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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 3

The first scent that returned was coffee.

I'd been standing in our tiny kitchen, going through the morning routine on autopilot, when it hit me—rich, bitter, unmistakable. For a moment I thought I'd imagined it, that my desperate brain had conjured the phantom of what I'd lost. But no. There it was again, weaker than before but real.

My hand trembled as I lifted the mug to my nose. Coffee. Just coffee, none of the subtle notes I used to detect—no hint of the bean's origin, no whisper of chocolate or caramel undertones. But it was something. After four months of nothing, it was everything.

"Cruz," I called out, my voice breaking. "Cruz, I can smell again. I can—"

But he'd already left for work. The apartment was empty except for me and this fragile, precious gift.

Over the following weeks, scents returned in fragments. Citrus. Vanilla. The sharp bite of alcohol in my perfume bases. Each one felt like a small miracle, though I quickly realized how limited my recovery was. The complex symphonies I used to compose were reduced to simple melodies. Where I'd once detected fifty notes in a perfume, now I caught maybe five. Still, it was progress. It was hope.

Cruz seemed pleased when I told him, but distracted. "That's great, baby," he'd say, already checking his phone. "Really great."

Samara visited more often now. She'd show up with takeout or wine, settling onto our couch like it was hers. I'd catch her and Cruz exchanging glances I couldn't quite read, their conversations falling silent when I entered rooms.

"You're being paranoid," I told myself. "He's just stressed. We're both stressed."

But paranoia has a way of sharpening perception.

It was a Thursday afternoon when Cruz left his phone on the bathroom counter. I'd gone in to grab my moisturizer and there it was, screen lit up with a new message notification.

Samara: Can't wait to see you tonight. Last night was incredible.

My heart stopped. Then started again, too fast, too hard.

I picked up the phone with shaking hands. No passcode—he'd removed it months ago, said he had nothing to hide. The messages loaded slowly, each one a knife sliding between my ribs.

Samara: I love how you touch me. So different from when you're with her.

Cruz: She doesn't even notice when I'm gone anymore. Too busy mourning her precious nose.

Samara: Poor thing. At least you have me now. Someone whole. Someone beautiful.

Cruz: God, yes. I can actually look at you without feeling sick.

I scrolled up. Weeks of messages. Photos I couldn't bring myself to examine closely. Proof of every suspicion I'd buried, every doubt I'd called paranoia.

The bathroom tiles felt cold beneath my knees. I didn't remember sinking to the floor.

When Cruz came home that evening, I was sitting on the couch with his phone in my lap. Samara arrived twenty minutes later—had he texted her to come? They walked in together, Samara's hand dropping from his arm when they saw me.

"Sevyn," Cruz started, his face going pale. "What are you—"

"How long?" My voice came out steady. Strange, when everything inside me was screaming.

Samara's eyes widened, her practiced innocence sliding into place. "I don't know what you're talking about—"

"Don't." I held up the phone. "I've seen everything. Every message. Every photo. Every time you complained about having to look at my face."

Cruz's jaw tightened. For a moment I thought he'd keep lying, keep pretending. Then something shifted in his expression—a hardness I'd never seen before.

"Fine," he said flatly. "You want the truth? I can't do this anymore, Sevyn. I can't keep pretending I don't see those scars every time I look at you. I can't keep watching you try to smell things like some broken toy."

The words hit like physical blows.

"I saved your life," I whispered.

"And I'm grateful." His tone suggested otherwise. "But that doesn't mean I have to spend the rest of my life with someone who looks like—" He gestured vaguely at my face. "I'm sorry. I tried. But Samara, she makes me feel like a man again. She's whole. Beautiful. She doesn't make me feel guilty every time I can't stand to touch her."

Samara stepped closer to him, her hand finding his. The gesture was possessive, triumphant. "I didn't mean for this to happen," she said, but her eyes told a different story. "But we can't help how we feel."

I looked at them standing there together—my boyfriend and my apprentice, united in their betrayal. Cruz's face showed relief now that the truth was out, like he'd been waiting for permission to stop pretending. Samara's expression held barely concealed satisfaction.

Something inside me went very quiet. Very cold.

I pulled off my engagement ring—the simple silver band Cruz had given me three years ago, promising forever. It felt light in my palm. Meaningless.

"Get out," I said softly.

Cruz blinked. "This is my apartment too—"

"Get. Out." Louder now, my voice cracking on the edges. "Both of you. Now."

They left, but not before Cruz grabbed some clothes, not before Samara shot me one last look that mixed pity with victory.

When the door closed behind them, I walked to the kitchen trash can and dropped the ring inside. It landed on top of yesterday's coffee grounds with a small, final clink.

Then I pulled out my phone and dialed a number I hadn't called in three years.

"Marcus?" My voice broke on his name. "It's Sevyn. I... I want to come home."

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