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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 5

He promised on a Wednesday.

We were standing in the kitchen, me with my coffee, him with his jacket half on, already running late. He stopped in the doorway and looked at me—really looked, the way he used to before all of this—and he said: Friday night is ours. No calls. No emergencies. No Lara. Just us.

He said it with eye contact. No qualifications. No *unless something comes up* or *barring anything urgent.* Just the words, clean and direct, the way he used to make promises back when promises still felt like something solid.

I said okay.

I believed him. Or I wanted to. I'm not sure those are different things anymore.

***

The restaurant was the kind of place that felt like a secret—low light, small tables, a menu that changed every week. Sterling had made the reservation himself. He'd texted me the address with a time and a single line: *Wear something you like.*

I wore the green silk. Not the navy. The navy had too much history on it now.

He was already there when I arrived, standing at the bar with his coat still on, and when he saw me come through the door something in his face opened up. He smiled. The real one, the one that started in his eyes before it reached his mouth. I felt it in my chest like a key turning.

We ordered. We talked. The food was good and the wine was better and for a while—maybe an hour, maybe a little more—it felt like before. Like the version of us that existed before Lara's name came back into the room.

Then his phone buzzed.

I saw it before he did. The faint pulse of light through the fabric of his jacket pocket. Once. Then again.

His jaw tightened. Just slightly. Just enough.

He looked at me. "I'm not going to—"

"Sterling."

"I'm not checking it."

But his hand had already moved to his pocket. Not reaching in—just resting there, like a reflex he couldn't fully stop.

I watched him fight it. I watched the effort move through his shoulders, his jaw, the small muscles around his eyes. I watched him choose me, visibly, consciously, the way you choose something you have to remind yourself to want.

He excused himself ten minutes later. *Just a second, I'll be right back.*

I sat at the table and drank my wine and watched the candle burn.

Forty minutes.

When he came back, his cheeks were faintly cold, like he'd been outside. There was something in the air around him—faint, floral, not mine. He sat down and picked up his fork and said, *it's handled,* and looked at me like that was enough.

I looked back at him.

I thought about the compass charm. *So you always know where you're going.*

I finished my wine. I did not fight. I was too tired to fight, and fighting had never changed anything anyway. But something behind my eyes went very still, the way a room goes still right before the power cuts out.

We took a cab home. He held my hand. I let him.

***

He fell asleep fast, the way he always did—one minute present, the next completely gone. I lay beside him in the dark and listened to him breathe and thought about nothing. Or tried to.

At two in the morning, I got up.

The test was still in my coat pocket. It had been there for four days. I'd carried it through three subway rides and a client meeting and a dinner where I'd smiled and laughed and pretended I wasn't holding a secret so large it had started to feel like a second body.

I took it into the bathroom. Locked the door. Turned on the fan.

I already knew. I think I'd known since Tuesday, since the nausea that felt different from stress, since the way certain smells had started landing wrong. My body had been trying to tell me for days. I just hadn't been ready to hear it.

I sat on the edge of the tub and waited.

The word appeared in the small window, clear and digital and absolute.

*Pregnant.*

I sat there for a long time.

Through the wall, I could hear Sterling breathing. Slow and even. The sound of a man asleep in his own life, unaware that everything had just shifted two rooms away.

I looked at the test in my hands. I thought about telling him. I thought about his face—the way it would open up, the way he would pull me in, the way he would say *Char* in that low voice that used to feel like home. I thought about how good he would be at this, for a while. How present. How devoted.

And then I thought about the forty minutes. The cold air on his jacket. The floral smell that wasn't mine.

I put the test in my coat pocket.

I went back to bed.

I did not sleep.

***

The pain started Sunday.

A low cramp at first, the kind I talked myself out of noticing. By Monday morning it had teeth. By Tuesday afternoon, standing at my studio table trying to finish a sleeve pattern, it dropped me.

I went down hard, one hand catching the edge of the table, the other going to my side. The room tilted. I heard myself make a sound I didn't recognize.

Emory was there in twenty minutes. She didn't ask questions. She just got my coat and my bag and her keys and drove.

***

The ER waiting room smelled like antiseptic and recycled air. Emory sat beside me with her hand over mine, not talking, just there. I was grateful for the silence. I didn't have words for any of this yet.

Sterling arrived in under twenty minutes. I'll give him that.

He came through the sliding doors still in his work clothes, his tie loosened, his face tight with something that looked like fear. He found me in the waiting area and crouched down in front of my chair and took both my hands.

"I'm here," he said. "I'm not going anywhere."

I looked at him. I nodded.

The triage nurse called my name twenty minutes later. Sterling stood up with me, his hand at my back, steady and warm. He walked me to the door.

"I'll be right here," he said. "I'm not leaving."

I went through the door.

When the attending physician came in, Sterling was not in the hallway.

The nurse said he'd stepped out to take a call.

I lay on the paper-covered table under the fluorescent light and looked at the ceiling and thought: of course he did.

Of course he did.

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