedding where Enzo and I looked so perfect, so happy. 'The worst part isn't the affair,' I said quietly. 'It's the lingerie.'

Aliyah's hand found mine, warm and steady. 'She was planning it.'

'For months. Maybe longer.' My voice cracked on the last word. 'She wanted to be me.'

* * *

That evening, I scrolled through Instagram and froze. There, posted twenty minutes ago, was Jocelyn at some exclusive matchmaking mixer in the Meatpacking District. She was laughing, champagne flute in hand, surrounded by men in expensive suits. The caption read: 'Single and ready to mingle! 💕'

She hadn't even waited twenty-four hours.

Something snapped inside me. I stood up, grabbed my sharpest black dress—the one that made me feel untouchable—and called an Uber.

The mixer was at some sleek rooftop bar, all glass and chrome and pretension. I paid the cover charge with a fifty, not bothering to wait for change, and pushed through the crowd until I spotted her.

Jocelyn was holding court near the bar, her laughter carrying over the music as she touched the arm of a silver-haired man in a Tom Ford suit. She looked flawless, victorious.

'Jocelyn.' My voice cut through her performance like a blade.

She turned, and for a split second, I saw fear flash across her face before she composed herself. 'Araya! What a surprise.'

'I'm sure it is,' I said, loud enough for the men around us to turn. 'How's Enzo? Still wearing that watch I gave him?'

Her smile faltered. 'I don't know what you're talking about.'

'The watch, Jocelyn. The one that matches his grandfather's. Or maybe you're wearing his grandmother's pearls tonight? You seem to like wearing things that belong to other people.'

The men exchanged uncomfortable glances. One of them stepped back.

'You're being dramatic,' she hissed, dropping the warmth from her voice. 'Enzo was bored. You were too boring to keep a man interested.'

I stepped closer, my heels clicking on the polished floor. 'I wasn't boring. I was loyal. Something you wouldn't understand.'

She sneered. 'Loyalty is for dogs, Araya. I got what I wanted.'

I opened my mouth to respond, but the words died as I stumbled backward, colliding with a solid chest. Strong hands steadied me, and I looked up into piercing blue eyes that seemed to see straight through the chaos.

'Careful there,' said a low voice. 'Rooftops are dangerous places for women with targets on their backs.'

I turned to face him fully, and something in his gaze made me still. He was tall, impeccably dressed, with the kind of presence that commanded rooms. But it was the cold amusement in his eyes that caught me—and the fact that he was looking at Jocelyn, not me.

'You're Cullen Pierce,' I said, recognition dawning.

He raised an eyebrow. 'And you're the woman who just made Jocelyn Carroll look like the fraud she is. I appreciate the entertainment.'

Jocelyn's face contorted with rage. 'Cullen, this isn't funny—'

'Actually,' he interrupted, his voice cutting through hers like ice, 'it's hilarious. Almost as funny as watching your mother try to marry my father.'

The words hung in the air like a challenge. Jocelyn's face went white, and in that moment, I realized I'd found an ally in the most unexpected place.

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