Follow
Chapters
Share
The Boy I Loved or The Man I Married Novel Cover

The Boy I Loved or The Man I Married

The coffee maker sputtered to life at 6:40 a.m., its familiar gurgle the only sound in our kitchen. I stood by the counter, watching the dark liquid drip into the pot, my hands wrapped around my own empty mug for warmth. Mark sat at the table behind me, his thumb scrolling across his phone screen—email after email, I assumed. The blue light from his device cast shadows across his face. We hadn't said good morning. We hadn't said anything at all. I cracked two eggs into the pan, the sizzle filling the silence between us. The smell of butter and frying eggs should have felt comforting, domestic even, but instead it felt like I was cooking for a stranger. I plated the eggs carefully, the yolks still soft the way he used to like them, and carried them to the table. "I'll be home late," Mark said, standing abruptly as I set the plate down. "Don't cook my dinner." He leaned down and pressed his lips to my forehead—a reflex, not a kiss. His hand squeezed my shoulder, a gesture that might have looked affectionate to anyone watching. But I felt the distance in it, the way you'd pat a coworker on the back. "Okay," I said. He walked past the eggs I'd made, reached into the basket on the counter, and grabbed a protein bar instead. The door clicked shut behind him, and I stood there, staring at the untouched plate. The eggs were already starting to congeal at the edges. I sat down and ate them myself, mechanically, tasting nothing.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The roads were empty, the kind of empty that made the world feel abandoned. Streetlights cast pale pools of yellow across the asphalt, and beyond them, the darkness stretched out like an ocean. I drove without thinking, my hands gripping the wheel, my vision blurred by tears that wouldn't stop coming.

I didn't know where I was going. I just knew I couldn't go back.

The dashboard glowed softly in front of me, the only light in the car besides the occasional flash of passing streetlamps. My breath came in shallow gasps, my chest tight, and I kept wiping at my eyes with the back of my hand, but it didn't help. The tears kept coming, hot and relentless.

Eventually, I found myself pulling into the mall parking lot. It was closed, of course—the kind of closed that left the entire lot empty except for a few scattered cars near the edges, employees' vehicles maybe, or people like me who had nowhere else to go. I parked in a corner, far from the entrance, and turned off the engine.

The silence was immediate and suffocating.

I leaned forward, resting my forehead against the steering wheel, and let everything out. The sobs came in waves, raw and choking, tearing out of me like something breaking open. My shoulders shook. My throat burned.

I couldn't remember the last time I'd cried like this—maybe I never had. Maybe I'd spent so many years holding it together that I'd forgotten how to fall apart.

But now I couldn't stop.

The full weight of everything—Mark's dismissal, his mother's demands, the job I might lose, the marriage that felt more like a business arrangement between two exhausted strangers. It was just too hard to take.

I cried until my chest ached, until the sobs turned into hiccups and then into the kind of quiet desperation that feels like drowning. My makeup was probably ruined, my hair a mess, but I didn't care.

There was no one to see me fall apart, no one to judge me for finally admitting that I was drowning in my own life.

The tap on my window made me jump so hard I hit my knee on the dashboard.

I gasped, my heart pounding, and turned to see a figure standing outside my car. A man.

Tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a dark suit that looked too formal for a mall parking lot at midnight. His face was shadowed, but I could see him peering in, his expression unreadable.

Panic flared in my chest. I fumbled for the keys, ready to start the engine and drive away, but he raised his hands in a gesture that seemed meant to calm me. Then he leaned down slightly and knocked again, gentler this time.

I hesitated, my breath still ragged, and slowly rolled down the window a few inches.

"Hey—sorry, I didn't mean to scare you." His voice was low, casual, with a faint edge of concern. "Just noticed the mall's closed and your lights were still on."

I wiped at my face quickly, trying to compose myself, but I knew it was useless. My eyes were swollen, my cheeks streaked with tears. I must have looked like a mess.

He paused, his expression shifting as he took in my face. His brow furrowed, and his tone grew more serious. "Do you need help?"

I shook my head quickly, embarrassed. "No. No, I'm fine. Thank you. I just—" My voice cracked, and I cleared my throat. "I just needed a minute. To, um, vent."

He studied me for a moment, then nodded slowly. A faint smile crossed his face, though it didn't quite reach his eyes. "Okay. As long as you're alright."

He straightened up, and I thought he was going to leave, but then he extended his hand through the window. "Brook Miller."

I froze.

Brook Miller.

The name hit me like a punch to the chest. I stared at him, really looked at him for the first time, and my breath caught. The suit. The broad shoulders. The sharp jawline.

It was him. It was Brook.

But he looked so different. Older, obviously, but also… polished. Put-together. Nothing like the cocky, golden-boy athlete I remembered from high school.

