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Love After Betrayal Novel Cover

Love After Betrayal

I stared at the ceiling of my Brooklyn apartment, watching the early morning light filter through the thin curtains. Another year older. Another birthday. I should have felt something—excitement, anticipation, joy—but all I felt was a hollow ache in my chest. My phone buzzed on the nightstand. A text from Blake. *Happy birthday babe. Left something at your door. Can't make lunch, emergency client meeting. Make it up to you next week.* No surprise there.
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Chapter 2

I left Blake's office that day with nothing but my portfolio and a sense of terrifying freedom. The weight of years had lifted from my shoulders, but in its place was something equally heavy—uncertainty. My tiny Brooklyn apartment, which had always felt temporary, now seemed like my only refuge in a city that suddenly felt too big, too fast, and too expensive.

The next morning, I woke before dawn, my laptop balanced on my knees as I scrolled through Craigslist and every niche design board I could find. Each listing seemed to demand years of experience I didn't have or connections I'd never made. I applied anyway, attaching carefully curated samples from my portfolio, writing cover letters until my fingers cramped.

By noon, my inbox held three rejection emails. Polite, impersonal dismissals that stung like paper cuts. I forced myself to read each one twice, searching for constructive criticism between the lines of 'we've decided to pursue other candidates.'

At two o'clock, I found myself in a cramped bridal shop in Williamsburg, my portfolio spread across a glass counter while the owner—a woman with impossibly thin eyebrows—flipped through my sketches with barely concealed disinterest.

'These are... interesting,' she said, lingering on a design I'd been particularly proud of. 'But they're too indie for our clientele. We need traditional with just a hint of modern. You know, safe but with a twist.' She closed my portfolio with manicured fingers. 'Not whatever this is.'

I nodded, swallowing the lump in my throat as I gathered my work. 'Thank you for your time.'

Outside, the autumn air bit at my cheeks, or maybe it was just the sting of rejection. I wandered aimlessly, eventually finding myself in a corner coffee shop I'd never noticed before. The scent of freshly ground beans enveloped me as I ordered the cheapest thing on the menu—plain black coffee.

'That'll be $2.75,' said the barista, a woman about my age with vibrant blue hair and an assortment of mismatched earrings. Her name tag read 'Sarah.'

I fumbled in my wallet, painfully aware of how quickly my savings would disappear without Blake's firm providing steady income. As I waited for my coffee, I absently sketched on a napkin—a habit I'd developed years ago, a way to process emotions I couldn't always name.

'That's really good,' Sarah said, sliding my coffee across the counter. She nodded toward my sketch—a dress design with clean, architectural lines. 'You a designer?'

'Trying to be,' I admitted, surprised by her interest. 'Just left my job to pursue it full-time.'

'Brave,' she said, with genuine admiration in her voice. 'I'm in design too—graphic, not fashion. But I recognize talent when I see it.' She studied my napkin sketch more closely. 'Your lines are clean. Confident. You have a point of view.'

I blinked, unused to such straightforward praise. Blake had always couched any compliments in conditions—'not bad, but...' or 'cute, if you're into that sort of thing.'

'I host a weekend coworking meetup with some other independent creatives,' Sarah continued. 'You should come. Saturday, ten AM. We all bring our projects, share resources, connections. It's how I got my first real client.'

I left the coffee shop with Sarah's number in my phone and something I hadn't felt in years—hope. Small, fragile, but undeniably there.

The next day, I signed a month-to-month lease on a tiny studio space above a laundromat in Bushwick. The rent would eat a significant chunk of my savings, but I needed a place that wasn't tainted by memories of Blake, somewhere that was just mine.

The space was barely bigger than a closet, with uneven floors and a single window that looked out onto a brick wall. But as I set up my sewing machine and pinned fabric swatches to the wall, it began to feel like possibility.

I worked through the nights, fueled by black coffee and determination, sketching on anything I could find—napkins, receipts, the backs of junk mail envelopes. My mood board filled with images torn from magazines, color palettes that spoke to me, textures that begged to be transformed.

Each night, I fell into bed exhausted but with a strange, unfamiliar feeling expanding in my chest. It wasn't happiness exactly—too raw and uncertain for that. It was something more primal. The feeling of finally moving toward something rather than away.

As I drifted to sleep, my phone lit up with a notification. An email from a name I didn't recognize, with a subject line that made my heart skip: 'Your portfolio—interested in discussing further.'

I sat up in bed, suddenly wide awake. The sender's address ended with @crossindustries.com.

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