Follow
Chapters
Share
I Spent Ten Years Loving a Man Who Never Existed Novel Cover

I Spent Ten Years Loving a Man Who Never Existed

I checked my phone again at the arrivals gate. The message was still there. I'd read it so many times the words had stopped looking like words. *I keep thinking about what you said last week. About how you always save the window seat for me on road trips. I don't think you know what that does to me, Lea.* Garrett had sent that four days ago. I'd read it in the library, between a stack of flashcards and a cold cup of coffee, and I'd had to press my hand flat against the table just to stay in my seat. Ten years. Ten years of being the girl who waited, who made herself smaller, who laughed at the right moments and never asked for too much. And then, three months ago, the messages started changing.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

I found out the morning of the regatta.

Mia Chen — mutual friend, terrible secret-keeper — mentioned it while we were pulling on our jackets in the dorm lobby. Casual, throwaway, the way people say things they don't realize are grenades.

'Oh, you and Garrett are paired on the water, right? He set it up through the athletics office. That's so cute, honestly.'

I stopped buttoning my jacket.

'He set it up,' I said.

Mia blinked. 'Yeah, like two days ago. He said you'd both signed up and it made sense to—' She read my face. 'Oh.'

I finished buttoning my jacket.

'It's fine,' I said. 'Let's go.'

But it wasn't fine, and we both knew it, and the walk to the Hudson was twenty minutes of me turning it over in my head — the calculation of it, the patience of it. Two days ago. He'd planned this two days ago, found the right person to pull the right string, arranged a boat and a life jacket and a grey November morning on the water where there was nowhere to go and nothing to do but listen to him.

Ten years of knowing Garrett Johnston, and I still had to remind myself: the warm version of his face was always in service of something.

* * *

The dock smelled like cold water and diesel. The Hudson was flat and pewter-colored, the Manhattan skyline sitting low on the opposite bank like a held breath. Maybe thirty students milled around in university-branded life jackets, checking rigging, laughing too loud the way people do when it's cold and they're pretending not to be.

Garrett was already there.

He saw me coming and held up a life jacket — orange, my size, the gesture calibrated to look like thoughtfulness. His smile was the olive branch version. Practiced. Patient.

'Hey.' He took a step toward me. 'I thought we could—'

'No.'

The word came out clean. Not loud. Just clear.

The people nearest to us went quiet. I felt it — that brief, total silence, the kind that has weight.

I looked at him steadily. 'I won't be partnering with you today. Or any other day.'

His jaw tightened. The olive branch smile didn't disappear exactly — it just stopped working, like a light with a loose connection.

I set my bag down on the dock and looked out at the water.

Behind me, I heard Soren's voice. Quiet, unhurried.

'I have a two-person boat.' A pause. 'If you want.'

I turned. He was standing a few feet back, hands in his jacket pockets, looking at me the way he always did — like he had all the time in the world and none of it was wasted on me.

'Yes,' I said. 'Okay.'

* * *

We didn't talk much at first. Soren handled the rigging with the ease of someone who'd done it a thousand times, and I sat in the bow and watched the dock get smaller. The city pulled back. The water opened up around us, grey and wide and indifferent, and the sounds of the other boats faded until there was just the wind and the creak of the hull and the occasional slap of a small wave.

I exhaled.

I hadn't realized how much I'd been holding until I let it go.

'There's a thing people do,' Soren said, after a while. He was looking at the sail, adjusting something. 'When a butterfly is struggling to get out of its chrysalis. They see it fighting and they think they're helping, so they cut the cocoon open.'

I looked at him.

'The butterfly comes out,' he said. 'But its wings never work right. They're soft. Underdeveloped.' He let the line go. The sail filled. 'The struggle is what forces the fluid into the wings. That's what makes them strong enough to fly. If you skip it—' He glanced at me. 'The wings never unfold.'

The water moved under us. The skyline was a thin grey line behind his shoulder.

