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Boyfriend's Cruel Scheme Novel Cover

Boyfriend's Cruel Scheme

The taxi's worn seats had never felt more uncomfortable, but I barely noticed. My fingers kept drifting to my carry-on bag, where the gold medal from the Global Design Awards rested in its velvet case—proof that three years of relentless work had meant something. The weight of it felt both substantial and surreal. I'd texted Thomas twice from the airport. No response. Typical lately, but I'd convinced myself he was just busy. After all, I'd been gone for two months—first for the preliminary rounds, then the finals. He was probably planning some small celebration. The thought made me smile despite my exhaustion. But as the taxi turned onto Elm Street, my smile faltered.
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Chapter 1

The taxi's worn seats had never felt more uncomfortable, but I barely noticed. My fingers kept drifting to my carry-on bag, where the gold medal from the Global Design Awards rested in its velvet case—proof that three years of relentless work had meant something. The weight of it felt both substantial and surreal.

I'd texted Thomas twice from the airport. No response. Typical lately, but I'd convinced myself he was just busy. After all, I'd been gone for two months—first for the preliminary rounds, then the finals. He was probably planning some small celebration. The thought made me smile despite my exhaustion.

But as the taxi turned onto Elm Street, my smile faltered.

My villa—my carefully restored 1920s treasure with its elegant cream facade and hunter green shutters—had been violated. The exterior now screamed in aggressive pastels: bubble-gum pink, electric purple, sunshine yellow. Enormous cartoon flowers had been painted directly onto the original brick. A glittering rainbow arched across what used to be my understated front entrance.

"This the right address, miss?" The driver's doubt mirrored my own disbelief.

I checked my phone stupidly, as if the house number might have changed. "Yes. This is... this is it."

I paid him with trembling hands, my designer's eye cataloging every garish detail with growing horror. Who had done this? And why? Thomas had mentioned nothing about renovations. I'd left explicit instructions that the house was perfect as it was—every paint color chosen after weeks of deliberation, every architectural detail preserved with painstaking care.

The front door stood slightly ajar.

My stomach knotted. I pushed it open slowly, half-expecting to find the place ransacked by squatters. Instead, I stepped into a nightmare of my own making—or rather, someone else's twisted fantasy wearing my home's corpse.

My entryway, once a study in minimalist elegance with its original oak floors and single statement piece—a genuine Tiffany lamp I'd hunted for months to find—had been transformed into what could only be described as a carnival threw up. Oversized plush unicorns lined the walls. Rainbow-striped beanbags replaced my carefully selected antique side table. Tacky fairy lights strangled every surface, their cheap plastic casings already yellowing.

The Tiffany lamp was gone.

I moved through the space in a daze, each room revealing fresh devastation. My dining room, where I'd hosted intimate dinners on my grandmother's mahogany table, now featured a plastic picnic set shaped like a mushroom. The table—a genuine 18th-century piece—had vanished. My collection of vintage botanical prints had been replaced by mass-produced posters of cartoon animals.

Voices drifted from deeper in the house. Laughter. Music.

I followed the sound on autopilot, my mind still trying to process the magnitude of what I was seeing. Perhaps there was an explanation. Perhaps Thomas had rented out the house while I was gone to help with expenses, and these were temporary tenants. Perhaps—

The living room stopped me cold.

Professional camera equipment crowded the space—three cameras on tripods, ring lights creating a artificial glow, cables snaking across what used to be my Persian rug. That rug was gone too, replaced by something that looked like synthetic fur in screaming pink.

But it was the people that made my breath catch.

Jazlyn Foster—my childhood friend, the girl who used to braid my hair and share secrets, the same woman my family had employed until she'd been dismissed last year for reasons my mother never fully explained—sat in an absurd throne-like chair upholstered in gold lamé. She wore a flowing dress that was clearly expensive, her makeup camera-ready, her posture that of someone utterly at home.

Beside her stood Thomas.

My Thomas. My boyfriend of three years. The man I'd supported through his "transition period" after he quit food delivery to "find himself." The man whose rent I'd paid, whose credit cards I'd covered, whose entire lifestyle I'd subsidized because I believed in us.

He had his hand on Jazlyn's shoulder, gazing down at her with an expression I recognized—the same adoring look he used to give me before I left for the competition.

A perky interviewer with a microphone leaned toward them, her voice bright with enthusiasm. "So Thomas, our viewers are dying to know—how did you surprise Jazlyn with this incredible villa?"

Thomas's smile was practiced, confident. "Well, when you love someone the way I love Jazlyn, you want to give them the world. She'd been talking about wanting a creative space, somewhere whimsical and inspiring for her design work. So I found this property and had it completely customized to her vision. Every detail reflects her unique aesthetic."

The interviewer turned to Jazlyn. "And you designed all of this yourself? It's so imaginative!"

Jazlyn's laugh was melodic, false. "I wanted to create a space that celebrates joy and creativity. Too many designers are obsessed with boring minimalism. I believe in color, in fun, in breaking rules."

I watched the comments scroll across the nearby monitor, thousands of viewers gushing over the couple's romance, praising Jazlyn's "boldness," calling Thomas "the perfect boyfriend."

I stood in the doorway of my own home, invisible, while strangers performed my life.

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