
After My Groom Chose the Student Over Me
Chapter 2
The cold had seeped into my bones by the time someone finally found me in that storage room. My graduation robes were damp with condensation, my body shivering uncontrollably. The janitor who discovered me looked confused, then concerned.
"Miss? Are you alright? The ceremony finished hours ago."
Hours. I'd been locked in there for hours.
"Thank you," I managed, my teeth still chattering. "I'm fine."
The lie tasted bitter on my tongue.
---
But I wasn't fine. Not when I saw what Whitney had done.
My phone buzzed with notifications as I returned to my small apartment. Social media alerts, messages from colleagues, even a few from students. All with links to the same post.
"Desperate Older Woman Clings to Younger Man's Success: The Truth About Professor Sofia Henderson."
The title alone made my stomach drop. I clicked on the link with trembling fingers.
"Everyone knows Professor Henderson thinks she's in love with Jericho Fox," Whitney had written in a public forum. "What they don't know is how she's been manipulating him for years, using her position to get him funding and attention."
The comments section was already flooded with responses.
"Always thought there was something off about her."
"Guess that explains why she's been so protective of him at university events."
"Poor Jericho. He deserves better than a desperate cougar."
Cougar. The word burned into my retinas.
I scrolled through more comments, each one more vicious than the last. Students I'd taught for years were posting about my "obsession" with Jericho. Colleagues were sharing "concerns" about my "erratic behavior."
None of it was true. None of it had happened.
But it didn't matter. Whitney had crafted a perfect narrative—one that painted me as unstable, desperate, pathetic.
---
"Professor Henderson's conduct has been increasingly concerning."
Jericho's voice carried across the faculty lounge. I froze in the doorway, coffee mug halfway to my lips.
"She's been fabricating stories about our relationship," he continued, addressing a small group of department heads. "I've tried to be patient, but her obsession is affecting my work with students."
I stood there, invisible in plain sight.
"Jericho," I finally managed, my voice barely audible. "That's not true."
He turned slowly, his expression a perfect mask of pity and disappointment.
"Sofia," he said gently, as if speaking to a child. "We've discussed this. Your feelings for me were never reciprocated."
The room fell silent. Every eye turned to me.
"I think you should seek help," he added, his voice dripping with false concern. "This delusion about us having a relationship... it's not healthy."
"She's been stalking him," Whitney chimed in from beside him. "Showing up at his office, waiting outside his classes."
"That's a lie!" My voice cracked. "I teach in the same building!"
"See?" Jericho shook his head sadly. "Paranoid and delusional. I'm sorry you had to see this, everyone."
---
They took everything from me. My reputation. My dignity. Even my basic human needs.
"Want dinner tonight?" Whitney asked sweetly, standing in my kitchen doorway. She'd somehow gotten a key—probably from Jericho.
I stared at her, hollow-eyed. It had been three days since I'd eaten properly.
"You have to earn it first," she continued, her smile never reaching her eyes. "Jericho thinks you need to learn your place."
"What do you want?" I asked, my voice hoarse.
"Clean the bathroom. With this." She held up a toothbrush.
The humiliation burned through me like acid. But my growling stomach reminded me of what was at stake.
"Jericho says you've been taking too many showers," Whitney added casually. "Wasting water. From now on, you only get hot water if you do what we say."
I took the toothbrush with trembling fingers.
"And if you want that blanket back..." She gestured to the bed where my quilt was missing. "You'll need to perform for us tonight."
"Perform?" The word felt dangerous on my tongue.
"Jericho wants to see how desperate you really are." Her smile widened. "Don't worry. We'll film it so you can see how pathetic you look."
I clutched the toothbrush tighter, the bristles digging into my palm.
"You're going to break me," I whispered.
"That's the plan," Whitney replied cheerfully. "Now get scrubbing. You have a lot to do before dinner."
As she left, I caught a glimpse of my reflection in the kitchen window—hollow-cheeked, eyes sunken, a ghost of the woman I once was. Somewhere in that broken reflection, I saw Jericho's next lesson in cruelty taking shape.
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