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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 2

Cullen Pierce watched Jocelyn the way a chess player watches a piece he's already decided to sacrifice — with complete, unhurried certainty.

'Is that Jocelyn Carroll?' he asked. Not like he didn't know. Like he was confirming something he'd already filed away.

'Unfortunately,' I said.

He turned those pale eyes on me, and something in his expression shifted. Not warmth exactly. More like recognition. 'Her mother is Esmeralda Carroll.'

I stared at him. 'The woman who's been all over the society pages with—'

'With my father.' His jaw tightened. 'Gerardo Pierce. They're getting married. At The Plaza.'

The silence between us lasted exactly two seconds before we both laughed — the kind of laugh that has nothing funny in it, the kind that comes out when the universe decides to be obscene.

Across the bar, Jocelyn was watching us with narrowed eyes, her champagne flute frozen halfway to her lips.

'So your father,' I said slowly, 'is marrying her mother.'

'In six weeks.'

'And she—' I gestured toward Jocelyn, '—just spent the last seven months sleeping with my boyfriend.'

Cullen looked at me for a long moment. 'We should get out of here,' he said. 'Somewhere that doesn't require us to perform.'

I glanced back at Jocelyn. She'd recovered her smile, but it didn't reach her eyes anymore. Good.

'Lead the way,' I said.

* * *

The SoHo bar was the kind of place that didn't need to try — low lighting, good bourbon, no music loud enough to drown out a conversation. We took a table near the edge of the rooftop, the city spread out below us like something that didn't know it was supposed to be impressive.

Cullen ordered two glasses of Blanton's without asking. I didn't object.

'Seven years,' he said, when the drinks arrived. Not a question. He'd heard enough at the mixer to do the math.

'Seven years.' I turned the glass in my hands. 'He kept saying he needed to establish his career first. That we'd get engaged when the timing was right. That he didn't want to rush something important.' I paused. 'I believed him. Every single time.'

Cullen didn't say anything. He just listened, and the quality of his attention was strange — total, unhurried, like he had nowhere else to be and nothing else worth hearing. I wasn't used to that. I'd spent seven years talking to a man who was always half somewhere else.

'The worst part,' I said, 'is that she was copying me. Not just the affair. She had my perfume, my haircut, my lingerie. The exact same set.' I set the glass down. 'She wasn't trying to steal my boyfriend. She was trying to replace me entirely.'

Something moved behind his eyes. Not pity. Colder than that. More useful.

'My father married my mother for her family's money,' he said. 'The Hamiltons built their real estate portfolio over three generations. My grandfather spent forty years on it.' He took a slow drink. 'Gerardo spent ten years dismantling it from the inside. Affairs, bad investments, leveraging assets my grandfather never agreed to touch. The stress killed him. Literally — his heart gave out two years after he found out what my father had done with the company.' He paused. 'My mother never remarried. She just — rebuilt. Quietly. On her own.'

'And now he's marrying Esmeralda Carroll.'

'At The Plaza. Five hundred guests. The whole performance.' His voice was even, but his hand on the glass was still. 'He wants to legitimize it. Put a bow on everything he took and call it a love story.'

I looked at him across the table. 'So what do we do about it?'

The corner of his mouth moved. 'We make sure the story ends differently than he planned.'

We talked for another hour. The bourbon helped. So did the particular freedom of sitting across from someone who had no history with you, no version of you they needed to protect. I didn't have to be careful with Cullen Pierce. I didn't have to manage his feelings about what I was saying. He just took it in, turned it over, and handed back something sharper.

By the third drink, we had the outline of something. Not a plan exactly — more like a shared direction. Cullen had access to information. I had proximity to Jocelyn's world. Between us, we had enough to make the Plaza wedding the most memorable event of the season, and not in the way Gerardo Pierce intended.

'To mutual enemies,' I said, raising my glass.

He touched his to mine. 'And the people stupid enough to underestimate us.'

* * *

I don't know which drink it was. The fifth, maybe. The city had gone soft at the edges and the anger in my chest had burned down to something warmer and more reckless.

I know I made the first move. I remember that clearly — the decision, the moment I stopped calculating and just acted, because I had spent seven years being careful and careful had gotten me a front-row seat to my own replacement.

Cullen didn't hesitate. He didn't ask if I was sure. He just looked at me the way he'd been looking at me all night — like I was someone worth paying attention to — and that was enough.

His Tribeca loft had floor-to-ceiling windows and a city below that blazed like it was trying to prove something. I didn't think about Enzo. I didn't think about Jocelyn. I didn't think about anything except the fact that for the first time in years, I was somewhere I had chosen to be, with someone who hadn't asked me to wait.

* * *

I woke at five-fifteen to a city just beginning to gray at the edges.

Cullen was asleep, one arm loose across the sheets, his face unguarded in a way it hadn't been all night. I lay still for a moment, looking at the ceiling, taking inventory of myself. No regret. No panic. Just the clean, quiet feeling of someone who had stepped off a ledge and discovered the fall wasn't as long as she'd feared.

I got up carefully. Found my dress, my shoes, my bag. In the kitchen, I filled a glass of water and set it on his nightstand without thinking — an automatic gesture, the kind of thing you do for someone before you remember you don't know them.

I looked at it for a second after I set it down.

Then I picked up my bag and walked out, pulling the door shut behind me with barely a sound.

The elevator was empty. The lobby was empty. Outside, the city was just waking up, cool and indifferent, and I stood on the sidewalk in last night's dress and breathed in the early morning air.

One night. A release valve. Nothing more.

I flagged a cab and didn't look back.

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