
My Boyfriend Left Me Sick to Comfort His First Love
Chapter 3
The boxes were already broken down and stacked in the corner when I arrived, which meant Braylon had been preparing for this. Performing preparedness. That was very him.
Maya held the door and I walked in carrying nothing but an empty duffel bag and four years of revised understanding. The apartment looked the same — same south-facing windows, same ceiling fan turning its slow, useless circles — but it felt the way a stage set feels when you walk onto it from the wrong side. Hollow at the structural level.
'Kenzie.' Braylon came out of the kitchen with his hands open, a gesture of reasonableness he'd clearly rehearsed. 'I think we owe it to four years to at least have a real conversation. A rational one.'
I walked past him to the bedroom.
The lilies were gone. He'd removed them, which meant he'd thought about what they represented, which meant some part of him understood exactly what he'd done. I found that almost interesting.
I opened the closet and started pulling things off hangers.
'I was trying to be a good person,' he said from the doorway. His voice carried that careful, wounded register — the one calibrated to make the listener feel unreasonable. 'She called, she was upset, she didn't have anyone. I would have done the same for anyone.'
I folded a blouse and placed it in the duffel.
'That's not fair, Makenzie. You're not even going to respond to me?'
Maya materialized in the hallway behind him with a flattened box and a roll of tape, moving around him like he was a piece of furniture. I almost smiled.
I worked with the focused silence of someone defusing something. Books from the nightstand. The charger I'd bought because he kept borrowing mine. The photograph of me and Maya from her cousin's wedding that had been sitting on the dresser for three years, slightly crooked, because I'd given up asking him to straighten it. I wrapped it in a shirt and set it carefully at the bottom of the box.
Braylon talked for a while. I listened the way you listen to rain — aware of it without being touched by it. At some point he stopped.
The last box was taped by eleven-fifteen.
---
The sidewalk was brutal. The kind of late-morning heat that rises off pavement in visible waves and makes the air taste like asphalt and exhaust. I had the final box balanced against my hip and was threading between a parked sedan and Maya's car when I saw her.
Felicity Ward looked like someone who had chosen this moment and dressed for it. Linen, sunglasses, the particular ease of a woman who has arrived somewhere rather than ended up there. She was watching me with an expression she probably thought read as compassion.
'Hey.' Her voice was warm in that pointed way. 'I know this is hard. I just want you to know — Braylon talks about you, he really does. He's a protector, you know? He just can't help coming back to his first love.' She tilted her head, a small, performative softness. 'You were a good distraction for him.'
I set the box down on the trunk of Maya's car.
I looked at her the way you look at something you're deciding whether to pick up or step over.
'He isn't a protector,' I said. 'He's a janitor.' I held her gaze just long enough for it to register. 'And you're recycled trash. Keep him.'
I picked the box back up, set it in the trunk, and got in the car.
In the passenger mirror, I watched her standing on the sidewalk, her composure developing the specific kind of crack that only appears when someone expected tears and got a verdict instead. Maya pulled into traffic without a word. After a moment, she reached over and turned up the radio.
That was enough.
---
Maya's guest room smelled like cedar and clean laundry. There was a window that faced west, which meant the evening light came in slow and amber and without judgment. I sat on the floor with my back against the bed frame and my phone in my lap and worked through four years of photographs with the methodical focus I'd applied to the closet.
There were more than I expected. There always are.
His face in every third one, and in each frame I could see what I hadn't let myself see while I was inside it — the way his attention was always slightly elsewhere, always directed toward something just outside the edge of the picture. I deleted them one at a time. I did not allow myself to pause over them.
The grief was there. It sat heavy and specific in my chest — not for him, exactly, but for the version of me who had stood in that line so patiently, so certain the line was worth standing in. Four years. That was real time. Real mornings. A real life organized around someone who had been somewhere else the entire time.
I pressed my fingertips together in my lap and breathed through it.
I did not cry.
He didn't get that. He didn't get anything else from me. I had already paid more than enough.
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