
Betrayed by Best Friend's Love
Chapter 2
The weeks blurred together in a pattern I hadn't expected to find comforting. Every Tuesday and Thursday, I would arrive at Jude's apartment with groceries tucked under my arm, my heels clicking against the worn linoleum of his hallway. The building smelled of old coffee and something indefinably sad, but I'd grown used to it.
"You're late," Jude said without turning around as I let myself in with the spare key he'd grudgingly given me after the third time I'd had to knock for ten minutes.
"Traffic," I lied, setting the bags on his small kitchen counter. The truth was I'd sat in my car for fifteen minutes, steeling myself for whatever mood I'd find him in today.
He was standing by the window, his fingers trailing along the glass. Even in profile, I could see the tension in his shoulders, the way his jaw clenched when he was fighting some internal battle.
"Did you remember the medication?" His voice carried that edge it always had when he felt too dependent, too vulnerable.
"Of course." I pulled out the small pharmacy bag, shaking the bottles so he could hear them. "Dr. Martinez said to take the new ones with food."
Jude's laugh was bitter. "Another miracle cure that won't work."
I'd learned not to argue with his pessimism. Instead, I moved around his kitchen with practiced efficiency, putting away groceries and organizing his pill dispenser. The routine had become second nature—fresh vegetables in the crisper, his favorite coffee beans in the freezer, medications sorted by day and time.
"You don't have to do this," he said, the same words he'd spoken dozens of times before.
"I know." My response was equally familiar.
But today something was different. As I reached for a high shelf to put away cereal, I felt him move closer behind me. Not touching, but close enough that I could feel the heat radiating from his body.
"Gwendolyn." My name on his lips sounded different—softer, uncertain.
I turned slowly, my back against the counter. He was so close I could see the flecks of gold in his damaged eyes, could count the individual lashes that cast shadows on his cheekbones.
"What is it?"
His hand rose hesitantly, hovering in the air between us. "Can I... would you mind if I...?"
I understood without him finishing. "Yes."
His fingertips touched my cheek first, feather-light and trembling. I held perfectly still as he traced the line of my jaw, his thumb brushing across my bottom lip. His touch was reverent, as if he were reading braille written on my skin.
"You're beautiful," he whispered, and the wonder in his voice made my chest tight. "I can feel it in the way you move, hear it in your voice, but this... this is different."
His palm cupped my face, and I leaned into the warmth of it without thinking.
"Why?" The question escaped him like a prayer. "Why do you stay when everyone else...?"
"Because you're worth staying for," I said, the words tumbling out before I could stop them.
Something shifted in his expression—surprise giving way to something raw and vulnerable. For a moment, the angry, bitter man disappeared, and I saw who he might have been before the accident stole his sight and his family's love.
"I don't deserve you," he said, his forehead resting against mine.
"That's not your choice to make."
The spell was broken by the sharp ring of my phone. I glanced at the screen—Ashley's name flashing insistently.
"I should take this," I murmured, stepping away from Jude's warmth.
"Gwen!" Ashley's voice bubbled through the speaker, artificially bright. "I'm outside your house, but Maria said you weren't home. Again."
I walked to Jude's living room, lowering my voice. "I'm running errands."
"Errands that take six hours?" Ashley's laugh had a sharp edge. "Come on, spill. You've been so mysterious lately. Is there a man involved?"
I glanced back at Jude, who had gone still in the kitchen doorway, listening.
"Don't be ridiculous," I said, hating how easily the lie came. "I've been volunteering at a charity. Very boring stuff."
"Volunteering?" Ashley's tone suggested she found this as believable as a fairy tale. "Since when do you do charity work?"
"Since I decided there was more to life than shopping and society parties."
"Well, aren't you becoming quite the saint," Ashley said, and I could practically hear her calculating smile through the phone. "I'm proud of you, sweetie. Whatever makes you happy. But don't become a complete stranger, okay? I miss my best friend."
After I hung up, Jude emerged from the kitchen, his expression unreadable.
"Your friend sounds... concerned," he said carefully.
"Ashley worries too much," I replied, but something cold had settled in my stomach at the memory of her voice—too sweet, too interested.
"She doesn't know about me."
It wasn't a question, and I didn't pretend it was. "No."
Jude nodded slowly, and I caught a flicker of something that might have been hurt before he turned away.
"Of course not," he said quietly. "Why would you tell anyone about the blind man you're taking pity on?"
"Jude, that's not—"
"Isn't it?" He faced me again, and the vulnerable man from moments before had vanished behind familiar walls of anger and self-loathing. "I'm your charity case, aren't I? Your good deed."
The accusation hit like a physical blow, partly because of how it had started, partly because of how far we'd traveled from that original deception.
"You know that's not true," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
But he'd already turned away, dismissing me with the cold indifference he wielded like a weapon when he felt too exposed.
As I gathered my purse to leave, I wondered if Ashley's call had been coincidence or something more calculated. The thought sent an unexpected chill down my spine, though I couldn't say why.
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