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Betrayal on Vacation: When He Chose Her Over Me Novel Cover

Betrayal on Vacation: When He Chose Her Over Me

The departure gate at LAX hummed with the familiar chaos of summer travelers, but all I could focus on was Cole's hand wrapped around mine and the boarding passes clutched in my other palm. Our graduation trip—finally happening after months of planning every detail, from the beachfront hotel to the little café I'd bookmarked for our first morning together. "I still can't believe we're actually doing this," Cole said, his thumb tracing circles on my wrist. "Just you and me for a whole week. No parents, no college stress, no—" "Cole? Cole Hudson?" The voice cut through our bubble like a knife through silk. I turned to see a petite girl with perfectly styled blonde waves and bright blue eyes that seemed to light up the entire terminal. She was beautiful in that effortless way that made my stomach clench with unexpected insecurity. Cole's hand went slack in mine. "Sophie?
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Chapter 2

The resort's breakfast terrace should have been paradise. Palm trees swayed in the morning breeze, the ocean sparkled beyond the infinity pool, and the buffet spread looked like something from a travel magazine. But all I could focus on was the way Sophie's fingers lingered on Cole's wrist as she handed him a piece of pineapple.

"Try this one," she said, her voice soft and intimate in a way that made my stomach clench. "It's perfectly ripe."

Cole opened his mouth without hesitation, letting her feed him like they'd done this a thousand times before. A drop of juice ran down his chin, and Sophie laughed—that musical laugh that had already started to grate on my nerves—before reaching out to catch it with her thumb.

"You always were messy when you ate," she teased, and Cole's eyes crinkled with a warmth I hadn't seen directed at me since we'd arrived.

I pushed eggs around my plate, my appetite vanishing as I watched them share bites from each other's plates. When I'd tried to offer Cole some of my toast earlier, he'd barely glanced at it before turning back to whatever story Sophie was telling about their old math teacher.

"Remember when Mrs. Peterson caught us passing notes?" Sophie was saying now, her hand resting casually on Cole's forearm. "She made us read them out loud to the whole class."

"God, I was so embarrassed," Cole said, shaking his head. "But you just owned it. You never cared what anyone thought."

"I cared what you thought," Sophie replied, and something in her tone made me look up sharply. Her eyes were fixed on Cole's face with an intensity that felt too private for a casual breakfast conversation.

I cleared my throat. "That sounds like you two had quite the partnership back then."

Sophie's gaze flicked to me, and for just a moment, her expression was unreadable. Then she smiled that perfect smile again. "Oh, we did. Cole never used to be so generous with sharing back then, though. I had to steal his cookies if I wanted any."

The comment hit like a subtle slap. I watched Cole laugh and shake his head, completely missing the implication that I somehow didn't deserve the generosity she'd had to fight for.

"Things change," I said quietly, but neither of them seemed to hear me.

Later, as we walked back to our rooms to change for the pool, I noticed Cole fumbling with his phone. The screen lit up, and I caught a glimpse of his lock screen—but instead of the photo of us from prom that had been there yesterday, I saw a generic ocean sunset.

"Did you change your wallpaper?" I asked, trying to keep my voice casual.

Cole's thumb moved quickly over the screen. "Yeah, thought I'd try something new for vacation."

But it was his phone charm that made my blood run cold. A small silver dolphin dangled from his case—identical to the one swinging from Sophie's phone when she'd pulled it out to show us photos at breakfast.

"That's a cute charm," I said, my voice barely steady. "Where did you get it?"

"Gift shop in the lobby," he said without meeting my eyes. "Sophie and I saw them when we went down for ice last night."

Last night. While I'd been sleeping, trusting him completely, he and Sophie had been wandering the hotel together, buying matching trinkets like teenagers with a secret.

"You went to get ice together?" The question came out sharper than I'd intended.

Cole's jaw tightened. "Emma, it's not a big deal. She was having trouble with her key card, and I helped her out. We ran into each other in the hallway."

"And decided to go charm shopping?"

"You're being paranoid," he said, and the dismissive tone in his voice felt like a door slamming shut. "They're just phone charms. It doesn't mean anything."

But as I stared at the matching silver dolphins, I knew that wasn't true. Nothing about this trip felt like coincidence anymore.

An hour later at the pool, I tried to lose myself in a book while Cole and Sophie splashed around like old friends. The sun was warm on my skin, and the sound of other vacationers laughing should have been relaxing. Instead, every nerve in my body felt wound tight.

"Emma, could you grab my sunscreen?" Sophie called from the water. "I think I'm starting to burn."

I tossed her the bottle, expecting her to climb out and apply it herself. Instead, she waded over to where Cole was floating on his back.

"Cole, could you help me with my back?" she asked, her voice taking on that vulnerable quality again. "I can never reach the spot between my shoulders."

I watched, frozen, as Cole immediately stood up, water cascading off his chest. Sophie turned around, gathering her wet hair to one side and exposing the smooth expanse of her back. Cole's hands moved over her skin with a familiarity that made me feel sick.

"Don't miss the shoulders," Sophie murmured, tilting her head to give him better access. "I burn so easily there."

Cole's fingers worked methodically across her shoulder blades, and I could see the way Sophie's eyes drifted closed, a small smile playing at her lips. "You always were good at taking care of people," she said softly. "Some things never change."

"I do my best," Cole replied, his voice rough in a way that sent alarm bells screaming through my head.

When his hands lingered on her shoulders, massaging rather than just applying sunscreen, I couldn't watch anymore. I snapped my book shut and stood up so abruptly that my chair scraped against the concrete.

"I'm going back to the room," I announced.

Cole looked up, his hands still on Sophie's skin. "Already? We just got here."

"I have a headache," I lied, grabbing my bag with shaking hands.

As I walked away, I heard Sophie's voice floating across the water: "Poor Emma. Maybe the sun is too much for her."

And Cole's response, casual as breathing: "She'll be fine. She always is."

But as I rode the elevator back to our floor, those matching dolphin charms burned in my memory like brands. I wasn't fine. I wasn't fine at all.

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