
Breaking Free from His Lies Chapter 1
The morning sun cast golden ripples across the infinity pool at the Hamptons estate, but I couldn't shake the chill that had settled in my chest since yesterday. I adjusted my position on the lounge chair, pretending to read my book while watching Grayson and Maisie through my sunglasses.
They sat at the breakfast table on the terrace, close enough that I could hear their easy laughter floating across the water. Seven years. Seven years I'd been with Grayson, and yet Maisie could make him laugh like that with just a glance.
"Jenna, you're being paranoid," I whispered to myself, the same mantra I'd repeated countless times over the years whenever that familiar knot of insecurity twisted in my stomach.
Maisie stood gracefully, her white sundress catching the breeze as she moved toward the smoothie bar the staff had set up. Even from a distance, I could see the deliberate sway in her walk, the way she tucked a strand of honey-blonde hair behind her ear. Everything about her seemed effortless, natural—the complete opposite of how I felt around Grayson, always trying too hard, always second-guessing myself.
She returned with two glasses, the pink smoothie looking perfectly Instagram-worthy in the morning light. I watched as she took a sip, her coral lipstick leaving a distinct mark on the rim. My stomach clenched as she set the glass down and reached for her phone, typing something with a small smile playing at her lips.
Then she did something that made my blood run cold.
With the same casual grace she did everything, Maisie slid her glass—the one with her lipstick clearly visible on the rim—directly in front of Grayson. Not beside his plate, not near his napkin, but right in front of him where he couldn't miss it. Where I couldn't miss it.
She glanced in my direction for just a moment, and I swear I saw the corner of her mouth lift in the faintest smile before she looked away.
My heart hammered against my ribs as I waited, hoping—praying—that Grayson would notice. That he would see the bright coral mark and push the glass away, or at least acknowledge how inappropriate it was.
Instead, he reached for it without hesitation.
Time seemed to slow as I watched him lift the glass to his lips, the same lips that had kissed me goodbye that morning, and drink from exactly where Maisie's mouth had been. The intimate gesture was so casual, so natural, that it felt like a physical blow to my chest.
I couldn't breathe. Seven years of devotion, of putting his needs before mine, of making myself smaller so he could shine brighter, and this was how little he thought of me. This was how little our relationship meant to him.
The book slipped from my trembling hands, hitting the concrete with a sharp crack that made both of them look over. Grayson waved, his smile bright and oblivious, still holding her glass in his hand.
"Everything okay, babe?" he called out, his voice carrying that easy confidence that had first drawn me to him in college.
I managed a weak smile and a thumbs up, my throat too tight to speak. Maisie had turned back to her phone, but I caught the satisfied gleam in her eyes before she looked away.
The rest of the morning passed in a haze. I mechanically went through the motions—swimming laps in the pool until my lungs burned, joining them for lunch where I pushed food around my plate, nodding along to their inside jokes and shared memories that I would never be part of. Every laugh they shared felt like another crack in my already fractured heart.
By evening, when we returned to our hotel room, the weight of what I'd witnessed had crystallized into something harder, sharper. This wasn't paranoia or insecurity talking anymore. This was clarity, painful and absolute.
Grayson was already in bed, scrolling through his phone with the same casual indifference he'd shown all day. The soft lamplight cast shadows across his face, highlighting the strong jaw I'd once traced with my fingertips, the dark hair I'd run my hands through countless times.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.
He didn't look up from his screen. "About what?"
"About this morning. About the smoothie cup."
Now he glanced at me, one eyebrow raised in that dismissive way that had become all too familiar. "What about it?"
The casual tone, the complete lack of understanding—it was exactly what I'd expected, and somehow that made it hurt even more.
"You drank from Maisie's cup. From exactly where her lipstick was." The words came out measured, controlled, but underneath was seven years of suppressed hurt finally finding its voice. "Do you have any idea how that made me feel?"
Breaking Free from His Lies of Contents
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