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Jake Exposes Ryan's Lies Novel Cover

Jake Exposes Ryan's Lies

The café had finally emptied of the last lingering students. I wiped down the counter one last time, the familiar scent of coffee grounds and cleaning solution filling my nostrils as I prepared to close up. My muscles ached from the six-hour shift, but at least I'd made enough in tips to cover Ryan's birthday present—a designer watch he'd been hinting about for weeks. The thought of his smile when he opened it tomorrow night made the exhaustion worth it. I glanced at the clock—9:45 PM. Ryan had texted that he'd fallen asleep early, which wasn't unusual lately. He'd been "studying hard" for finals, often too tired to even text goodnight. I understood; UCLA wasn't easy for either of us. As I gathered my things from the back room, I noticed Ryan's phone on the counter. He must have forgotten it when he stopped by for lunch.
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Chapter 2

The morning after Ryan's birthday party, my phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number. I glanced at it while tying my apron for my morning shift at the café.

"Coffee on me? - Jake"

My heart skipped. Jake Mitchell. Ryan's roommate. The guy Ryan had explicitly warned me to stay away from. I stared at those three simple words, my thumb hovering over the screen.

Ryan's warnings echoed in my mind: "Total player... goes through girls like tissues." But so did the screenshots of his conversations with Chelsea. Who was I supposed to trust anymore?

I typed back before I could overthink it: "I work at Bruin Brew until 3."

His response came immediately: "Perfect. See you then."

The shift dragged by in a haze of espresso shots and customer orders. Every time the door chimed, I glanced up, my pulse quickening. By 2:45, I'd wiped the same counter three times and reorganized the pastry display twice.

At exactly 3:01, Jake walked in. He wore a simple black t-shirt that hugged his shoulders and faded jeans, looking effortlessly confident in a way Ryan always tried too hard to achieve.

"Hey," he said, sliding onto a stool at the counter. "Busy day?"

"The usual pre-finals rush." I untied my apron, suddenly self-conscious of my work uniform and the coffee stains on my sleeve.

"You look like you could use this." He pushed a paper cup toward me—a vanilla latte, my favorite.

"How did you know?" I asked, taking a grateful sip.

He shrugged. "I pay attention."

Unlike Ryan, who still ordered me caramel macchiatos after a year together, despite my constant reminders that I preferred vanilla.

We settled at a corner table, and to my surprise, Jake didn't launch into flirtatious banter. Instead, he asked about my classes, my part-time job, my dreams after graduation. He listened—really listened—nodding and asking follow-up questions that showed he was actually absorbing what I said.

"So," he finally said, "are we going to talk about the elephant in the room?"

I tensed. "What elephant?"

"The fact that your boyfriend is cheating on you, and you know it."

The directness of his statement knocked the wind from me. I'd been avoiding thinking about those messages since the party, letting Ryan's explanations soothe my doubts. Hearing someone else say it out loud made it real again.

"It's... complicated," I managed.

"It's really not." Jake's eyes held mine. "He's using you, Sophia. For your money, your support, your...everything. And he's giving nothing back."

"You don't know that," I said defensively, though my voice lacked conviction.

"Don't I?" Jake raised an eyebrow. "I live with the guy. I see the gifts you buy him. I hear him on the phone with other girls when you're not around."

I stared into my latte, watching the foam dissolve. "Why are you telling me this?"

"Because you deserve better."

Over the next week, Jake became a regular fixture at the café. He'd appear during my shifts, sometimes just for a few minutes, leaving a vanilla latte on the counter with a napkin note underneath. Simple things like "Kick ass on that paper" or "Your smile made my day." Small gestures that made my heart flutter in ways I hadn't felt in months.

Madison noticed immediately. "The hot roommate has a thing for you," she said one afternoon, wiggling her eyebrows as she helped me close up.

"He's just being nice," I insisted, though I couldn't hide my smile.

"Nice guys don't show up every day with your favorite coffee," she countered. "And they definitely don't look at you the way he does."

"Ryan says he's a player."

Madison snorted. "And Ryan is a paragon of fidelity?"

She had a point.

On Friday evening, as I was wiping down tables after closing, the rumble of a motorcycle engine drew my attention to the window. Jake sat astride a sleek black bike, holding an extra helmet.

My heart raced as I stepped outside. "What are you doing here?"

"Taking you to dinner," he said simply. "If you want."

"On that?" I gestured to the motorcycle, equal parts terrified and thrilled.

"Live a little, Sophia." His smile was a challenge. "There's a place in Santa Monica. Right on the water. Best seafood you've ever had."

I hesitated, thinking of Ryan waiting at home. Ryan, who had "forgotten" our last three date nights. Ryan, whose texts to Chelsea still haunted my dreams.

"Okay," I said, surprising myself. "Let me grab my purse."

Twenty minutes later, I was clinging to Jake's back as we raced down the coast highway, the wind whipping through my hair and the ocean stretching endlessly beside us. For the first time in months, I felt... free. Alive. Like I could breathe again.

As we pulled up to the restaurant, the sun was setting over the Pacific, painting the sky in brilliant oranges and pinks. Jake helped me off the bike, his hand lingering on mine a moment longer than necessary.

"Beautiful, isn't it?" he asked, but when I turned to look at him, he wasn't watching the sunset.

He was watching me.

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