
He Loved Me When You Didn't
Kaitlyn Barton POV:
After three years building my family's hotel empire abroad, I came home to New York, expecting a warm embrace from my childhood fiancé, Edwin.
Instead, he greeted me with a warning. He told me to be gentle with his new girlfriend, Kacy, painting me as a villain before I even knew her name.
At my own welcome-home party, he let her stage a dramatic fall and then publicly blamed me for it, his eyes burning with a hatred I'd never seen.
He cradled her in his arms as if she were a fragile doll I had broken.
"Happy now, Kaitlyn?" he snarled, shattering twenty years of our shared history in front of everyone we knew.
In his eyes, I was no longer his love, but a monster he needed to protect his new flame from.
As he stormed out, my phone buzzed. It was a text from Everett Rowe, the man who had quietly loved me for five years.
"If you are truly ready, I will marry you. Right now. Just say the word."
My fingers moved on their own.
"Yes," I typed. "I'll marry you."
The moment I stepped back onto New York soil, a city I had once shared completely with Edwin, he greeted me not with a hug, but with a warning about his new girlfriend, painting me as the villain before I even knew her name. Three years abroad, cultivating my family's hotel empire, had prepared me for many business battles, but nothing for the cold, calculated betrayal that awaited me at home. He had replaced me, and then twisted our shared history, turning me into the aggressor he now needed protection from. This was not the reunion I had envisioned, nor the Edwin I remembered. My heart, which had swelled with anticipation, now froze into a solid block of ice.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 1
Kaitlyn Barton POV:
After three years building my family's hotel empire abroad, I came home to New York, expecting a warm embrace from my childhood fiancé, Edwin.
Instead, he greeted me with a warning. He told me to be gentle with his new girlfriend, Kacy, painting me as a villain before I even knew her name.
At my own welcome-home party, he let her stage a dramatic fall and then publicly blamed me for it, his eyes burning with a hatred I'd never seen.
He cradled her in his arms as if she were a fragile doll I had broken.
"Happy now, Kaitlyn?" he snarled, shattering twenty years of our shared history in front of everyone we knew.
In his eyes, I was no longer his love, but a monster he needed to protect his new flame from.
As he stormed out, my phone buzzed. It was a text from Everett Rowe, the man who had quietly loved me for five years.
"If you are truly ready, I will marry you. Right now. Just say the word."
My fingers moved on their own.
"Yes," I typed. "I'll marry you."
The moment I stepped back onto New York soil, a city I had once shared completely with Edwin, he greeted me not with a hug, but with a warning about his new girlfriend, painting me as the villain before I even knew her name. Three years abroad, cultivating my family's hotel empire, had prepared me for many business battles, but nothing for the cold, calculated betrayal that awaited me at home. He had replaced me, and then twisted our shared history, turning me into the aggressor he now needed protection from. This was not the reunion I had envisioned, nor the Edwin I remembered. My heart, which had swelled with anticipation, now froze into a solid block of ice.
Chapter 1
Weeks before my return from London, murmurs about Edwin Brown had already reached me. Friends from New York sent discreet messages, hinting at a new woman in his life. The initial reports were vague, mostly gossip about a "delicate" girl from a modest background. I shrugged it off. Edwin and I had a history. Three years apart did not erase twenty years of shared life. I felt a slight curiosity, but mostly a dismissive confidence. He was my Edwin. He always came back to me. The idea of a "replacement" felt ridiculous, almost insulting to our bond. I believed in us.
The rumors grew more specific. People said Edwin constantly feared this new girlfriend, Kacy Munoz, would be hurt. They claimed she was a vulnerable soul from a difficult background, and Edwin felt compelled to protect her. He reportedly saw her as a stand-in for me, but a softer, less intimidating version. I found this idea utterly preposterous. Edwin knew me better than anyone. He understood my strength, my drive. He wouldn't pick some fragile replica. The thought made me laugh. It sounded like something out of a bad rom-com. I dismissed the whispers as overblown exaggeration. People loved drama, especially when it involved heirs from prominent families.
I walked into the familiar grand ballroom of the Barton Hotel, the very place my family owned, for my welcome-home party. The air hummed with conversation and clinking glasses. I moved through the crowd, greeting old friends and business associates, feeling a surge of satisfaction at being back. Then, a hand touched my arm. My body stiffened. I turned and saw Edwin. His eyes held a familiar intensity, but something new flickered there-a guardedness I had never seen directed at me. My smile faltered.
His first words were not a welcome back. He did not ask about my trip, my work, or even if I was well. Instead, he leaned in, his voice low, almost a plea.
"Kaitlyn, I need to talk to you about Kacy."