I was quiet for a long time.

'I've been trying to get out of the cocoon faster my whole life,' I said.

'I know,' he said.

Two words. No pity in them. No performance. Just the simple, steady weight of being seen.

I looked out at the water and felt something shift — not dramatically, not all at once. Just a small, internal rearrangement. Like a room where someone has moved the furniture two inches and suddenly the light falls differently.

My whole life, my pace had been the problem. Too slow, too careful, always a beat behind. I'd spent ten years apologizing for it, shrinking around it, loving someone who made me feel it most acutely because at least his impatience was familiar.

But Soren had never once looked at his watch while I was thinking.

Maybe the pace wasn't the problem. Maybe it never had been.

We sailed until the cold got serious, and then we turned back toward the dock, and neither of us said anything else, and it was the most comfortable silence I'd ever sat inside.

* * *

The boathouse was warm and smelled like wet rope and coffee from a folding table someone had set up near the door. People were coming in off the water in clusters, red-cheeked and loud. I was looking for Bailee when Garrett appeared at my elbow.

'Can we talk?' His voice was low. He steered me — not touching, just angling his body — toward a hallway off the main room. Storage, mostly. Quiet.

I stopped walking.

'Lea.' He turned to face me. The olive branch was gone. What was underneath it was something I recognized — the cold version, the one that came out when charm hadn't worked. 'I'm trying to be patient with you. But you're making this into something it isn't.'

I looked at him.

'You're not in his league.' He said it quietly, like he was doing me a favor. 'You know that, right? Soren Edwards — do you know who his family is? What that world looks like? You'll never be enough for someone like him. Deep down—' His voice dropped further. 'Deep down, you've always known it.'

There it was. The same voice. The one that had kept me small for ten years, that had made me grateful for crumbs, that had convinced me that being tolerated was the same as being loved.

I waited for the familiar collapse — the chest-tightening, the sudden need to apologize, to make myself smaller, to find a way to make him comfortable again.

It didn't come.

I looked at Garrett Johnston — really looked at him — and I saw it clearly for the first time. Not a person who had failed to love me. A person who had needed me not to be loved, because my smallness was the thing that made him feel large.

'My ten years of loving you,' I said, 'are over.'

My voice was steady. No anger in it. No performance.

'You never deserved a single one of them.'

I turned and walked back toward the light and the noise and the smell of coffee, and I didn't look back.

Behind me, the hallway was quiet.

For the first time, the silence felt like mine.

