
Married to A Friend After My Boyfriend Cheated
Married to A Friend After My Boyfriend Cheated Chapter 1
The fluorescent lights in the office hummed overhead as I carried two steaming cups of coffee down the empty corridor.
Past nine on a Friday night, the building felt hollow, most people were out enjoying their weekend, but not Rylan and me—we were builders, dreamers, willing to sacrifice everything for what we were building together.
“Babe, I brought you—” I took a step toward the conference room, expecting to see Rylan’s familiar smile.
Instead, the words caught in my throat. I froze.
Time splintered. My hands trembled, coffee spilling over the edges of the cups.
There, on our polished conference table where we’d planned our next quarter, Rylan’s hands were not on reports. They were on her.
Liora. My best friend.
-
Liora was woman who’d stood beside me through heartbreaks, victories, and my secret wedding planning.
But now? Now she was bent over the table, hair falling over scattered papers, skirt hiked around her waist. The sound they were making pierced the quiet office, grotesque and surreal.
The coffee cups slipped from my fingers, crashing to the floor in a shower of ceramic and steaming liquid. I barely noticed.
My chest felt hollow, a churning pit that grew with every second I stared.
Rylan’s head snapped toward me, eyes wide, mouth opening and closing like a fish. Liora scrambled to pull down her skirt, cheeks burning, but she didn’t dare meet my gaze.
“Aurora,” Rylan breathed, voice shaking. “This isn’t—we can explain—”
“Explain?” The word escaped as a whisper first, then sharp as a knife. “Explain what exactly?”
Liora finally looked at me, and what I saw made my stomach twist.
Not shame. Not regret. Annoyance. Like I was just an interruption.
“Aurora, look, this just… happened,” she said, hands trembling as she smoothed her hair. “We didn’t plan this.”
Just happened. Like a storm. Like a flat tire. Like something beyond their control.
The betrayal hit in waves. First, the image: Rylan’s hands on her body, the same hands that had held me that morning. Then the timeline. How long had this been going on? How many lies, how many secrets shared behind my back?
“How long?” My voice was barely audible.
Rylan fumbled with his pants and shirt, face red, hair mussed, eyes desperate. “Aurora, baby, let’s just sit down and talk. I get that you’re upset, but—”
“How. Long.”
Silence stretched. Then Liora answered, voice small but defiant.
“Six months.”
Six months. While I worked eighteen-hour days building our dream. While I planned our future, talked about marriage, about the house we’d buy. While I poured my life savings, my trust, my heart into this—and they betrayed me.
A white-hot rage ignited in my chest.
I grabbed the nearest object, a coffee mug from the credenza, and hurled it at the wall. Porcelain exploded, shards scattering, a sharp, satisfying sound.
“You destroyed everything!” I screamed, voice breaking, trembling. “Everything I built, everything I believed in, everything I gave you both!”
Rylan stepped toward me, hands raised. “Aurora, calm down. We can work through this—”
“Don’t you dare tell me to calm down!” I shoved him. He stumbled, eyes wide in genuine surprise. “Don’t you dare act like this is my problem to fix!”
Liora gathered her things in a hurry. “I should go,” she muttered.
“Yes, you should,” I spat. “Go and never come back. Both of you.”
Rylan’s voice tried to regain control, calm, charming. “Aurora, be reasonable. This is our company. Our life. You can’t just—”
“Our company?” I laughed, bitter and harsh. “You mean the company I funded while you two were screwing each other behind my back?”
The air was poisonous, heavy with betrayal. I grabbed my purse from the chair, shaking. Keys rattled in my hands as I stormed toward the door.
“Aurora, wait,” Rylan called, desperation creeping in. “Don’t do anything stupid. Let’s talk like adults.”
I turned back once, taking in the scene—the rumpled papers on the table, Liora’s smudged lipstick, Rylan’s disheveled hair. This room, where we’d planned our life, was now a graveyard of dreams.
“Go to hell,” I whispered, then louder: “Both of you, go to hell!”
I ran past the desks, computers, whiteboards, posters—two years of my life—toward the elevator. My footsteps echoed in the empty office.
The garage was cold, concrete biting at my fingers as my keys slipped twice before I finally unlocked the car.
Sliding into the driver’s seat, the weight of it all crashed down. I wasn’t just losing a boyfriend. I was losing a best friend, a partner, my world. Everything I had built, everything I had believed in, everything I had given—it was all gone.
The engine growled, reluctant. I pulled into the cold New York night, every shadow a reminder of betrayal, and drove into the unknown, heart raw and empty, with no idea where I was going next.
Married to A Friend After My Boyfriend Cheated of Contents
New Release Novels

















