
Betrayed in Love's Name
Betrayed in Love's Name Chapter 1
The champagne had tasted like promises that morning—fizzy, golden, intoxicating. Three years. Three years since I'd walked away from the Montgomery estate, from the arranged marriage my adoptive parents had carefully orchestrated, from everything safe and certain. All for Cruz.
The Seattle coastline stretched before us, grey-blue and infinite, as our rented boat cut through the waves. Cruz stood at the helm, wind whipping his dark hair, that crooked smile playing on his lips—the one that had convinced me to trade silk sheets for threadbare blankets, family legacy for love in a cramped apartment.
"To us," he'd said earlier, pressing a kiss to my temple. "To three years of proving everyone wrong."
I'd believed him. God, how I'd believed him.
The storm came fast, the way everything would unravel later—sudden, vicious, unstoppable. One moment Cruz was laughing, the next he was airborne, thrown overboard by a rogue wave that slammed into the boat's side.
I didn't think. Thinking was for people who hadn't spent three years reshaping their entire existence around one person.
The water hit me like a wall of ice. Salt burned my throat as I kicked toward where Cruz had disappeared, my limbs already heavy with cold and terror. I wasn't a strong swimmer—had never needed to be, growing up in Los Angeles mansions with pristine pools and attentive staff. But love makes you stupid. Love makes you brave in all the wrong ways.
I found him thrashing below the surface, panic in his wide eyes. His hands grabbed at me, clawing, desperate. We went under together.
The next moments dissolved into chaos—water in my lungs, Cruz's weight dragging us both down, my muscles screaming. I hooked my arm around his chest the way I'd seen in movies, kicking with everything I had left. The surface seemed impossibly far.
Then came the crack.
My head connected with the boat's hull as we surfaced—a sickening crunch that sent starbursts across my vision. Pain exploded through my skull, white-hot and blinding. Blood, warm against the cold water, streaming down my face.
Cruz was coughing, sputtering, alive.
I was sinking again.
The last thing I remembered was his voice, distant and distorted, screaming my name. Then nothing but darkness and the strange, metallic taste of my own blood mixing with seawater.
***
Consciousness returned in pieces. Beeping machines. Antiseptic smell. Except I couldn't smell it—couldn't smell anything at all.
I tried to lift my hand to my face and found it bandaged. Everything felt wrong, disconnected, like my body belonged to someone else. The hospital room swam into focus, all white walls and fluorescent lights that hurt my eyes.
"Sevyn. Baby, you're awake."
Cruz appeared at my bedside, his face drawn and pale. Tears tracked down his cheeks as he grabbed my unbandaged hand, pressing it to his lips. "Thank God. Thank God you're okay."
I tried to speak. My throat felt scraped raw.
"Don't talk," he said quickly. "The doctors said you need rest. You hit your head pretty hard, and there was some trauma to your face and neck. But you're alive. That's all that matters."
Face and neck. The words hung there, heavy with implication.
"The scarring will fade," Cruz continued, his voice cracking. "Dr. Chen said it'll take time, but they can do reconstructive surgery eventually. And I don't care, Sevyn. I don't care about any of it. You saved my life. You're a hero."
Hero. The word felt hollow.
Over the following days, Cruz came every morning, noon, and night. He brought flowers I couldn't smell, read to me from books I couldn't focus on, held my hand while making promises that sounded too practiced, too perfect.
"Your scars mean nothing to me," he whispered one evening, thumb stroking my bandaged fingers. "We'll face this together. You and me against the world, just like we always said."
Samara came too—my apprentice, my protégé. She sat in the corner chair, her pretty face arranged in appropriate concern. "Everyone at the studio is asking about you," she said softly. "They can't wait for you to come back."
Except I wouldn't be going back. Not to perfumery. Not without my sense of smell.
The doctor had explained it gently, clinically: psychological trauma combined with the head injury. Temporary, possibly. Or permanent. They couldn't say for certain.
I'd built my entire identity around scent—the way jasmine unfolded in top notes, how amber deepened in the base, the precise moment when bergamot turned from bitter to sublime. Now there was only nothing. A void where my gift used to live.
Cruz squeezed my hand. "We'll get through this. I promise you, Sevyn. I'll love you forever, scars and all."
I wanted to believe him. Wanted it so desperately that I ignored the way his eyes slid away from my bandaged face. Ignored the slight hesitation before he kissed my forehead instead of my lips. Ignored the relief in his expression when visiting hours ended.
Love makes you blind in all the worst ways.
But I would learn. Eventually, I would learn exactly what Cruz Thomas's forever was worth.
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