
Betrayal and a Second Chance
Chapter 1
I was still half-asleep when I padded into our kitchen that morning, the Los Angeles sunlight streaming through the blinds in sharp, golden bars. The apartment smelled like coffee and normalcy—a scent that would forever remind me of what life was like before everything shattered.
Ryan sat at our small kitchen table, scrolling through his phone with one hand while absently spooning cereal with the other. His dark hair was still damp from the shower, curling slightly at the nape of his neck the way it always did. I remember thinking how beautiful he looked in that moment—how utterly, heartbreakingly beautiful.
"Morning," I said, reaching for a mug from the cabinet. When he didn't respond, I glanced over my shoulder. "Did you sleep okay?"
He looked up then, his blue eyes meeting mine with a detachment that should have warned me. "I'm seeing someone else—Madison Torres. We're over."
The mug slipped from my fingers, clattering against the counter but miraculously not breaking. The sound seemed distant, as though happening in another apartment, to another girl whose world wasn't imploding.
"What?" My voice didn't sound like my own. "What are you talking about?"
Ryan returned to scrolling through his phone, his expression unchanged. "It's not working for me anymore. Madison and I connected at Kyle's party last weekend."
"Last weekend?" The words felt thick in my throat. "You were with me last weekend."
"Before I met you at the library." He shrugged, a casual gesture that dismissed our two years together. "Look, I didn't plan it, okay? It just happened."
I stumbled toward him, my legs numb. "Ryan, please. If I did something wrong, just tell me. I can fix it. We can work through this."
"There's nothing to fix, Jess." He stood, rinsing his bowl in the sink with methodical precision. "I'm just done."
"Done?" The word echoed in our small kitchen. "After everything? After I changed my whole major for you? After I gave up Stanford?"
He sighed, the first sign of any emotion. "I never asked you to do any of that."
"But you knew I did!" My voice rose, cracking with desperation. "You knew how much I love you!"
"That's the problem." He grabbed his backpack from the chair. "It's too much. You're too much. Always checking my phone, interrogating me about every girl I talk to. It's suffocating."
I collapsed onto the sofa, my legs finally giving out. Tears blurred my vision as I watched him move toward the door. "Please," I whispered. "Please don't do this."
He paused, hand on the doorknob. For one breathless moment, I thought he might turn back—might say it was all a terrible joke. Instead, he said, "I'll come get my stuff later," and walked out.
The door clicked shut with terrible finality.
I don't know how long I sat there, sobbing until my throat was raw and my eyes burned. The sun moved across the apartment, shadows shifting while I remained frozen. Two years of love, of building my life around him, erased in a three-minute conversation.
By late afternoon, I'd dragged myself back to my old dorm room, where my roommate Lily had maintained my half of the space even after I'd practically moved in with Ryan. She wasn't there—probably at her biochem lab—which was a relief. I couldn't bear her practical sympathy yet, her inevitable "I told you so" that she'd been holding back since Ryan and I first got together.
I curled up on my bed, scrolling mindlessly through social media, torturing myself with Madison Torres's perfect profile. Her gleaming dark hair and confident smile. The casual photos with friends at beach bonfires and rooftop parties. A life so different from my library-bound existence.
A notification popped up—Ryan had changed his relationship status. It was real. It was happening.
Something snapped inside me. Before I could think better of it, I opened the UCLA student social feed and typed:
"Seeking Seven-Day Boyfriend. Requirements: Must be seen with me around campus. Must attend one party this weekend. Must take exactly three photos for social media. No romantic expectations. Serious inquiries only. #MovingOn"
I hit post before I could change my mind, then threw my phone across the bed as though it had burned me.
What had I just done?
My phone pinged almost immediately. Then again. And again.
With trembling fingers, I reached for it, expecting mockery or crude propositions. Instead, the first message was from someone called "SunChaser":
"I've been waiting for you to notice me for longer than you know. Seven days might not be enough, but it's a start."
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