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Betrayed in Love's Name Novel Cover

Betrayed in Love's Name

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.
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Chapter 2

The apartment felt smaller when I came home from the hospital. Everything looked the same—the secondhand couch we'd bought together, the mismatched dishes, the framed photo of us at Pike Place Market—but something fundamental had shifted. Maybe it was me.

Cruz hovered by the kitchen counter, his shoulders tense as I shuffled through the door. The bandages on my face had been reduced to smaller patches, but the scars beneath were angry and red, pulling at my skin when I tried to smile.

"How was physical therapy?" he asked, not quite meeting my eyes.

"Fine." I touched the largest scar, running along my left cheekbone. "Dr. Martinez says the swelling should go down more in a few weeks."

Cruz nodded, turning back to the coffee maker. His movements were too quick, too deliberate. When he finally looked at me, I caught the flinch—just a microsecond, but there. His gaze skittered away from my face like touching something hot.

"That's good," he said to the coffee mug. "That's really good, baby."

I wanted to cross the room and touch him, to feel his arms around me the way they used to be. But something in his posture warned me off. Instead, I settled onto the couch, pulling a throw pillow into my lap.

"Samara called," Cruz said, still facing away. "She's coming by later to check on you."

"She doesn't need to—"

"She wants to. She cares about you."

The words felt hollow. Everything felt hollow these days, including the space where my sense of smell used to live. I breathed deeply, trying for the hundredth time to catch even a whisper of the coffee's aroma. Nothing. Just the mechanical sensation of air moving through my nostrils.

That evening, I sat at our small dining table with my perfume notebook spread before me. The pages were filled with my careful handwriting—formula notes, scent combinations, inspiration sketches. Three years of work. Three years of building something beautiful.

I uncapped a bottle of bergamot oil, the one Cruz had bought me for our anniversary. My hands shook as I held it beneath my nose.

Nothing.

I tried jasmine. Rose. Sandalwood. Each bottle might as well have been filled with water.

"Maybe I just need to practice," I whispered to the empty room. "Maybe it'll come back if I keep trying."

I began mixing, relying on memory and instinct. Three drops bergamot, two drops neroli, a single drop of ylang-ylang. My hands moved with practiced precision, but I was working blind, deaf to the language that had once sung in my blood.

The front door opened. "Sevyn? You okay in there?"

Cruz appeared in the doorway, and I saw his expression change as he took in the scattered bottles, the tears on my cheeks.

"I can't smell anything," I said, my voice breaking. "I can't smell anything at all."

He crossed the room slowly, like approaching a wounded animal. "Hey, it's okay. The doctor said it might take time—"

"What if it doesn't come back?" The words tore out of me. "What if I never smell again? What am I supposed to do? Who am I supposed to be?"

Cruz knelt beside my chair, but his hands hovered uncertainly before settling on my shoulders. "You're still you. You're still the woman I love."

But his touch felt different. Careful. Like I might break.

"I don't know how to be anything else," I whispered.

He pulled me against his chest, and I buried my face in his shirt, breathing in nothing. "We'll figure it out together. I promise."

The next afternoon, Samara arrived with groceries and that gentle smile she'd perfected. She moved through our kitchen like she belonged there, putting away items with an efficiency that made me feel like a guest in my own home.

"You look better," she said, though her eyes lingered on my scars. "The swelling's definitely going down."

I nodded, watching her arrange flowers in our only vase. She'd brought peonies—my favorites, though I couldn't smell their sweetness anymore.

Cruz emerged from the bedroom, freshly showered, his hair still damp. "Sam, thanks for bringing dinner. You didn't have to—"

"I wanted to help." Her voice was soft, concerned. "Sevyn's been through so much."

They stood close together by the counter, and something passed between them—a look, a moment of understanding that felt private. Intimate. When I shifted in my chair, they stepped apart quickly.

"I should get going," Samara said, but she made no move toward the door. Instead, she touched Cruz's arm. "Call me if you need anything. Anything at all."

Her fingers lingered a beat too long.

After she left, Cruz was quiet through dinner. He pushed food around his plate, answered my questions with distracted murmurs. When I reached across the table to touch his hand, he pulled back to grab his water glass.

"Sorry," he said quickly. "Thought you were reaching for the salt."

But I'd been reaching for him. And we both knew it.

That night, lying in bed beside him, I listened to his breathing and wondered when the space between us had grown so wide. When his love had started feeling like pity. When I'd become something to be managed rather than cherished.

In the darkness, I touched my scars and tried to remember what jasmine smelled like. But all I found was the cold, empty silence where my gift used to sing.

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