You may also like

Forbidden Desires (short erotical stories) Novel Cover
8.0
Mature content (18+) Readers discretion is advised Different stories. Different desires. Unforgettable experience Each story peels back to different layer of longing: forbidden, tender, dangerous, wild, rough, reminding you that pleasure can be thrilling.
From Wife to Leading Lady Novel Cover
9.5
The Metropolitan Museum's grand hall sparkled under crystal chandeliers, but the glittering facade couldn't mask the hollow ache spreading through my chest. I'd excused myself from the charity gala's main ballroom, seeking refuge in the quieter Egyptian wing where ancient artifacts stood as silent witnesses to countless human dramas. That's when I saw them. Max and Vivienne Hall stood in a secluded alcove between two towering sarcophagi, their bodies angled toward each other in a way that spoke of intimacy I hadn't seen from my husband in years. Her hand rested on his forearm—not the casual touch of old friends, but something deeper, more possessive. His head was bent toward hers, close enough that I could see the soft smile playing at the corners of his mouth, the same expression he'd once reserved for me. My breath caught in my throat. The champagne flute in my hand trembled as I watched Vivienne laugh at something he whispered, her fingers trailing down his arm in a gesture so familiar it made my stomach lurch. This wasn't business. This wasn't friendship.
His Contract Bride, The Real Heiress Novel Cover
9.2
I stepped from the taxi onto Manhattan's pristine curb, a naive farm girl from Montana. My mission: marry billionaire Julian Sterling for a contract. But my welcome was a trap; that night, I found myself in his bed, a drugged, vulnerable man clinging to me. The Sterling penthouse became a gauntlet. Julian's mother and stepsister relentlessly tried to undermine my "charity case" facade, insulting, sabotaging, and humiliating me, making my true mission perilous. Victoria tossed money into my breakfast. Stella set impossible tasks. Julian's friend, Vanessa, bribed me to leave and shamed me at a gala. Julian, cold and suspicious, demanded I "play the fool." Each cruel prank fueled a quiet fury. It was infuriating to be dismissed, knowing secrets I held. Julian's unexpected vulnerability and my grandfather's mysterious will sparked deeper questions. But I fought back. I shredded Vanessa's bribe, tamed a pop star, and outwitted Stella's sabotage, proving competence. Julian's disdain shifted to respect. This was now a battle for my inheritance, identity, and hidden truths.
My Protector: The Billionaire's Hidden Devotion Novel Cover
9.3
In my last life, I was played for a fool by my charming fiancé, Curtis, and my jealous cousin, Chloe. He promised me the world, but it was all a beautiful illusion built on lies. He stole my ideas, shattered my reputation, and left me broken and alone. My death was ruled an "accident," but I knew the truth. They had orchestrated it all. Chloe, my own cousin, stood by his side, watching with twisted satisfaction as my world burned. They took everything from me-my career, my dignity, and finally, my life. The betrayal was a cold rage that settled deep in my bones. I couldn't understand how I had been so blind to the monster hiding behind his perfect smile. Now, I've opened my eyes to a second chance. I'm back at the beginning, forced to choose a husband to save my family's failing company. On one side is Curtis, the charming serpent who destroyed me. On the other is the cold, ruthless Arjun Becker, a man who promises security, but at what cost? This time, I won't be a fool. I know exactly who to choose.
Once Loved, Forever broken Novel Cover
7.9
I thought I had the most loyal husband until I caught Caleb cheating with my step sister. My heart twisted in pain as I recalled how far our two year old marriage had come, the promises, the moments, everything went down the drain in a couple of minutes. Caleb was my only family. My father died shortly after his marriage to my stepmother and she hated me to no end. She would never take me back into the house, considering I eloped to be with my lover. My late father's debts were piling up and my divorce with Caleb ended my job as a waitress with him as well. So there was no way to pay up. Feeling betrayed, devastated and helpless, I thought to end it all on the cliff but I got saved by a stranger. The stranger turned out to be Alexander Hall. After saving me, he offered me a contract marriage to help me with my father's debts. I was desperate so I accepted his offer and moved in with him. Will this stranger offer me the love that I yearn for? Or will I be left struggling for peace at the end of this contract?
Puck Me, Stepbrother Novel Cover
9.1
Bryson POV Blackridge University was already a nightmare before I dumped hot coffee all over Julian Hayes. He's tall, built, with this perfect smirk that makes me want to punch him. Captain of the hockey team and the biggest asshole I've ever met. He destroyed me in front of everyone. Made sure I knew exactly where I stood. But then I joined the hockey team to make my mom happy, and suddenly everything changed. I could actually play. And Julian? He started looking at me like he wanted to destroy me in a whole different way. Now every practice feels like war. Every time we're alone in the locker room, I can barely breathe. I hate him. I want him. And I'm pretty sure he knows it. Julian's POV I run Blackridge University. Team captain, golden boy, everyone wants to be me or be with me. Then some transfer kid crashes into me and ruins my shirt. Bryson Miller. Smart mouth, cheap clothes, and eyes that look at me like he's not impressed. I should've crushed him and moved on. But the little shit joined my hockey team and turned out to be good. Really good. Now I can't get him out of my head. Every practice, every fight we have feels like something else entirely. Something I don't want to think about. I thought that was complicated enough. Then I walk into my house tonight and find Bryson unpacking boxes in my living room..