
Boyfriend Cheated with Cheer Captain, I Left
Boyfriend Cheated with Cheer Captain, I Left Chapter 1
At the National High School Football All-Star Game, my boyfriend Evan had just been named MVP. Sophia, the cheer captain, immediately posted on Instagram.
Caption: "Guess who got a little something from the champion himself~"
The photo turned out to be a pair of Evan's worn underwear!
Scrawled across them in lipstick were the words: "For my dearest Sophia."
She held them up with her long acrylic nails, pouting for the selfie.
The internet exploded. "Why does she have his underwear?" "Isn't it obvious? They're totally together." "Sitting here waiting for the official couple photo."
Within seconds, a close-up of the two of them cheek-to-cheek surfaced in the comments.
Congratulations and teasing flooded the feed.
I gripped my phone, a chill spreading through my entire body.
Evan had promised to go public about us ages ago but kept putting it off, saying he needed to prove himself first. He'd been stalling ever since.
Now here I was, his actual girlfriend, and I didn't even get an invite to his victory party.
I took a deep breath and called him.
"Explain."
On the other end, Evan's voice was lazy, almost amused. "The fans grabbed everything off me. Jersey, pads, all of it. Sophia insisted on keeping something as a souvenir, so I gave her the underwear. No big deal."
"The Instagram post is just riding the hype. Don't be so uptight about it."
Then Sophia's voice chimed in. "Yeah, honey, Evan and I are like brothers! I've seen everything on him already. It's just a pair of boxers, so don't be so petty."
I listened to their increasingly flirtatious banter through the speaker, then slowly pulled off my engagement ring and tossed it aside.
"Fine," I said to Evan. "I'll be the bigger person. Why don't you skip the 'girl bro' thing and just make her your girlfriend? I'm tired of watching this act."
The other end went dead silent, and then Evan's voice shot up.
"Lillian, are you threatening me?"
"This is publicity. A marketing strategy. Do you even understand that? We're a friendship duo. Sophia's helping me build buzz. This is the most critical time in my career, and you're pulling this crap?"
I swallowed the ache in my throat.
"Do you even remember what you promised me?"
A pause. Then a sigh, and his voice came drifting over, light as air.
"Lillian, I know. You've been waiting for me to go public with you."
"But have you ever considered what kind of damage it would do to my image if I suddenly announced some no-name girlfriend? I'd take a massive hit."
"I didn't have a choice. If you could help my career the way Sophia does, I wouldn't need to do any of this."
My knuckles whitened around the phone.
He was right about one thing: I was nobody compared to Sophia. She had the body, the face, and she'd been the most popular cheer captain in the country for years.
All I had was eight years. Eight years he now considered too embarrassing to show the world.
I let out a quiet breath.
"You're right. It was my mistake."
"So from now on, I won't stand in the way of your future, superstar."
Silence stretched on his end. Then his fury erupted.
"Lillian, do you have any idea how much pressure I'm under? I've barely gotten a foothold, and instead of supporting me, you're picking fights at every turn!"
"What happened to the girl who used to put up with everything? When did you become so unreasonable?"
He hung up. Nothing left but the flat drone of a dead line.
A sharp pain shot through my right foot. I crouched down, pressing my fingers gently against my ankle.
The dull throb pulsed over and over, a reminder that the person who used to rub the pain away was gone.
Back then, Evan wasn't some star, just a scrawny kid who kept getting hurt playing football.
Football was expensive: the gear, the travel, the injuries. Evan was always covered in bruises.
To save every penny I could, I turned down a full scholarship to a top university, scrounged together basic medical supplies, and taught myself how to treat wounds until my hands were thick with calluses. I ground my way to a medical license through sheer willpower.
In eight years, I'd stitched and bandaged every single wound on his body myself.
Then, during a game, an opponent delivered a dirty hit. Evan went down hard. His right fibula shattered.
The doctors said he'd never play again.
I rushed to the hospital. Seeing his face, empty and shattered, felt like a blade dragging across my chest.
Evan was born to stand under championship lights. His career couldn't end like this.
Without telling him, I signed the consent form to donate my own fibula.
He broke down, grabbed the form, and hurled it to the floor.
But I cupped his face in my hands and smiled.
"I'm just a regular person. I'm not the one on the field, so that bone's no use to me."
"Take it and go be a star. It'll be like you're carrying a piece of me with you."
He cried. In the end, he said nothing and went through with the surgery.
Afterward, he had his own broken bone fragment made into a bracelet and fastened it around my wrist.
"Lillian, I swear: this bone is part of me. It'll protect you for the rest of your life."
"When I make it big, I'm going to hold this hand, the one wearing this bracelet, and show the whole world that you're my girl."
I held the bracelet, still warm from his body, and smiled for a long, long time.
The transplant was a success. He was back on the field in no time, a rising star all over again.
I could still walk, still live a normal life. But every time it rained, every time I climbed stairs, the spot where the bone had been taken from sent a deep, drilling pain through my right leg.
I pulled myself back to the present and let out a slow breath.
Now that bone, along with everything I'd ever given, was useless to him.