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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 3

The test sat on the edge of the sink like it was waiting for me to blink first.

I didn't blink. I just sat there on the cold tile floor of my Brooklyn bathroom, back against the tub, knees pulled to my chest, staring at those two pink lines like they were a sentence I didn't know how to finish.

One night. A release valve. Nothing more.

That's what I'd told myself on the sidewalk outside his Tribeca loft, in last night's dress, breathing in the early morning air. I'd been so sure of it. Clean. Contained. Done.

Apparently not.

I don't know how long I sat there. Long enough for the floor to make my tailbone ache. Long enough for the light through the frosted window to shift from gray to pale gold. Long enough to cycle through every version of what came next and find all of them terrifying.

I picked up my phone and called Aliyah.

She didn't ask questions on the call. Just said, 'I'm coming,' and hung up. Twenty minutes later, her key was in my lock.

She found me still on the bathroom floor. She looked at the test on the sink, then at me, then sat down on the tile beside me without a word. For a while we just sat there together, the way we had on my apartment floor the morning after Enzo — two women and a silence that didn't need filling.

'Okay,' she said finally.

'Okay,' I repeated. My voice came out steadier than I expected.

'How far along?'

'Five weeks. Maybe six.'

Aliyah nodded slowly. She reached over and turned the test face-down on the sink. I appreciated that more than I could say.

'Have you told him?'

'No.'

'Are you going to?'

I pressed my fingers against my eyes. 'I don't know who he is, Aliyah. I spent one night with him. I know he hates his father and drinks Blanton's neat and assembles arguments the way other people assemble weapons. That's it. That's the whole list.'

She was quiet for a moment. 'You know more than that.'

Maybe. But knowing someone's capable of being interesting for one night and knowing whether they're capable of showing up for a lifetime — those were two completely different things. I'd spent seven years confusing them.

'There's a clause,' I said. 'In his grandfather's will. If Cullen produces an heir, the Hamilton assets revert to him.' I let that sit in the air between us. 'So if I tell him I'm pregnant, I will never know. Not really. I'll spend the rest of my life wondering if I was a strategy.'

Aliyah was quiet for a long moment. Then: 'So don't tell him yet.'

I looked at her.

'Give him three months,' she said. 'You're already in contact with him — the revenge thing, the pact, whatever it is. Keep meeting with him. Let him show you who he is without the pregnancy on the table. If he proves himself in that window, he's worth telling. If he doesn't—' She shrugged. 'You raise this baby on your own terms and he never has to know.'

It was so clean. So practical. So exactly the kind of framework Aliyah built when the world got messy.

'And if he does prove himself?' I asked. 'Then what? I tell him I've been sitting on this for three months?'

'Then you tell him the truth and you deal with it together.' She met my eyes. 'No man gets to be a factor unless he earns it. That's the rule.'

I sat with that for a moment. The clock starts now. Ninety days. No pregnancy, no leverage, no safety net — just Cullen Pierce, unfiltered, showing me exactly who he was when nothing was at stake.

'Okay,' I said.

Aliyah squeezed my hand once, hard. 'Okay.'

* * *

I reached out to Cullen two days later. Kept it simple — I had new information on Jocelyn's social calendar, did he want to compare notes. He replied within the hour. We met at a corner booth in a dim Italian place in the West Village, the kind with no reservations and no Instagram presence, and we talked for three hours.

That became the pattern.

Late dinners in back booths. Coffee in the mornings when our schedules aligned. Occasional walks through neighborhoods that felt neutral — no history, no associations, just pavement and conversation. Cullen would bring what his network had turned up: Esmeralda's guest list additions, Jocelyn's recent credit card activity, the social events she was using to position herself in the months before the Plaza wedding. I brought what he couldn't buy — the interior map of Jocelyn's psychology. I knew which compliments made her reckless. I knew she couldn't resist a room that made her feel chosen. I knew that her hunger for status was so specific, so consuming, that she would walk through almost any door if the right person held it open.

Cullen listened to all of it with that particular quality of attention he had — total, unhurried, like he was filing everything away in some internal architecture I couldn't see the shape of. He asked good questions. The kind that made me think harder, not the kind designed to make the asker look smart.

I kept waiting for the angle. For the moment he'd say something that revealed the calculation underneath. It didn't come.

What came instead was smaller. He remembered I took my coffee black. He texted once, at eleven on a Tuesday, just to send me a screenshot of Esmeralda Carroll's latest society page appearance with a single-word caption: 'Predictable.' He showed up to our Thursday dinner already knowing I'd had a bad day — I hadn't told him, but he'd read it in something, some shift in how I'd responded to his earlier message — and he didn't ask about it. He just ordered the good bourbon and let me talk about something else entirely.

I straightened the salt shaker on the table between us and caught him watching my hands.

'Habit,' I said.

'I know,' he said. And somehow that was worse than if he'd asked.

* * *

Three weeks into the clock, Cullen called me on a Wednesday afternoon, his voice carrying the particular flatness it got when he'd found something significant.

'I need to show you something,' he said. 'Not over the phone.'

We met at his office — a corner suite in a Midtown building that still had the Hamilton name etched into the lobby stone, a detail I suspected was not accidental. He pulled up a document on his laptop and turned the screen toward me.

A marriage license. Jocelyn Carroll and Ledger Ferguson. Dated six months ago. A courthouse ceremony, no announcement, no social media, no trace in any of the circles where Jocelyn performed her single, available, upwardly mobile self.

I read it twice.

'Ledger Ferguson,' I said.

'Trust fund. Old Virginia money.' Cullen's voice was even. 'He has a history. Documented. Two prior incidents, both settled quietly.' He paused. 'She married him for access to the family trust. The disbursement conditions require a spouse.'

I sat back. The room felt very still.

Jocelyn, who had spent months copying my perfume and my lingerie and my haircut. Jocelyn, who had stolen my boyfriend and posted champagne selfies the next day. Jocelyn, who was still sleeping with Enzo, still attending events as a single woman, still performing the life she'd decided to take from me — while secretly married to a man with a violence record, for money.

The hunger in her was so total it had eaten her whole.

'She doesn't know you have this,' I said.

'No.' Cullen closed the laptop. 'And she won't. Not until the moment it's most useful.' He looked at me across the desk. 'The Plaza wedding is in nine weeks. Ledger Ferguson has already been added to the guest list — Esmeralda invited him. She thinks he's a good match for Jocelyn.' A pause. 'She doesn't know they're already married either.'

I thought about Jocelyn's face at the mixer. The way the warmth had evaporated the second she was cornered. The cold, transactional thing underneath.

'She walked into it herself,' I said.

'They always do,' Cullen said. 'When the trap is built right.'

I looked at him across the desk — this sharp, controlled man who had been quietly, methodically building toward a reckoning for years, who had just handed me the most devastating piece of information I'd ever held, and who was watching me with that same total attention he always had.

The clock was still running. Seventy-one days left.

I wasn't sure anymore what I was testing him for. I was starting to be afraid he was already passing.

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