My breath hitched. The carefully constructed façade of indifference I had maintained for weeks cracked. Kacy. His new girlfriend. He led with her name, a name that felt foreign and unwelcome in this space, on his lips. His concern was not for me, but for her. A cold wave washed over me.
His eyes, once filled only with devotion for me, now held a tender, protective glow as he spoke of Kacy. He looked at me, then past me, as if searching for someone else, his brow furrowed with a protective anxiety. He spoke about her sensitivity, her fragility, her difficult past. He painted a picture of a delicate flower he needed to shelter from the harsh world, a world that suddenly, disturbingly, included me.
"She is very sensitive, Kaitlyn," he said, his voice dropping an octave, a subtle warning in his tone. "Her background is tough. Please, be gentle with her. Don't upset her." His words were a preemptive defense, a shield raised against me before I had even met her. He cast me as a potential aggressor, a bully who would intentionally hurt this "fragile" Kacy.
I stood there, momentarily speechless. The sheer audacity of his words, the immediate assumption of my malice, left me feeling a bitter mix of outrage and disbelief. He had known me my entire life. He had seen my loyalty, my fierce protection of those I cared about. Yet, he now perceived me as a threat, a villain in his new narrative. The absurdity of it all resonated deeply. He had already judged me, condemned me, based on an imagined future interaction with a woman I had yet to meet.
My eyes narrowed. A coldness settled deep within me. He had decided my role in his new life without any input from me. He had cast me as the antagonist. My voice came out flat, devoid of the warmth I had felt moments before.
"Are you serious, Edwin?" I asked, my tone sharp, cutting through the pleasant background chatter. "You haven't seen me in three years. Your first words to me are a warning about your new girlfriend?"
Edwin flinched. He had not expected my directness. His face, usually so composed, showed a flicker of surprise, then something akin to guilt. He realized his words had been out of line, a gross breach of etiquette. He cleared his throat, his gaze shifting uncomfortably.
"Kaitlyn, I… I didn't mean it like that," he stammered, his usual smooth confidence replaced by an awkward fumbling. "It's just… Kacy. She cries easily. It's hard to comfort her when she gets upset." His explanation only made things worse. He was still prioritizing her feelings, still justifying his dismissive behavior towards me by portraying her as a perpetual victim. His voice, though slightly agitated by my directness, still held a deep, unwavering concern for Kacy. It was clear. His loyalty had shifted entirely.
I found his explanation utterly ridiculous. The Edwin I knew would never have tolerated such melodrama. He used to find my own occasional bursts of frustration or sadness charming, seeing it as part of my strong personality. Now, another woman' s tears defined his behavior. The contrast was stark, almost laughable.
I thought about our past. Edwin, the boy who once worshipped the ground I walked on. He used to move mountains to make me smile. There was the time I mentioned wanting a rare antique doll, a fleeting thought I barely voiced. The next day, he had scoured the city, flown across states, and presented it to me, wrapped in silk, his eyes shining with triumph. Another time, when I had a bad flu, he assembled a team of top doctors and nurses just to monitor me, insisting on round-theclock care even though it was just a common virus. He even once flew me to Iceland on a whim, claiming he had "predicted" a perfect aurora borealis display just for my birthday. For years, my birthdays were extravagant affairs he meticulously planned: private yacht parties, surprise celebrity performances, custom-designed jewelry. He once shut down an entire amusement park just so I could ride the roller coasters without a queue. He lived to spoil me, to cherish me, to make me feel like the most important person in the world. His devotion was legendary among our friends.
Now, he stood before me, warning me away from a woman he'd known for a fraction of that time, a woman he implied I would instinctively harm. A bitter, involuntary laugh escaped my lips. It was a harsh, humorless sound.
Edwin' s face darkened further. My laughter clearly stung him, adding to his obvious embarrassment and frustration. He looked genuinely angry. But I just felt a profound weariness. This conversation was pointless. He had already made his choice, had already defined our new dynamic. There was nothing left to say, nothing to salvage here.
I shook my head, my decision made. I had planned to join Bettie and our friends in the private lounge, but the thought of spending another moment in Edwin' s condescending presence, or worse, meeting this Kacy under his protective gaze, was intolerable. I turned on my heel.
"You know what, Edwin?" I said, my voice cutting and sharp. "Keep your 'sensitive' girlfriend safe. I wouldn't want to accidentally hurt her delicate feelings. You worry about her. I'll worry about myself." My words dripped with sarcasm. I did not wait for his response.
Edwin' s face went pale. He called my name, a desperate, confused sound, trying to chase after me, to offer another half-hearted explanation. But I ignored him. I walked away, my heels clicking sharply on the polished marble floor, each step a definitive statement, leaving him, and our fractured past, behind.
You may also like

