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The Day I Stopped Loving Him Novel Cover

The Day I Stopped Loving Him

She spent ten years loving the wrong brother. He only needed one night to claim her for good. Ivy has always been Julian’s shadow—fetching his coffee, doing his homework, waiting for him in the rain. But when she catches him kissing another girl on campus gossip forums, something inside her finally shatters. Enter Rowan Vance. Julian’s bitter rival. The cold, brooding architecture genius who never wastes words—or kindness. He finds her broken and soaked to the bone, and without a word, wraps his leather jacket around her shoulders. Rowan doesn’t want her gratitude. He wants her. As Ivy pieces herself back together—ditching the old habits, rediscovering her own fire—Julian panics. He never realized how much he needed her until she slipped away. But every desperate attempt to win her back only pushes her further into Rowan’s arms. And Rowan isn’t the kind of man who shares. “Hold still, Ivy. Unless you want Julian to see exactly who you belong to now.” From rain-soaked heartbreak to a love that rebuilds her from the ground up, Prologue is a scorching, emotional ride about finding your worth—and the man who makes you never want to be anyone else’s shadow again.
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Chapter 1

I finished the last stitch at 2 a.m. on a Tuesday, three weeks after I started.

The dress was midnight blue, threaded through with silver that I'd hand-sewn in clusters — Orion, Cassiopeia, the Little Dipper — until the whole skirt looked like a piece of sky torn loose and wrapped around a girl. My fingers had bled twice from the needle. I hadn't cared. Julian had once said, offhand, that he loved the stars. That was enough for me to spend an entire month making myself into one.

That's the kind of person I was back then.

The Autumn Masquerade was Harwick University's biggest social event of the year — the kind of night where the right dress could change your whole story. Crystal chandeliers, a live string quartet, couples sweeping across a marble floor in rented tuxedos and designer gowns. I wasn't naive enough to think I belonged in that world. But Julian did. And for one semester, somehow, Julian had chosen me.

We weren't official. He'd never used that word. But he'd held my hand in the library, texted me at midnight, let me sit beside him in Dr. Kessler's psychology seminar while he passed me notes that made me press my lips together to keep from smiling. Two weeks ago, he'd leaned close in the dark of the campus coffee shop and said, *Tonight feels like a beginning, doesn't it?*

I'd believed him.

So I stood by the fountain in the east courtyard — where we'd agreed to meet, where he'd said *I'll find you by the water* — and I waited.

Seven o'clock came and went.

The first drops of rain hit at seven-thirty. Light at first, almost polite. I pulled my thin wrap tighter and told myself he was just running late. Julian was always a little late. It was part of his charm, the way he moved through the world like time bent around him instead of the other way around.

By eight, the rain had stopped being polite.

It came down in cold, heavy sheets, the kind that soaks through everything in seconds. My silver stitching caught the water and dragged the hem down. The fabric darkened. The carefully pressed layers of tulle went limp and sad against my legs, and I could feel the dye from the outer layer bleeding into the lining, turning the whole bottom of the dress a bruised, muddy purple.

I didn't move.

I told myself: *If I leave, he'll come and I won't be here. If I leave, I'll have ruined it.*

As if the dress wasn't already ruined. As if I wasn't standing in two inches of water, my heels sinking into the courtyard grass, mascara tracking down my face in thin black rivers.

I checked my phone for the fortieth time. No messages. I typed *Hey, are you on your way?* and stared at it for a long moment before hitting send. The two gray checkmarks sat there, unchanged. Unread.

Nine o'clock.

My hands had gone numb. I kept flexing my fingers around the phone just to feel something, just to remind myself I was still standing here, still a person, still worth showing up for.

Then my phone buzzed.

Not a text from Julian. A push notification — GreekRank, the campus gossip forum that half the student body pretended not to use and everyone actually checked. The preview line read: *🔥 MASQUERADE MOMENT YOU NEED TO SEE.*

I should not have clicked it.

I clicked it.

The video was fifteen seconds long. Shot on someone's phone from across the main ballroom, slightly shaky, but clear enough. The chandeliers threw warm gold light across the dance floor, and there, standing right beneath the largest one like he'd positioned himself for a portrait, was Julian.

He was wearing the navy suit he'd shown me last week, asking if I thought it was too formal. I'd said it was perfect.

He had his hands on Blair Ashford's waist — Blair, who was the captain of the cheer squad, who had her own Wikipedia page because her father owned half of Connecticut, who wore her confidence like a second skin. Her dress was white and backless and she was laughing at something Julian said before he tilted his head down and kissed her. Not a quick kiss. The kind that makes the people around them look away.

The kind that means something.

The rain kept falling.

I stood there in the dark, watching fifteen seconds of video on a loop, the fountain behind me making its cheerful, indifferent sound.

Then the camera panned slightly, catching the edge of the group around them — Blair's friends, all dressed up and glittering, one of them leaning toward another with a hand cupped over her mouth. The audio was muffled but the caption on the post had helpfully transcribed it.

*"What about that sad little shadow of his — Ivy? Isn't she supposed to be his date tonight?"*

A beat. Then Julian's voice, easy and light, barely even interested.

*"Don't worry about her. She's like a golden retriever. You ignore her for a day, and tomorrow she comes bounding back, tail wagging. Besides, she still owes me three weeks of psych notes."*

Laughter. Blair's laugh was the loudest.

The video ended.

I read the transcript again.

A golden retriever.

I had spent thirty-one nights bent over a dress, pricking my fingers until they bled, sewing stars onto fabric because he had once, in passing, said he liked them. I had turned down a study group, a weekend trip with my roommate, two separate invitations from people who actually wanted my company — all so I could be available when Julian needed me. I had carried his emotional weight through his parents' divorce, talked him through his panic attacks at midnight, rewritten half his thesis outline when he was too scattered to think straight.

A golden retriever.

My phone slipped.

I didn't grab for it. I watched it fall in a kind of slow, detached silence — watched it hit the surface of the puddle at my feet, watched the screen flicker once and go dark.

I didn't cry.

I'd expected tears, I think. Some part of me had been braced for them, the way you brace for a wave you can see coming. But nothing came. Just a strange, spreading stillness, like the moment after a very loud sound when the air itself seems to be holding its breath.

Somewhere in my chest, something that had been holding on for a long time — something I hadn't even known I was still gripping — finally let go.

Not with a snap. Not dramatically.

Just quietly, completely, like a thread that had been fraying for years finally giving way in the dark.

I stood there in the ruined dress, in the rain, beside the fountain, for another long moment.

Then I reached down and picked up my phone.

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