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From Betrayal to New Love Novel Cover

From Betrayal to New Love

The train's rhythmic clacking had lulled me into a restless sleep during the eighteen-hour journey from Montana, but now, standing before our apartment door with trembling fingers wrapped around my keys, I felt more awake than I had in months. The handcrafted leather journal pressed against my chest through my worn canvas bag—weeks of careful stitching, of burning my fingertips on hot tools, of learning ancient techniques just to create something worthy of Javier's hands. Today was my birthday. Twenty-two years old, and I was surprising the man I'd loved since childhood. The hallway smelled of vanilla candles and fresh paint, familiar scents that should have felt like coming home. Instead, they felt foreign, as if I'd been gone years instead of months. I slipped the key into the lock, my heart hammering against my ribs with anticipation. "Javier?" My voice echoed in the darkness. Silence answered back. I fumbled for the light switch, squinting as harsh fluorescent light flooded our living room.
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Chapter 1

The train's rhythmic clacking had lulled me into a restless sleep during the eighteen-hour journey from Montana, but now, standing before our apartment door with trembling fingers wrapped around my keys, I felt more awake than I had in months. The handcrafted leather journal pressed against my chest through my worn canvas bag—weeks of careful stitching, of burning my fingertips on hot tools, of learning ancient techniques just to create something worthy of Javier's hands.

Today was my birthday. Twenty-two years old, and I was surprising the man I'd loved since childhood.

The hallway smelled of vanilla candles and fresh paint, familiar scents that should have felt like coming home. Instead, they felt foreign, as if I'd been gone years instead of months. I slipped the key into the lock, my heart hammering against my ribs with anticipation.

"Javier?" My voice echoed in the darkness.

Silence answered back.

I fumbled for the light switch, squinting as harsh fluorescent light flooded our living room. Everything looked exactly as I'd left it—the throw pillows I'd arranged just so, the framed photos of us from high school prom, the coffee table books about architecture that Javier never read but kept for appearances. No birthday decorations. No flowers. No sign that today held any significance at all.

My phone buzzed. A text from my college roommate: "Happy birthday, Rose! Hope Javier has something amazing planned!"

I stared at the message until the words blurred. Maybe he was planning something. Maybe he was out getting supplies, or picking up dinner from that Italian place we went to for special occasions. I checked our bedroom, the kitchen, even opened the refrigerator looking for a cake he might be hiding.

Nothing.

Another buzz. This time, Instagram. Sarah Chen had tagged me in a story: "Wish you were here! Amazing party at the Hendersons'!"

I clicked through her stories, my stomach dropping with each swipe. There was Marcus laughing with a drink in his hand. There was Jennifer in that blue dress she'd been saving for something special. And there—my breath caught in my throat—there was Javier.

He stood near the Hendersons' marble fireplace, looking devastatingly handsome in the charcoal suit I'd helped him pick out last Christmas. His dark hair was perfectly styled, his smile easy and confident. He wasn't alone.

Sabrina Ward pressed close to his side, her red dress clinging to curves I'd always envied. Her laugh was bright and musical, the kind that drew every eye in the room. And around her throat—I had to look twice to be sure—hung the delicate pearl necklace Javier had shown me months ago, the one he'd said he was "saving for the right moment."

My hands shook as I grabbed my coat and keys. The Hendersons lived only twenty minutes away. I could be there before the party ended, could surprise him properly. Maybe there was an explanation. Maybe—

The Uber driver didn't try to make conversation during the ride, which was good because I couldn't have managed pleasantries. I clutched my bag tighter, feeling the journal's leather binding through the canvas. Three weeks I'd spent on it. Three weeks of learning from Old Mary, the Crow elder who'd taken pity on the city girl desperate to master traditional leatherwork. Every stitch was perfect, every design element meaningful—symbols for strength, for love, for the future I'd imagined we'd build together.

The Henderson mansion blazed with warm light, luxury cars lined up in the circular drive like expensive jewelry. I paid the driver and walked toward the sound of laughter and clinking glasses, my sneakers silent on the pristine walkway.

I should have gone through the front door. Should have announced myself, let Javier introduce me properly to his friends. Instead, I found myself slipping around to the side terrace, drawn by the sound of familiar voices.

"—honestly don't know how you managed it," Marcus was saying, his words slightly slurred. "Getting Rose out of the picture so smoothly."

I froze behind one of the massive stone pillars that supported the terrace overhang, my heart stopping mid-beat.

Javier's laugh was rich and careless. "Please. You think it was difficult? 'Oh Rose, you should really explore your artistic side. Montana has such authentic craft traditions.' She practically packed herself."

"But wasn't she suspicious?" This was David, another friend from our college group. "I mean, sending your fiancée away right before the design competition—"

"Suspicious?" Javier's voice carried that particular tone he used when he thought someone was being slow. "David, you don't understand Rose. She'd jump off a cliff if she thought it would make me happy. The girl's pathetically devoted. Always has been."

The journal slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the stone terrace with a soft thud that seemed to echo in my chest.

"Still," Marcus pressed, "three months is a long time to keep a woman like Sabrina waiting."

"Worth every second," Javier said, and I heard the smile in his voice. "Rose needed to be out of the way for Sabrina to really shine in the competition. Can't have my future wife overshadowed by my... what should we call Rose? My practice round?"

Their laughter felt like glass shards in my lungs. I pressed my back against the cold stone pillar, fighting the urge to be sick. Through the terrace doors, I could see them clearly now—Javier gesturing with his whiskey glass, completely at ease, while his friends hung on every word of his casual cruelty.

"The best part," he continued, "is she thinks she's doing it for me. Learning all those quaint little crafts to impress me. God, it's almost sweet how hard she tries."

"And when she comes back?" David asked.

"If she comes back." Javier shrugged. "Honestly, I'm hoping Montana keeps her. Sabrina and I have real potential. She understands ambition, understands what it takes to build something meaningful. Rose just... she's comfortable. Safe. But a man doesn't marry safe when he can have extraordinary."

I bent to retrieve the journal, my vision blurring with tears I refused to let fall. Not here. Not where they might see. The leather was cool under my trembling fingers, and for a moment I remembered Old Mary's weathered hands guiding mine, teaching me to honor the material, to put love into every stitch.

Love. What a fool I'd been.

I straightened, clutching the journal to my chest one last time before walking to the nearest trash bin. The heavy lid lifted with a metallic groan, and I stared down into the darkness within.

Three weeks of work. Three weeks of hope. Three weeks of believing that if I just tried hard enough, loved deeply enough, I could earn what I'd thought was already mine.

The journal fell into the trash with barely a whisper.

Behind me, Javier's laughter continued, bright and careless, cutting through the night air like a blade. I pulled out my phone with steady hands and opened the train app. The last train to Montana left in two hours.

I had just enough time to disappear from his life as quietly as I'd tried to surprise him with my presence.

This time, I wouldn't be coming back.

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