
Betrayal on Vacation: When He Chose Her Over Me
Chapter 3
The beachfront restaurant I'd found online looked exactly like the photos—soft lighting, waves lapping at the shore just beyond the windows, couples sharing intimate conversations over candlelit tables. I'd made the reservation weeks ago, imagining Cole and me finally having uninterrupted time together, away from Sophie's constant presence.
But as we were seated at our table for two, Sophie appeared like a mirage I couldn't escape.
"What a coincidence!" she exclaimed, though her perfectly timed arrival felt anything but accidental. "I was just about to eat alone at the bar, but this is so much better."
Before I could protest, she'd already signaled the waiter to add a third chair to our intimate table. Cole's face lit up with that same eager expression I'd been seeing for three days straight.
"Sophie, that's great," he said, completely missing my clenched jaw. "Emma found this place online. She's great at finding hidden gems."
The compliment felt hollow when he immediately turned his attention back to Sophie, who was studying the menu with theatrical concentration.
"Ooh, buffalo wings," she said, her eyes sparkling with mischief. "Extra spicy. I love food with a kick."
My stomach clenched automatically. Cole knew about my condition—how spicy food triggered my gastritis, leaving me doubled over in pain for hours. He'd spent two years carefully checking restaurant menus with me, steering us away from places that might cause problems. It was one of the small ways he'd shown he cared, one of the reasons I'd trusted him so completely.
"That sounds perfect," Cole said without hesitation. "I'll get the same."
I stared at him across the flickering candle. "Cole, you know I can't—"
"Emma, just order something else," he said dismissively, not even looking at me. "Not everything has to revolve around your stomach issues."
The words hit like a slap. Sophie's smile widened as she watched the exchange, her blue eyes gleaming with satisfaction.
"Oh, do you have dietary restrictions?" she asked with false concern. "I'm sorry, I had no idea. We could order something milder—"
"No," I said quietly, my voice steady despite the hurt racing through my chest. "Order whatever you want."
When the wings arrived, glistening with bright red sauce, Sophie made a show of biting into one, her lips glistening as she sucked the sauce from her fingers.
"These are incredible," she moaned, closing her eyes dramatically. "Cole, you have to try this one—it's the perfect level of heat."
What happened next made my blood freeze in my veins. Sophie took a large bite of her wing, the meat half-chewed and sauce-covered, then leaned across the table toward Cole with her mouth still full.
"Open up," she said playfully, holding the partially eaten wing toward his lips.
Any normal boyfriend would have laughed it off, grabbed his own wing, made some joke about sharing food. But Cole opened his mouth without hesitation, accepting the wing Sophie had already been eating, his teeth closing around the same spot her mouth had just been.
I watched in horror as he chewed thoughtfully, sauce staining his lips the same shade as hers.
"You're right," he said, licking his fingers clean. "Perfect heat."
Sophie giggled, dabbing at the corner of his mouth with her napkin. "You missed a spot."
The intimacy of the gesture, the casual way Cole accepted her touch, the complete disregard for my presence at the table—it all crashed over me like a wave. This wasn't friendship. This wasn't innocent reminiscing about middle school. This was something else entirely.
My phone buzzed against my leg. A text from my best friend: "Emma, call me. NOW."
I excused myself to the bathroom, my hands shaking as I dialed her number.
"Thank God," she said immediately. "I've been trying to figure out how to tell you this. Sophie's been posting all over social media. Photos of her and Cole sharing drinks, videos of them at the pool, captions about 'indirect kissing hundreds of times' and their 'unbreakable middle school bond.'"
The bathroom walls seemed to close in around me. "What do you mean, indirect kissing?"
"She's posting about sharing straws, eating from the same plates, using each other's chapstick. Emma, she's making it sound like they're together. Like you don't exist."
I closed my eyes, remembering every shared bite, every casual touch, every moment I'd dismissed as innocent friendship. The matching phone charms. The midnight ice run. The way Cole's hands had lingered on her skin while applying sunscreen.
"How many people are seeing this?" I whispered.
"Everyone. She's tagged your mutual friends from school. Emma, I'm so sorry."
I ended the call and splashed cold water on my face, staring at my reflection in the mirror. The girl looking back at me seemed smaller somehow, diminished by three days of being treated like an afterthought in my own relationship.
When I returned to the table, Sophie was feeding Cole another wing, their fingers intertwining as he accepted it. Neither of them looked up when I sat down.
"We need to talk," I said quietly to Cole. "Back at the hotel."
He finally glanced at me, his expression annoyed. "Can't it wait? We're having a good time."
"No," I said, standing up and placing my napkin on the table. "It can't."
As I walked toward the exit, I heard Sophie's voice floating behind me: "Don't worry about Emma, Cole. She'll get over it. She always does."
But this time, I knew with crystal clarity, she was wrong.
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