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After My Ex Punched the Man I’m Falling For Novel Cover

After My Ex Punched the Man I’m Falling For

The candle was melting. I watched it happen in real time — the little flame eating through the wax, a slow white drip running down the side of the birthday cake the waiter had set in front of me twenty minutes ago with a careful, professional smile. The kind of smile that said: I'm not going to ask. The rooftop bar was full. Couples leaning across small tables. A group of women shrieking at something on a phone. Jazz coming out of a speaker somewhere, low and unhurried. All around me, the city did what it always did — moved, breathed, didn't care. I sat very still. Jayden's jacket had been on the back of his chair.
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Chapter 5

The photo came from Adriana, obviously.

Jayden didn't ask how she'd found it. He knew better than to ask Adriana how she found anything — she had a talent for it, the same way some people had a talent for music or math. She just saw things. Noticed things. Filed them away for the exact moment they'd do the most damage.

'She seems happy,' Adriana said, setting her phone face-down on the table like she was doing him a favor by not making him look longer. Her voice had that particular softness she used when she was being precise. 'You know how she gets when she's excited about something new. It's sweet.'

Jayden said nothing.

He kept eating. He kept his face level and his jaw unclenched and his hands flat on the table. He did all the things a person does when something is fine.

But the image was already burned in: Melody outside some café in Brooklyn, mid-laugh, the real one — the one that took over her whole face — and a man beside her, tall, dark-haired, watching her like he was reading something he hadn't expected to find.

Jayden had been texting her for weeks. Brief, warm texts. Checking in. Sending her a meme she would've found funny six months ago. Asking if she wanted to grab coffee sometime, no pressure, just catching up.

She always replied. That was the thing — she always replied. Polite. Friendly. A sentence or two. Nothing wrong with any of it. Nothing to point to.

That was, he was starting to understand, exactly the problem.

He picked up his phone after Adriana left. Opened their thread. Scrolled up through the last month.

His messages were long. Hers were short. His were frequent. Hers came hours later, sometimes the next morning, always cheerful and light and — he saw it now, clearly, the way you finally see a shape in a picture you've been staring at too long — finished. Complete. Requiring nothing back.

She wasn't punishing him. That would've been easier. She was just — elsewhere.

Something ugly and unfamiliar coiled in his chest. He put his phone down. He picked it up again.

He didn't text her.

---

The new pages came through on a Tuesday.

I was at the kitchen counter with coffee and the shared doc open, doing what I always did in the mornings — working through Julian's overnight output before he emerged from his study looking like someone who had argued with a deadline and technically won.

I read the first paragraph and slowed down.

Read it again.

The scene was set at a ramen counter, eight seats, a ceiling fan that clicked on every rotation. The female character had ordered wrong — something oversalted, something she wouldn't admit was a mistake — and the male lead had pushed his bowl toward her without comment and gone back to his notes, and she'd eaten his food like it was nothing, like it was just what you did, like proximity had quietly become comfort without either of them scheduling it.

I kept reading.

A theater. A shoulder. Three paragraphs that somehow contained everything without saying any of it.

A café. A coffee flight. Fingers overlapping on the rim of a small ceramic cup, and the line he'd written for it: *He pulled back. He always pulled back. One day, he thought, she would stop reaching.*

My pencil had stopped moving.

I went to the next section. Then the next. I was looking for the laugh — I knew it was there, I'd felt it coming in the shape of the pages — and then I found it.

He'd described the way his female character laughed as: *full-faced and unguarded and slightly too loud for the room, the kind of laugh that made strangers turn around not because it was disruptive but because they wanted to be near whatever had caused it.*

I sat very still.

I knew that laugh. I lived in that laugh. I'd heard it directed at Julian twice in the last two weeks, both times without meaning to, both times when he'd said something so precisely absurd that I'd lost the ability to manage my response.

He'd been watching. He'd been watching and writing it down and turning it into something on the page, and the female character's laugh was mine, and the male character's habit of going completely still was his, and none of this was research anymore, and we both knew it, and neither of us was saying it.

I opened the comment box.

I typed: *Authentic. Don't change it.*

I stared at the words. Three of them. Completely inadequate and also the only ones I had.

I hit submit.

I closed the laptop. I stood up and refilled my coffee even though it was still full. I stood at the window and watched the street below — a man walking a dog, a woman on a phone, the ordinary Tuesday morning of a city that had no idea what was happening in this kitchen.

At 2:14 a.m. that night — I know because my phone lit up and I was, for reasons I was not examining, still awake — the comment notification came through.

Julian had read it.

There was no response in the doc. No edits to the passage. Nothing deleted, nothing revised.

Just the original comment, sitting there. And below it, after a gap that felt like it had weight:

*Authentic. Don't change it.*

He'd quoted it back. Just that. Just those three words, in the reply field, at 2 a.m., from a man who chose every word like he was building a sentence that had to last.

I set my phone face-down on the nightstand.

I looked at the ceiling.

In my notebook on the desk — the battered one with the margin sketches — there was a drawing I'd done three days ago without deciding to. Rumpled hair. Glasses sideways above one ear. A coffee mug dangling from two fingers. The lines had come fast and certain, the way they always did when my hand knew something I hadn't caught up to yet.

I hadn't shown it to anyone.

I hadn't closed the notebook either.

Outside, the city ran its usual indifferent hum. Someone honked once, far away. A siren came and went.

I didn't fall asleep for a long time.

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