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Anniversary Day of Betrayal Novel Cover

Anniversary Day of Betrayal

The alarm buzzed at 5 AM, but I was already awake, staring at the ceiling with nervous excitement coursing through my veins. Today marked three years since David first told me he loved me, and I wanted everything to be perfect. I slipped out of bed carefully, not wanting to wake him, and padded barefoot to the kitchen. The marble countertops gleamed under the soft pendant lights as I gathered my ingredients—Belgian chocolate, fresh raspberries, organic eggs, and the vanilla extract I'd been saving for a special occasion. My hands moved with practiced precision, measuring and mixing, the familiar rhythm of baking calming my pre-celebration jitters. The chocolate raspberry cake had taken me weeks to perfect. I'd watched countless YouTube tutorials, practicing the intricate sugar flowers until my fingertips were stained with food coloring and my kitchen looked like a battlefield of powdered sugar. But seeing the delicate pink roses blooming across the dark chocolate ganache made every failed attempt worth it. While the cake cooled, I arranged rose petals in a careful trail from our front door to the dining table, each petal placed with the devotion of a love letter. The champagne glasses caught the afternoon light just right, and I smiled at the small gift box nestled beside them—custom cufflinks with our initials intertwined and today's date engraved in elegant script.
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Chapter 1

The alarm buzzed at 5 AM, but I was already awake, staring at the ceiling with nervous excitement coursing through my veins. Today marked three years since David first told me he loved me, and I wanted everything to be perfect.

I slipped out of bed carefully, not wanting to wake him, and padded barefoot to the kitchen. The marble countertops gleamed under the soft pendant lights as I gathered my ingredients—Belgian chocolate, fresh raspberries, organic eggs, and the vanilla extract I'd been saving for a special occasion. My hands moved with practiced precision, measuring and mixing, the familiar rhythm of baking calming my pre-celebration jitters.

The chocolate raspberry cake had taken me weeks to perfect. I'd watched countless YouTube tutorials, practicing the intricate sugar flowers until my fingertips were stained with food coloring and my kitchen looked like a battlefield of powdered sugar. But seeing the delicate pink roses blooming across the dark chocolate ganache made every failed attempt worth it.

While the cake cooled, I arranged rose petals in a careful trail from our front door to the dining table, each petal placed with the devotion of a love letter. The champagne glasses caught the afternoon light just right, and I smiled at the small gift box nestled beside them—custom cufflinks with our initials intertwined and today's date engraved in elegant script. David had mentioned needing new cufflinks for his upcoming presentations, and I'd wanted to give him something meaningful, something that would remind him of us every time he wore them.

I sent him a text at 2 PM: "Can you come home at 6? It's important. ❤️"

His response came an hour later: "Sure."

Not exactly the enthusiasm I'd hoped for, but David had been stressed with work lately. Tonight would remind him why we were worth fighting for.

I spent the rest of the afternoon getting ready, slipping into the navy dress he'd once said made my eyes look like sapphires. I curled my hair the way he liked it and applied just enough makeup to look effortless. By 6 PM, I was positioned by the window, watching for his car.

6:15 PM came and went. My stomach twisted with familiar anxiety—David's punctuality had been slipping lately, but surely he wouldn't be late tonight.

Then I heard his key in the lock, and my heart soared. I smoothed my dress one final time and turned toward the door with my brightest smile.

The smile died on my lips.

David walked through our front door, but he wasn't alone. Oaklynn Jones—my college nemesis, the woman who'd made my life miserable for four years—stood beside him like she belonged there. They were wearing matching white cashmere sweaters, and I could see embroidered initials intertwined across their chests. Not our initials. Theirs.

The rose petals crunched under their feet as they stepped inside, David crushing my carefully arranged path without a glance. Oaklynn's predatory gaze swept across my anniversary setup—the champagne, the candles, the gift box—and her lips curved into a smile that made my blood freeze.

"Oh my God," she said, her voice dripping with mock sympathy. "David, you didn't tell me she was throwing herself a pity party."

I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. My eyes darted between them, searching David's face for some explanation, some sign that this was a cruel joke. But his expression was blank, almost bored, as if walking into his girlfriend's anniversary surprise with another woman was perfectly normal.

Oaklynn's attention fixed on my cake, and she approached it with the deliberate movements of a predator stalking prey. She picked it up with exaggerated care, holding it at eye level as she examined my sugar flowers.

"This is so... amateur," she announced, loud enough to ensure I heard every syllable. "I mean, look at these pathetic little flowers. They're all lopsided." She turned the cake slowly, pointing out imaginary flaws with theatrical disgust. "And the ganache is so thick and clumsy. This is what happens when people try to do professional work without any actual skill."

Each word hit me like a physical blow. I'd spent hours on those flowers, watching tutorial after tutorial, practicing until my hands cramped. They weren't perfect, but they were made with love.

Oaklynn carried my cake to the kitchen, her heels clicking against the hardwood with military precision. She stood over the trash bin and looked directly at me, her eyes glittering with malicious satisfaction.

"Garbage belongs in the garbage," she said, and opened her hands.

My cake—three years of love, hours of work, the symbol of everything I'd hoped tonight would be—crashed into the trash with a sickening thud. Chocolate and raspberry filling splattered against the white plastic liner, and one of my sugar roses broke off, landing on the kitchen floor like a discarded dream.

Oaklynn wiped her hands on my favorite dish towel with exaggerated disgust, as if touching my creation had contaminated her.

The doorbell rang.

David answered it without hesitation, accepting a delivery box from a bakery I recognized—the most expensive one in the city. He carried the box to my dining table and opened it with ceremonial care, revealing a three-tier masterpiece decorated with gold script that read "David & Oaklynn" in flowing letters. A sugar sculpture of an embracing couple crowned the top tier.

He placed it exactly where my cake had been, grinding more rose petals under his feet.

"What is this?" My voice came out as a whisper, barely audible above the roaring in my ears.

David finally looked at me, and his expression held no warmth, no recognition of our history, no acknowledgment of the pain spreading across my face like spilled wine.

"Oaklynn and I have been together for eight months," he said, his tone as casual as if he were discussing the weather. "I'm done pretending."

Eight months. Eight months while I'd been planning this anniversary, while I'd been working extra hours to help pay for his MBA application fees, while I'd been building our future in my mind.

Oaklynn moved to David's side, slipping her arm through his with possessive satisfaction. "Today is our special day now," she announced, her voice sickeningly sweet. "Isn't that perfect timing?"

My hands shook as I reached for the gift box, my last desperate attempt to salvage something from the wreckage of my world. "David, please. Don't our three years mean anything? I got you—"

He snatched the box from my trembling fingers, opened it with rough movements, and stared at the cufflinks for a long moment. The engraved initials caught the candlelight I'd so carefully arranged.

Then he tossed the box back at me. The cufflinks scattered across the floor, one rolling under the table where his and Oaklynn's cake sat like a monument to my humiliation.

"I have no use for cheap sentiment," he said.

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