
My Boyfriend Abandoned Me for His Crying Ex
Chapter 1
The restaurant on Hudson smelled like rosemary and money. Sterling had won his case that morning, and the firm was buying. He sat across from me with his tie loosened, laughing at something Marcus said, his hand resting warm on my knee under the table.
I watched him the way I always did. The cut of his jaw. The small dimple that only showed when he was genuinely happy. Five years in, and he still made my chest go quiet.
Then Daniel from our Columbia class leaned in over his wineglass.
"Hey, did you guys hear? Lara's back."
The noise of the table kept going. Forks. Ice. Someone's laugh two seats down. But the air around Sterling thinned out.
"Lara who?" Marcus asked.
"Watkins. London Lara. She moved back like a month ago."
Sterling shrugged. He took a slow sip of bourbon. "Yeah, she sent me a follow request. I didn't accept it."
"Bold," Daniel grinned.
"Old news," Sterling said.
His phone lit up on the table, face up. The notification flashed white, then was gone. He picked it up smooth and easy, swiped, set it face down. He didn't look at me.
I didn't look at him either. I cut a piece of fish I didn't want.
His hand was still on my knee. I could feel his thumb moving in slow circles, the way it always did. Like nothing.
Later, in the cab home, he kissed my temple and told me I looked beautiful tonight. I said thank you. I did not ask about the notification. He did not bring it up.
Something had moved between us, small and underwater.
***
Three weeks later, he canceled Broadway.
I'd had the tickets since February. Hamilton, orchestra, the seats he knew I wanted. He called me at four-thirty, voice tight.
"Babe, I am so sorry. There's an emergency at the firm. I can't get out of it."
"What kind of emergency?"
"A client thing. I'll explain later. Eat without me."
He hung up before I could ask which client.
I sat on the edge of our bed in the dress I'd bought specifically for tonight. Navy silk. He hadn't even seen it yet. I told myself I was being a good girlfriend. I told myself for ten whole minutes.
Then I called a car.
The firm lobby was half-dark, just the cleaners and the after-hours guard who waved me through because he knew my face. I rode the elevator up to the thirty-second floor with my coat over my arm.
Sterling's door was open a crack. The light inside was warm and low.
I saw her first.
She was sitting on the edge of his desk, one heel off, the other dangling. Her hair was longer than it used to be in the photos I'd Google-stalked once, years ago, and pretended I never had. Her wrist was turned up in his hand. He was bent over it with a piece of cotton, dabbing at something dark.
"Hold still," he said softly.
"It stings."
"I know. Almost done."
There was an oat milk latte on his desk, half-finished, the lid set neatly beside the cup. Two sugars. I knew because that was Lara's order from the email chains in college, the ones I had also pretended I never read.
He still knew it. After six years.
I must have made a sound, because he looked up.
"Charlotte."
I did not move.
"Hi," Lara said. Her voice was a soft, sad thing. "You must be Charlotte. He's told me so much."
I looked at Sterling. "This is your emergency."
"I was going to tell you tonight." He let go of her wrist. He did not stand up fast. "Lara needed legal counsel. Her marriage—it's bad, Char. I'm taking the divorce pro bono."
"You're taking it."
"I'm the only one she trusts."
Lara lowered her eyes the way someone practices in a mirror.
I did not say anything. I turned around and walked back to the elevator. He did not follow me for almost a full minute, and when he did, he did not catch up before the doors closed.
***
The cab ride home was quiet until it wasn't.
"There are eleven hundred attorneys in this city, Sterling. You're telling me she couldn't find one who isn't her ex."
"She's terrified, Charlotte."
"So am I. Of what this looks like."
He turned in the seat. The streetlights moved across his face in stripes. "Do you hear yourself? A woman is being beaten by her husband and you're worried about how it looks?"
"Don't do that."
"Do what?"
"Make me the cruel one. Don't."
"Then stop acting like it."
His voice cracked the cab in half. The driver glanced up in the mirror and looked away.
I didn't answer. I watched the Williamsburg Bridge come up through the windshield, all that lit-up wire stretched over black water, and I felt something inside my chest fold itself small and quiet, the way it had learned to.
The next morning he was in the kitchen before me. The coffee was made the way I like it, oat foam, cinnamon on top. There was a small blue box next to my mug.
A Tiffany necklace. A delicate gold bar on a chain.
"I was an ass," he said. He kissed the top of my head. "I love you. You know that."
I said yes. I let him fasten it around my neck. I told myself I was being reasonable.
I filed the night before in the same drawer where I had filed Columbia. The moot court. The empty seat at the defense table. The trophy I'd lifted alone.
I was getting good at that drawer.
***
The text came two days later, from a number I didn't have saved.
*Hi Charlotte! It's Lara. I hope this isn't weird. I just wanted to say, girl to girl—men like Sterling need to feel like heroes. It's how they're wired. Don't make things harder than they have to be. For anyone. Xx*
I read it three times standing in the middle of our bedroom. My ears went hot. I screenshot it. I did not respond.
I did not show Sterling. I already knew the script he'd hand me. *You're reading too much into it, Char. She's just trying to be friendly. You're being paranoid.*
I put the phone face down on the dresser and went to work.
***
He came home late three nights running.
Monday: a deposition that ran. Tuesday: a client dinner at Le Bernardin, no, I shouldn't come, it would be boring. Wednesday: a filing, deadline, sorry, sorry, sorry.
Wednesday I waited up.
He walked in at one-fourteen smelling faintly of bar soap, not his. He kissed my forehead.
"You're up."
"Sterling." I kept my voice even. "Have you seen her outside of case meetings."
He looked right at me. His eyes did not move.
"No," he said. "Charlotte, no."
I nodded. I went to bed.
I lay in the dark and listened to him in the kitchen, the fridge opening, a glass set down, water running. The gold bar on my collarbone was warm from my skin. I touched it once and let my hand drop.
For five years I had believed every word out of his mouth.
In the dark, I realized I was no longer sure that I did.
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