She Kept Saving Me From Love Until One Fake Boyfriend Exposed What Protection Really Meant-yumihong

I peeled her fingers off my wrist one by one and turned my phone faceup on the table.

The red recording bar had been running since 4:31 p.m.

Maya looked at the screen, then at me. The café glass held a blurred copy of her face behind her own, two Mayas stacked in the rain-streaked window. Neither one looked surprised.

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— Good, she said. — Then you can listen back when you calm down.

The server arrived with the check nobody had asked for. White porcelain clicked against the saucer in his hand, and the smell of burnt espresso rose between us like something left too long on the stove. Maya reached for her wallet as if we were finishing an ordinary Sunday coffee.

— Don’t, I said.

My voice came out flatter than I expected. No shaking. No crack.

Her hand stopped over the leather flap. A tiny line appeared between her brows. She had spent years studying every twitch in my face; the moment she couldn’t read me, her shoulders stiffened under the camel coat.

— How long? I asked.

— Since Daniel?

— Since the first one.

Rain ticked against the conservatory glass. Someone near the window laughed too loudly at a joke that must not have been funny. Maya picked up her spoon, set it down again, and lined it with the edge of the saucer.

— Since Owen, she said.

The name hit harder than Daniel’s.

Owen had been college. Owen with the chipped front tooth and the green duffel bag and the promise that graduation would not change anything. After he left, my dorm room had smelled like cold ramen and wet towels for a week because the curtains stayed shut and nothing dried. Maya found me sitting on the tile floor outside the communal laundry room at 2:13 a.m., still wearing one shoe, staring at a machine that had stopped spinning twenty minutes earlier.

She had brought grape juice in a paper cup because the vending machine was out of water.

— You scared me that night, Maya said. — You stopped eating. You stopped answering your mother. You looked like someone had reached into your chest and taken the wiring out.

Her fingers smoothed a wrinkle from the napkin in front of her. Precise. Careful. The same hands that braided my hair before interviews, zipped my dresses before weddings, held burner phones in the dark.

— So you decided to ruin every man after him?

— I decided not to watch that happen again.

— By lying.

— By preventing damage.

The words were so clean they made my stomach turn.

I let the silence sit there until she tried to fill it.

— Ethan was already slippery, she said. — Marcus loved hearing himself talk. Adrian kept score every time he paid for dinner. Daniel would have left too. Men like that always do.

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