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His Betrayal, My Heartbreak Novel Cover

His Betrayal, My Heartbreak

I checked my watch for the third time in as many minutes, my heart racing as I hurried along the familiar path to Shoreline Café. The salty breeze from the Santa Monica pier tousled my hair, but I didn't bother fixing it. My fingers were too busy clutching the folded doctor's note in my purse, the one I'd been too terrified to open since picking it up yesterday. Three weeks of morning sickness. Three weeks of wondering. The café came into view, its blue awning fluttering in the gentle California breeze. Our Monday morning ritual for the past four years—lattes and catching up before the week pulled us in different directions. Today would be different. Today, I might be telling Ryan Thompson, my best friend since childhood and undefined love for years, that he was going to be a father. I tucked a loose strand of hair behind my ear, a nervous habit I'd never outgrown, and scanned the outdoor tables for his familiar silhouette.
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Chapter 1

I checked my watch for the third time in as many minutes, my heart racing as I hurried along the familiar path to Shoreline Café. The salty breeze from the Santa Monica pier tousled my hair, but I didn't bother fixing it. My fingers were too busy clutching the folded doctor's note in my purse, the one I'd been too terrified to open since picking it up yesterday.

Three weeks of morning sickness. Three weeks of wondering.

The café came into view, its blue awning fluttering in the gentle California breeze. Our Monday morning ritual for the past four years—lattes and catching up before the week pulled us in different directions. Today would be different. Today, I might be telling Ryan Thompson, my best friend since childhood and undefined love for years, that he was going to be a father.

I tucked a loose strand of hair behind my ear, a nervous habit I'd never outgrown, and scanned the outdoor tables for his familiar silhouette. He wasn't there yet. Unusual. Ryan was annoyingly punctual, a trait that had served him well in his Silicon Valley ventures. I ordered our usual—a vanilla latte for me, black coffee with one sugar for him—and chose our favorite corner table overlooking the water.

My phone buzzed with a message from Jessica: *Good luck telling him! Call me after!*

I smiled weakly at my phone. Jessica had been the one who'd practically forced me to take the pregnancy test after I'd spent twenty minutes throwing up in her bathroom last weekend. She'd also been the one who'd listened to me cry about Ryan's commitment issues for the past seven years.

"It's just not who I am, Claire," he'd say, pulling me close in the darkness of his apartment. "But what we have—this is special. You know that, right?"

And I did know. Or thought I did. The way his eyes found mine across crowded rooms. The way he'd call me first with good news or bad. The way he'd supported my art when everyone else said it was impractical. We were more than friends, less than a couple—existing in that gray space that had become increasingly painful to inhabit.

I spotted him finally, weaving between tables, and my breath caught. Even after all these years, the sight of him still did that to me. But something was off. His shoulders were tense, his expression closed. No smile. No wave.

"Hey," I said, pushing his coffee toward him as he sat down. "Everything okay?"

"Yeah." He didn't touch the coffee. Didn't look at me directly. "Thanks for meeting me."

Thanks for meeting me? As if this wasn't our standing date for the past four years?

"Ryan, what's going on?" I reached across the table, but he subtly shifted his hands away.

He took a deep breath, finally meeting my eyes with a strange, detached gaze I'd never seen before. "I need to tell you something."

My stomach twisted. Not from morning sickness this time, but from a sudden, terrible premonition.

"I'm engaged," he said flatly. "To Isabella Rodriguez."

The world tilted sideways. Isabella Rodriguez. The professional dancer he'd mentioned meeting at a gallery opening four months ago.

"You're... what?" My voice sounded distant, like it belonged to someone else.

"It's love at first sight, Claire. I've never felt anything like this." His words came faster now, rehearsed. "I know it seems sudden, but when you know, you know."

When you know, you know. After seven years of telling me he didn't believe in marriage. After seven years of me waiting, hoping, supporting him through every startup failure and success.

"I thought we were..." I couldn't finish the sentence. What were we? He'd never let us define it.

"We had fun," he said, his voice taking on a business-like tone I recognized from his investor meetings. "But I need to move forward with my life. With Isabella, it's different. It's real."

Real. As if what we had wasn't.

"Ryan, I need to tell you something too—" I started, my hand instinctively moving to my stomach.

"I can't do this right now, Claire." He stood abruptly, checking his Apple Watch. "I have to focus on my future with Isabella. I hope we can be friends eventually, but I need space right now."

And just like that, he walked away. Seven years dismissed in a three-minute conversation.

I sat frozen, watching his back disappear into the crowd. My fingers trembled as they found the folded note in my purse. I didn't need to read it now. I already knew what it said. Three weeks pregnant.

A tear slid down my cheek as my hand rested protectively over my abdomen. Over our child. The child he would never know about.

Because he was already gone.

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