
My Boyfriend Left Me Sick to Comfort His First Love
Chapter 4
Three weeks is not enough time. I knew that walking into Maya's bathroom while she lined up what she called her 'surgical arsenal' on the counter — mascara, a curling iron, the good perfume she only deployed for occasions that required armor.
'You're going out,' she said, in the tone she used when she had already decided and was simply informing me of the fact.
'I went out yesterday. I went to the grocery store.'
'That doesn't count.' She held up a slip dress on a hanger — silk, deep burgundy, the kind of thing that requires a different posture. 'Put this on.'
I put it on.
When I looked in the mirror, something shifted. Not healed, not fixed — just different. The dress didn't know about Braylon or the lilies or the hospital ceiling. It only knew what it could see, and what it could see was a woman who still existed. I pressed my fingertips together at my sides and held that thought like a coal.
'High-end bar,' Maya said, applying lip gloss with the precision of someone who had already mapped the evening. 'Heard the drinks are excellent.'
She had the particular casualness of a person who has done significant research and is pretending otherwise. I let her have it.
---
The bar was the kind of place that hummed at a frequency designed to make you feel like the night was already going well. Low amber light. Ice in heavy glasses. A sound system calibrated to be heard by the body before the ears registered it. Maya found us a spot at the far end of the bar and ordered with the confidence of someone who had looked the menu up in advance.
I felt the silk of the dress against my arms and made a decision: two hours. I would give tonight two hours and I would not think about the apartment or the photographs or the specific weight of being someone's placeholder for four years.
I managed forty-five minutes before Maya was pulled toward someone she knew near the lounge entrance, squeezing my arm as she went. 'Two minutes,' she said. 'Don't move.'
I didn't move. I stood near the edge of the lounge and held my drink and watched the room and was fine.
Then he was there.
He materialized from the direction of the bar crowd — broad through the shoulders, a loosened collar, the easy smile of someone who had decided the night was going in his direction. He looked at me the way certain men look, the assessment running quick and invisible, and then he was standing in my space.
'Come on.' He tilted his chin toward the floor. 'One dance. You've been standing here alone.'
'I'm waiting for someone.'
'She'll find you on the floor.' His hand closed around my wrist — not tight, but there. Present. Decided.
The touch sent something cold and electric up my arm, and the next second I was not in the bar. I was on a bathroom floor, listening to a door close, and the heat was pressing down, and somewhere in the apartment a phone was lighting up with a name I hadn't wanted to know.
I heard myself say, 'No.' The word came out thinner than I wanted. My tongue felt wrong in my mouth.
'One dance isn't going to—'
'She said no.'
The voice came from behind me, unhurried and absolute. I turned.
He was tall enough that the man in front of me had to recalibrate his posture. One hand extended, palm flat against the other man's chest — not a shove, not a threat, just a wall. A statement of physics.
'Walk away while you still can.'
The silence lasted exactly long enough to mean something. Then Carter muttered something I didn't catch and dissolved back into the crowd.
The hand on my wrist was gone. I realized I was still holding my breath.
'Here.' A glass of water appeared in my peripheral vision, offered with the same unhurried certainty as everything else he'd just done. 'Take your time.'
I took the glass. I drank. The bar came back — the amber light, the hum, the ice against glass.
I looked up at the man who had done all of this without raising his voice, and found him watching me with a steadiness that had no performance in it. His eyes were dark and calm, and there was something in them — a quality of recognition, specific and careful — that didn't fit the category of stranger.
'I've been hoping to run into you,' he said.
I searched his face. That flicker again — something familiar at the edges, something I couldn't quite press my finger to. Like a word you know you know, hovering just outside reach.
'Do I know you?' I asked.
His mouth curved, slow and certain. Not a stranger's smile.
'You did,' he said. 'A long time ago.'
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