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My Boyfriend Left Me Sick to Comfort His First Love Novel Cover

My Boyfriend Left Me Sick to Comfort His First Love

The lilies were the first thing wrong. I noticed them before I was fully awake — a fat white bouquet propped against the water glass on my nightstand, petals so perfect they looked fake. Braylon was already up, moving around the kitchen with unusual purpose, and the smell reached me before the meaning did: sweet and dense and just slightly too much, the way perfume is too much when someone is trying to cover something else. I sat up slowly. Outside the window, Los Angeles was already cooking. It wasn't yet eight in the morning and the sky had that flat, punished white of a day that would hit ninety-nine by noon. The ceiling fan circled without conviction. My body had started its monthly negotiations overnight — a low, warning throb deep in my abdomen that I recognized the way you recognize bad weather before it arrives. I pressed my fingertips together in my lap and watched the door. Braylon came in carrying a tray.
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Chapter 1

The lilies were the first thing wrong.

I noticed them before I was fully awake — a fat white bouquet propped against the water glass on my nightstand, petals so perfect they looked fake. Braylon was already up, moving around the kitchen with unusual purpose, and the smell reached me before the meaning did: sweet and dense and just slightly too much, the way perfume is too much when someone is trying to cover something else.

I sat up slowly. Outside the window, Los Angeles was already cooking. It wasn't yet eight in the morning and the sky had that flat, punished white of a day that would hit ninety-nine by noon. The ceiling fan circled without conviction. My body had started its monthly negotiations overnight — a low, warning throb deep in my abdomen that I recognized the way you recognize bad weather before it arrives.

I pressed my fingertips together in my lap and watched the door.

Braylon came in carrying a tray. Eggs, toast, a glass of juice with actual ice in it. He was smiling in that careful way, the way you smile when you've rehearsed it.

"Morning," he said, setting the tray across my legs with a precision that felt rehearsed too. "Figured you could use a slow start."

Four years. I knew this man's rhythms the way I knew my own — the way he took his coffee, the specific silence he kept when he was avoiding something, the version of generous he performed when guilt was eating him from the inside out. Braylon did not make breakfast on weekday mornings. Braylon had not brought me flowers since our second anniversary.

"Thank you," I said.

He sat on the edge of the bed and reached for his phone from the nightstand in a single, practiced motion, setting it face-down against his thigh before I could see the screen. Casual. Automatic. The kind of move a person makes when they've stopped thinking about whether it looks like anything.

I picked up my fork. I ate the eggs. I smiled when he told me I should take it easy today.

The cramps came on harder by mid-morning. By the time Braylon retreated to the bathroom for his shower, I was already curling inward, that deep, grinding pressure radiating down my thighs and up my spine in slow, deliberate waves. The AC unit worked but didn't work — it pushed air around without really cooling it, and the apartment sat in the full blaze of the south-facing windows like a held breath.

I was lying on my side on top of the covers when his phone lit up.

I didn't mean to look. Or maybe I did. Somewhere in the four years of small, ignored instincts, something had been keeping a tab.

The screen showed three messages in quick succession. The name at the top read: Felicity.

*I'm back in LA.*

*I need to see you, B.*

*No one understands me like you do.*

The shower was still running. The fan still circled. The lilies sat on the nightstand and the smell of them hit me differently now — not sweet, not even floral. Something underneath the sweetness. Something that had already turned.

I put the phone back exactly as it was, face-down, and lay very still.

---

The call came three hours later.

I was on the floor by then. Not dramatically — just practically. The bed had felt too far and the cool tile of the bathroom was the only thing offering anything close to relief. I had my cheek against the floor and my knees pulled up and I was doing the thing where you breathe very carefully and try to convince your body it is not, in fact, trying to destroy you from the inside.

Braylon's phone rang in the other room. I heard his voice shift — that particular softening, the one I had always told myself meant nothing.

He appeared in the bathroom doorway with his keys already in his hand.

"It's Felicity," he said. "She was in a fender bender. She's upset, she doesn't have anyone—"

"Braylon." My voice came out quieter than I intended. "I can't get up by myself."

He looked at me. I watched him look at me — at the floor, at my face, at the keys in his hand — and I watched him make the calculation.

"You're just having a period, Makenzie." He said it the way you say something you've already decided is true. "She has no one else."

The door closed behind him. I heard the lock click.

The fan circled in the other room. The heat pressed down. The lilies were somewhere behind me on the nightstand, and I didn't need to see them to know exactly what they smelled like now.

I pressed my fingertips together against the tile and breathed.

Somewhere in the apartment, his phone lit up again. I didn't look.

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