8.1
She thought patience would earn her love.
She was wrong.
After years of waiting for her best friend to finally see her, she meets the one man she should never want-his older brother. Dark, forbidden, and dangerously perceptive, he sees through every excuse she's ever made for being overlooked.
Now she must choose between a safe fantasy that keeps breaking her heart and a dangerous truth that offers no escape once it begins.
Because the brother who looks at her like that?
He doesn't believe in halfway love.

7.2
Clifton, the god of esports, was secretly battling a career-ending wrist injury to protect his team.
A year ago, he kissed his duo partner, Justice, only to be met with violent disgust. Justice shoved him away and dry-heaved in the rain, looking at him like a monster.
Humiliated by the straight man's raw revulsion, Clifton cut him out of his life.
But now, Justice suddenly appeared at Clifton's club as a rookie tryout.
Instead of an ambitious climber, Justice played the perfect, pathetic victim. He cowered, trembled, and acted terrified whenever Clifton was near.
He even signed a bloodsucking contract with a toxic teammate, sparking rumors he was brought in to replace Clifton as captain.
During a scrimmage, Clifton hesitated to shoot because he remembered Justice had just severely burned his hand.
Justice showed no mercy. He ruthlessly gunned Clifton down, humiliating the captain in front of the entire coaching staff.
Clifton was consumed by blinding rage and betrayal.
If Justice was so disgusted by him, why did he fake his devotion for six months just to use him?
Why was he acting like helpless prey now, after trampling all over Clifton's pride?
Determined to rip off the liar's disguise, Clifton dragged Justice into a live stream in front of sixty thousand viewers.
"He's asking if you are in love with me."
Clifton smiled cruelly, waiting for the public execution. But just as the trap snapped shut, a choked, terrified gasp came through the headset.

9.6
She was sold as a broodmare. He was a warrior with no memory. Together, they'll burn down the world.
Lyra has been called many things: half-blood, mongrel, dirty blood. Rejected by every pack she's approached, she's given one final chance-as a bride to Ronan, the cruel Alpha of Red River Pack. But when her wedding night becomes a nightmare, she stabs her new husband and flees into the frozen wilderness.
Stellan remembers nothing. Not his name, not his past, not the ancient tattoos covering his body. He only knows that when he sees a terrified woman falling from a cliff into an icy river, he must save her-even if it kills him.
On the run from a vengeful Alpha and his army of hunters, Lyra and Stellan discover an impossible bond growing between them. The moon has chosen them as mates. But Stellan's memories are returning, and with them, a devastating truth: he's not just any wolf. He's the Alpha of the North Star Pack. And a half-blood can never be his Luna.
Now Ronan's brother has sworn revenge, an ancient prophecy awakens, and three packs prepare for war. Lyra must prove that bloodlines mean nothing-and that the most powerful bond of all is forged in ice and fire.
He lost his memory. She lost her freedom. Together, they'll find everything.

9.5
"You shouldn't be here, Fiona," his deep voice rasped against her ear, his hand still pressed against the wall behind her.
"Then tell me to leave," she whispered, her lips trembling inches from his. He didn't move. He didn't breathe. And in that moment, she knew he wanted her just as much as she wanted him.
Fiona Harry has lived her whole life in a golden cage of wealth, reputation, and suffocating rules. University was supposed to be her escape, her first taste of freedom. But nothing could prepare her for the moment she came face-to-face with Professor Jalen Hart, her father's best friend. One reckless night changes everything. A drunken mistake turns into an irresistible obsession, pulling her deeper into Jalen's forbidden world. But secrets don't stay hidden forever. Between Jude, her possessive friend who knows too much, Marian, Jalen's wicked wife, and the dangerous power of desire, Fiona is about to risk not only hers and her family's reputation but her entire future.
And what happens when the truth comes out especially to Marian?

8.9
The mangled car teetered on the cliff's edge, my leg crushed, gasoline fumes thick in the air. My husband, Holden, stood safe on the highway, directing the rescue – but not for me. He was saving her, the woman in the passenger seat, leaving me and our unborn child to the ocean below.
I woke trapped in the crushed Maybach, leg pinned. The cliff loomed; the driver's seat was empty.
Holden, safe outside, directed paramedics past me to Giana, his "most valuable asset," ordering her rescue first.
I watched him comfort Giana, oblivious, as the car slid. My baby barely viable. Holden offered a black card for silence; Giana gloated.
Ten years of devotion, a cruel lie. Rage fueled me: how could he abandon his wife and child?
I swore a venomous oath: never again an accessory. I flicked his card away, shielded my pregnancy, and promised my baby escape.

7.5
I was Nyx, a top-tier covert operative. But when I opened my eyes, I was trapped in the unfamiliar, overweight body of a bullied girl named Eliza.
Before I could even process the body swap, the bedroom door splintered open. I was in bed with Julian Malone, a wealthy military heir, both of us heavily drugged. Cameras flashed wildly. It was a vicious setup to ruin his career, and I was the bait.
To save his family's reputation, Julian was forced to marry me. But the moment the wedding was over, he abandoned me. His elite family treated me like a disease. His mother froze my only bank account, trying to starve me into submission.
I even intercepted a private conversation between his parents.
"Once she's in a private facility, she loses all legal standing. We can sign anything we want on her behalf."
They planned to lock me up in a mental asylum and erase my existence entirely to get rid of the "trailer park trash."
To them, I was just a weak, pathetic pawn they could crush without a second thought. They thought they had backed a helpless girl into a corner.
They had no idea they had just declared war on a lethal weapon.
I didn't cry or beg. Instead, I bypassed their state-of-the-art security, cracked their safe, and stole the financial secrets that could destroy their entire empire.
"I want five hundred thousand dollars, or these files go to the IRS."
This time, I was playing by my own rules.