Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

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.

You may also like

After Rebirth, She Picked The Right Guy Novel Cover
8.5
Everyone knew Caroline loved Jacob, the frail man in a wheelchair, even giving up her chance at marrying into wealth for him. She devoted everything to his recovery, enduring hardship and humiliation to help him stand again. When he finally recovered, they were praised as perfect together-until danger came. Faced with saving her or her sister, Jacob chose the latter without hesitation. Only in her final moments did Caroline realize his heart was never hers. Reborn, she made a different choice, choosing power over love. When Jacob later begged, she looked down coldly. "I have no interest in men who can't stand on their own."
Divorce After His Affair Novel Cover
9.8
The doorbell rang as I was preparing dinner—Brandon's favorite pasta, the one I'd perfected over years of marriage. I wiped my hands on a kitchen towel and headed for the door, expecting the organic produce delivery I'd scheduled. "Mrs. Shaw?" The delivery man balanced a small box in one hand and a tablet in the other. "Special delivery for this address." I frowned. "I didn't order anything." "It's addressed to this residence, ma'am." He handed me the elegantly wrapped box with a cream-colored envelope attached. "Just need your signature." After signing, I examined the package. The wrapping paper was from Cartier—Brandon must have ordered something. Perhaps he remembered our anniversary after all? A flicker of hope warmed my chest.
Falling for the CEO's brother Novel Cover
9.1
Elise thought her life was finally falling into place. She turned down her father's company to work as executive assistant to Marcus Grey-the boy she's loved since childhood, now the powerful CEO she's devoted her life to. But when Marcus proposes to another woman, Elise's world crumbles. Enter Sebastian Deluca-Marcus's tattooed, ruthless, long-estranged brother. He's everything Marcus isn't: dangerous, magnetic, and determined to take back his place in New York. But, there's something odd about him. Something changed since he arrived. Bound by family secrets and a mutual desire to expose Marcus's fiancée, Elise and Sebastian form an uneasy alliance. But as sparks ignite between them, Elise must choose: remain loyal to the boy she thought she loved, or risk everything for the man who sees her as more than a shadow. Some loves are safe. Others are consuming. Which one will she survive?
Gilded Cage: The CEO's Unwilling Bride Novel Cover
8.4
I was the "diamond" of the Sargent Foundation, a perfect orphan polished for the cameras and high-society galas. But beneath the glittering chandeliers, I was suffocating. When the pressure finally broke me and I tried to flee the Sargent Gala, I wasn't met with comfort. I was hunted down by security and dragged into a sterile, white-hot spotlight in a room I was never allowed to enter. Adrien Sargent, the cold-blooded CEO who controlled my every move, didn't want to help me. He wanted to devour me. He presented a legal cage: sign over my voting shares for his unethical hostile takeover, or he would have my only friend—the elderly butler who raised me—killed in his nursing home bed. I became a prisoner in the East Wing, stripped of my phone and watched by hidden cameras. During a midnight storm, I tried to steal a security card to escape, but Adrien caught me in his study. Reeking of whiskey and corporate rage, he didn't just stop me. He pinned me to his desk and branded my neck with a bite so deep it bruised, treating me like a thief who deserved to be claimed. The next morning, the house turned into a battlefield of lies. His PR consultant tried to claim she was the one in his bed, but Adrien found a pearl button from my pajamas under his desk. He didn't feel guilt; he felt violated. He accused me of orchestrating the entire encounter to blackmail him, his eyes filled with a terrifying, possessive fury. When his grandmother caught us, she didn't see a victim; she saw a liability. To save the family stock price, she gave us an ultimatum: marriage. "I’ll do it," I said, looking at the massive diamond ring that felt more like a shackle. Adrien thought he had finally broken me, but he didn't know about the encrypted file I just received. The corporate crisis he’s fighting was an inside job, and the trail leads straight to his own front door. I looked at my new husband on our wedding night and let my silk dress hit the floor. He thinks he’s trapped a rabbit, but I’ve just gained total access to his world. I will sleep with the enemy, learn every dark secret he’s hiding, and then I am going to burn his empire to the ground.
His Ordinary Girl Found Everything Novel Cover
7.4
After ten years with my boyfriend, Brenton, I overheard him call me "ordinary" on my 28th birthday. He told his friend he'd regret marrying me because my middle-class background wasn't good enough for his wealthy family. The next day, he kicked me out of our home. His mother then paid me to cater a party, serving the very woman she' d always wanted for her son. Ten years of my life, erased. I was disposable, a placeholder they no longer needed. That night, heartbroken and homeless, I did something crazy. I opened a dating app, found a quiet, dependable Marine from high school, and sent him a message. His profile said: "Looking for a serious partner for marriage and family. No games." So I typed out the words that would change my life. "This might sound crazy, but if you're serious about getting married... would you consider marrying me?"
My Sister Wanted Everything I Had—Including My Husband Novel Cover
7.8
The elevator ascended with a soft hum, carrying me toward the twenty-third floor of the Grand Meridian Hotel. My heart fluttered with anticipation as I clutched the handle of my overnight bag. After three weeks of Ryan's business trip to Seattle, I'd decided to surprise him with an impromptu visit. The conference was ending tomorrow, but tonight would be ours alone. The hallway stretched before me, plush carpet muffling my footsteps as I approached room 2317. I slipped the key card Ryan's assistant had arranged for me into the slot, watching the light flash green. The door swung open to reveal a spacious suite with floor-to-ceiling windows showcasing Seattle's glittering skyline. Ryan's suitcase stood by the closet, his laptop open on the desk. The bed was rumpled but empty. I frowned, setting down my bag and removing my coat.