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My Boyfriend Abandoned Me for His Crying Ex Novel Cover

My Boyfriend Abandoned Me for His Crying Ex

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.
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Chapter 4

She arrived at noon.

I heard about it from Priya, who sat two offices down from Sterling and had a view of the hallway. She texted me at twelve-forty-three: *your boyfriend's ex just showed up at the firm. kind of a scene.*

I was at my desk eating a salad I didn't want. I read the text twice. Then I put my phone face-down and finished the salad.

Priya filled in the rest later, over the phone, her voice careful in the way people get when they're not sure how much to say. Lara had come through the glass doors with mascara down her face and her phone clutched in both hands like it was the only solid thing left. She'd been shaking. She'd said her husband had found her new address. She'd said it loud enough that three people in the open workspace heard it before Sterling got her into his office and closed the door.

By the time he came out, he'd cleared his afternoon. He'd gotten her water. He'd sat with her for two hours while his two-o'clock waited in the conference room and eventually left.

By five o'clock, the story was set. Sterling Morrison, protecting a woman in danger. Anyone who looked sideways at that was the villain.

I already knew how that worked. I'd been the villain in that story before.

***

The receipt was in his left jacket pocket.

I found it on Saturday morning, pulling his charcoal blazer off the hook to hang it properly. It was folded once, the way receipts get when you shove them in fast without thinking. I almost put it back without looking.

I looked.

Dry cleaning. One item. A silk blouse, listed by color—ivory—and by size. Not my size. Not my style. The kind of thing I would never wear, delicate and pale and easy to ruin.

I stood in the hallway for a long time.

The apartment was quiet. Sterling was still asleep. I could hear his breathing from the bedroom, slow and even, the sound of a man with a clear conscience or a very practiced one.

I folded the receipt back along its crease. I put it exactly where I found it. I hung the jacket on the hook and smoothed the shoulders and walked to my studio corner—the small table by the window where I kept my sketchbook and my pencils and the parts of myself I hadn't shown him.

I opened the book.

I drew until the light changed. Until the city outside went from gray to gold to gray again. I drew structures that had no softness in them—clean lines, sharp angles, things built to hold their shape under pressure. I drew a coat with a collar that stood up like a wall. I drew a jacket with seams so precise they looked like decisions.

I did not sleep that night.

I lay in the dark next to Sterling and listened to him breathe and thought about the receipt. Ivory silk. Not my size. I thought about all the things I had filed away in that drawer inside me—Columbia, Broadway, the cold carbonara, the showcase, the star on the kitchen calendar—and I thought about how a drawer can only hold so much before the wood starts to warp.

I did not cry. I was past the part where I cried.

***

He made a reservation for Thursday.

The same West Village place where we'd had our first date—the one with the low lighting and the bread they brought without asking and the corner table he'd had to call ahead to request. He told me to wear something nice. He said it the way he used to, easy and warm, like he was looking forward to it.

I wore the navy dress. The one I'd bought for Broadway.

He was already at the table when I arrived. He stood up when he saw me. He looked at me the way he used to look at me, before all of this, and something in my chest pulled tight and then let go.

We ordered. We talked. He was funny—genuinely funny, the dry, quiet kind that I'd always loved—and he asked about my work, about the pieces I'd been drawing, and he listened when I answered. He gave me the small wrapped box over dessert. A charm for my bracelet, a tiny gold compass. *So you always know where you're going,* he said.

I turned it over in my fingers. I thought about the engagement ring I had stopped expecting. I thought about how a compass charm was a beautiful thing to give someone you were not ready to keep.

I said thank you. I meant it.

For two hours, I almost forgot.

Then his phone buzzed in his jacket pocket. Once. Twice. A third time.

He didn't reach for it. He kept his eyes on me, kept his hands on the table, kept his face arranged into something present and deliberate. But I watched the effort move through him—the small tightening around his jaw, the way his shoulders held just a fraction too still.

I reached across the table and turned his phone face-down.

He looked at me. Something moved through his expression that I couldn't name—relief, maybe, or grief, or both at once.

*Thank you,* he said quietly.

I looked at him. At the man who woke up early to get my coffee. Who spent hours on carbonara because it was my comfort food. Who wrapped me in his coat without being asked and remembered every small thing about me and still, still could not stop himself from flinching toward someone else's emergency.

I thought: this is what it costs him to be here with me. This is the effort it takes. To sit across from me for two hours without checking his phone. To choose me, just for one dinner, over whoever was buzzing in his pocket.

I thought: I should not be something a man has to work this hard to choose.

I smiled at him. I picked up my wine.

The compass charm sat on the table between us, small and gold and pointing nowhere I recognized.

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