
My Boyfriend Left Me Sick to Comfort His First Love
Chapter 2
The tile was no longer cool. Heat had soaked through the porcelain, or perhaps the fever in my own blood had finally won the exchange. My vision began to fray at the edges—static creeping in like an old television losing its signal. A sudden, violent surge of nausea forced me to crawl toward the toilet, my fingers slipping on the floor. I didn’t make it. I retched until my throat burned with bile, the physical agony in my abdomen sharpening into a jagged blade that twisted with every shallow breath.
I tried to reach for my phone, but my arm felt like it belonged to someone else, heavy and distant. The ninety-nine-degree air felt like wet wool in my lungs. I remember the hallway—the way the shadows seemed to stretch and yawn—and then the world simply folded in on itself.
“Makenzie! Makenzie, look at me!”
The voice was a serrated edge cutting through the dark. I felt hands on my shoulders, firm and panicked. I opened my eyes to see Maya, her face pale beneath her tan, her eyes darting around the apartment with a feral intensity. She was on her phone, her voice cracking as she barked our address into the receiver.
“She’s unconscious, she’s been vomiting, it’s a heat stroke or something worse—get someone here now!” She looked toward the bedroom, then back at me, her jaw tightening until the tendons in her neck stood out. “Where is he? Makenzie, where the hell is Braylon?”
I couldn’t answer. I just watched the ceiling fan spin, a slow, useless circle in the stagnant air. I wanted to tell her about the lilies. I wanted to tell her they smelled like a funeral.
***
The hospital smelled of ozone and industrial bleach. It was a cold smell—a relief so sharp it felt like a bruise. I stared at the IV bag dripping rhythmically into the vein of my left arm, the clear liquid a tether holding me to the bed. The grinding pain in my gut had faded to a dull, chemical hum.
Maya sat in the corner, her arms crossed over her chest, her foot tapping a frantic rhythm against the linoleum. She didn’t have to say anything. Her silence was a protective wall.
The door swung open, the heavy plastic thudding against the stopper. Braylon rushed in, his hair wind-blown, his shirt wrinkled in a way that suggested he’d been sitting in a car for a long time. As he approached the bed, a scent trailed after him—a cloying, powdery floral that wasn’t the lilies. It was Felicity’s perfume. It hung on him like a confession.
“Oh thank god,” he breathed, reaching out as if to sweep me into a hug, his face twisted into a mask of frantic concern. “Maya called me—I got here as fast as I could. Kenzie, baby, I’m so sorry, I didn’t think it was this bad, I thought—”
I recoiled before his hands could touch my skin. The movement was instinctive, a physical rejection of the lie he was still trying to live.
“Don’t,” I said. My voice was thin, but it had the structural integrity of ice.
He froze, his hands hovering in mid-air. “Kenzie, I was just helping her. She was in an accident, she was shaking, I couldn’t just leave her—”
“She was shaking,” I repeated. I looked at the redness of his eyes, searching for a trace of the man I’d loved for four years. I found only a stranger who was remarkably good at making excuses. “I was on the floor, Braylon. I was vomiting from pain while you were holding her hand because she bumped a fender.”
“It’s not like that,” he pleaded, stepping closer, his voice dropping into that soulful, manipulative register. “You’re the one I’m with. You’re the one I love. I just… I have a history with her. I felt responsible.”
“You are responsible,” I said. I pressed my fingertips together under the thin hospital sheet, grounding myself. “You’re responsible for leaving me in a ninety-nine-degree apartment when I couldn't stand up. You chose a fake emergency over my real one. You chose a memory over a person.”
“Kenzie, please. Let’s just go home and talk about this.”
“There is no home,” I said. The words felt clean. They felt like the first breath of air after being underwater. “There is an apartment with your things and my things, and by tomorrow, they won’t be in the same room anymore.”
His face went slack. “You’re breaking up with me? Over this? After four years?”
“No,” I said, looking him dead in the eye. “I’m breaking up with you because it took me four years to realize I was standing in line for a heart that was already full. Get out, Braylon.”
“Makenzie—”
“She said get out.” Maya’s voice came from the door. She hadn't moved, but the sheer weight of her presence seemed to fill the room, a silent sentinel.
Braylon looked at me, then at Maya, his mouth opening and closing like a landed fish. He wanted a scene. He wanted a grand reconciliation where he could be the misunderstood hero. I gave him nothing but the steady, unblinking sight of his own failure.
He turned and walked out, his footsteps echoing down the sterile hall.
I leaned my head back against the pillow and closed my eyes. The perfume was gone. For the first time in a long time, I could actually breathe.
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