I fumbled with my hair, suddenly hyper-aware of how disheveled I must look, and smoothed down my coat with trembling hands. Then I reached out and shook his hand.

"Claire," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.

His eyes widened. He stared at me, his hand still gripping mine, and his mouth fell open slightly. "Holy—Claire? Claire Parker?"

I couldn't help it. I laughed. A short, startled sound that surprised even me. I nodded. "Yeah. It's me. Though it's Claire Dawson now. I got married."

"I—" He blinked, clearly thrown. "I didn't recognize you. You—you cut your hair."

I laughed again, this time more genuine. "I didn't recognize you either. I didn't know you were back in town."

"I just moved back," he said, his voice slightly off-kilter. "Earlier this month. From New York. Starting a construction business here."

Construction. Brook Miller, who used to spend his weekends partying and his weekdays coasting through classes on his athletic scholarships, was now a businessman.

Silence fell between us, heavy and awkward. We stood there—him outside the car, me inside—staring at each other like we didn't quite know what to do next.

Because we didn't.

Because he was my ex-boyfriend. My high school ex-boyfriend. The golden boy who'd broken my heart when he decided I was too clingy, too much. And I was the girl who'd cried for weeks after he left, the girl who'd worn too much makeup and smoked cigarettes behind the bleachers to look cool enough for him.

We used to sneak out together, we’d even make out under the bleachers after football games, we were once so close that we shared each of our secrets, and we’d end so uglily that my high school friends would deliberately avoid mentioning his name in front of me in our senior year.

Now he had become a businessman, and I had been a suburban teacher for 12 years. We were strangers wearing familiar faces.

"So," he said finally, breaking the silence. "What happened? Why were you—" He gestured vaguely toward my face. "You know."

My stomach twisted. I couldn't tell him. I couldn't sit here in a parking lot at midnight and tell my ex-boyfriend that my marriage was falling apart, that I'd just had a screaming fight with my husband, that I didn't know where else to go.

"Work," I said quickly. "Just… work stuff. It's been a rough week."

He nodded slowly, clearly unconvinced, but he didn't push.

"Well," he said. "If you're sure you're okay—"

"I'm fine," I said, starting the engine. "Thanks for checking on me, Brook. Really. It was good seeing you."

I rolled up the window before he could say anything else and backed out of the spot. In the rearview mirror, I saw him standing there, hands in his pockets, watching me drive away.

And as I pulled onto the empty road, I told myself this was just an awkward coincidence. A strange, embarrassing reunion with someone from my past.

I had no idea that this chance meeting would change everything.

That the life I thought was ending was about to transform in ways I never could have imagined.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

A Deal with the Hockey Captain   Novel Cover
7.2
Eden's eighteenth birthday was supposed to be her moment-the night she'd finally tell him. The boy she grew up loving. The one who kissed every girl but her. The one she saved her virginity for. She's spent years dreaming of Liam, chasing his smile, starving for his attention. But tonight, all he sees is the next girl he can break. And Eden? She's not enough. Desperate to change that, she does the unthinkable. She turns to Hunter Cross. Captain of the hockey team. Cold. Arrogant. Brutally sexual. The kind of man girls dare not fantasize about-but Eden does. She begs him to teach her how to flirt, how to kiss, how to touch a man until he forgets every woman before her. Hunter agrees-but only under one condition. "If I teach you how to seduce him, then for one month... you belong to me. Fully. No questions. There are no limits." Now Eden is learning far more than she bargained for-lessons in pleasure, in control, in giving up her body piece by piece to a man who doesn't believe in love. Each touch Hunter demands pushes her deeper into the kind of sin she never imagined, the kind that leaves her shaking, soaked, and begging for more. But the deeper she falls, the more dangerous the game becomes. Because Hunter's not just training her for another man. He's breaking her for himself. And he has no intention of ever letting her go. For fans of Haunting Adeline, Twisted Games, and Credence-this is a dangerously seductive enemies-to-lovers story with a filthy slow burn, a dominant hero, and an ending that will leave you breathless. Warning: This book contains explicit adult content, power-play dynamics, rough language, and high-heat scenes intended for mature readers only.
Betrayed by love Novel Cover
9.5
Isabella Hart's supposed ideal marriage to world-famous actor Adrian Cole broke apart when her husband's affair with Vanessa Grey, his manager, was exposed in a leaked sex tape. The revelation humiliated and hurt Isabella, forcing her to seek solace in reckless one-night standing with a stranger named Victor Hale. Little did she expect that he would become her stepfather some days later when her mother, Eleanor, married him. When she discovered she was pregnant from that night, she accepted it and said Adrian was the father. But during a gender revelation party, Adrian's mother Margaret Cole announced to everyone that the child belonged to Victor, the scandal ripping the family apart, leaving Eleanor livid, divorcing Victor, and cutting Isabella away from her completely.
Divorced And Rich: Falling For The Mechanic Novel Cover
9.7
For three years, I endured being treated like a walking ATM and a maid by my husband's family, biting my tongue to keep the peace. Then, my husband's buddy suddenly dropped off a nine-year-old boy at my front door. The crumpled note from my husband casually explained it was his illegitimate son, blaming me for being barren and demanding I raise the kid as our own. My mother-in-law was absolutely thrilled, parading the boy around as the true heir at the dinner table. "Some trees just don't bear fruit, no matter how much water you give them," she sneered. My brother-in-law cheered, and my drunk father-in-law demanded I cook a feast to celebrate. They actually expected me to continue paying the mortgage, buying the groceries, and cleaning up their endless messes, all while raising the living proof of my husband's betrayal. I looked at the parasites who had drained me dry for years, acting like they were doing me a favor by letting me stay in a house that my money paid for. I didn't scream, and I didn't cry. I simply called my lawyer to file for an immediate divorce, froze every single bank account and credit card they relied on, and drove off to my grandmother's secluded cabin in the woods. Let them see how long they survive without my money.
From Betrayed Wife to Queen Novel Cover
7.8
The divorce papers landed on the mahogany desk between us with a soft thud that somehow echoed through the silence of our private chambers. Adrian stood across from me, his posture rigid with determination, the royal insignia on his jacket catching the late afternoon sunlight streaming through the windows. "I want a divorce, Emmeline." His voice was cold, clinical—the voice of a stranger wearing my husband's face. "I've found someone I truly love." I stared at the papers, my fingers trembling slightly before I clenched them into fists on my lap. The legal jargon blurred before my eyes, but certain words stood out in stark relief: "irreconcilable differences," "division of assets," "mutual consent." "It's Violeta, isn't it?" My voice sounded distant to my own ears. Adrian's jaw tightened. "Yes. She understands me in ways you never could. What we have is real—true love." True love. The phrase hung in the air between us like a mockery.
He is born never to be lost in the mortal world Novel Cover
7.9
Sharon had grown up in the Jiang household, betrothed to the eldest son, Evan, since they were children. When Evan was kidnapped at eighteen, she volunteered to take his place. For three days, they gave her no food or water. Burning with a 104-degree fever, she nearly died before finally staggering back to the Jiang estate. But the first words she heard were Evan’s, spoken coldly to his parents: “I won’t marry Sharon. She was trapped in that den of thieves for three days—who knows what happened to her?” “If you want to keep the engagement, send her to the Institute of Female Virtue. Let them scrub her clean.” On her first day at the Institute, they stripped her naked and performed the “Verification”—a brutal, archaic ritual meant to certify her virginity. On the second, she cooked ninety-nine separate dishes, then spent the entire night on her knees, scrubbing floors. On the third, they forced her to dance barefoot on a red-hot iron plate. Four years later, Sharon was finally released. Her first act was to visit the crematorium and order a sandalwood urn for her own ashes. “Miss Sharon, your pre-arranged cremation service will activate upon your demise. A deposit is required now, with the balance due within one month. On behalf of our facility, we wish you a vibrant life and a peaceful passing.” The crematorium robot delivered its programmed pleasantries with mechanical courtesy. Sharon was past caring.
I DON'T WANT HIM BACK Novel Cover
9.7
Blurb: She signed the divorce papers. He never signed away his obsession. Veronica Stanford was the perfect wife-devoted, patient, and hopelessly in love. But when her billionaire husband, Jason Harper, trades her in for her treacherous best friend, Rhea, Veronica's world shatters. Broken and betrayed, she drowns her sorrows in a bar, only to be saved by a dangerously alluring stranger with emerald-green eyes and a lethal reputation: Monte "Four" Zagcanni, the ruthless heir to a mafia empire. Four is everything Jason isn't-dark, dangerous, and devastatingly protective. When Veronica discovers she's pregnant with Jason's child, she strikes a deal with Four: a fake marriage to shield her from scandal. But what starts as a cold arrangement ignites into a passion neither can resist. Jason, realizing his mistake too late, wants Veronica back-along with the son he never knew existed. But Four isn't a man who surrenders what's his. And Veronica? She's done being the meek wife. Betrayal runs deep. Revenge burns hotter. As secrets unravel-her father's bloody past, Rhea's twisted obsession, and Jason's deadly lies-Veronica must decide: trust the man who destroyed her once, or surrender to the devil who might destroy her forever. One wants her back. The other wants her forever.