In the chaos and quiet of her 30s, a woman reflects on the loves that shaped her, the heartbreaks that undid her, and the tender spaces in between. Through fleeting romances, almost-loves, and the weight of expectations—family’s, society’s, and her own—she navigates a world where connection is currency, vulnerability is rebellion, and self-discovery never comes easy. Told with wit, warmth, and raw honesty, this novel is a journey through modern love: messy, magical, and sometimes maddening. It's about the people who entered her life, the ones who left, and the version of herself she’s still becoming.
View MoreIt all started when I was fourteen—and hopelessly gullible. I believed the world was as kind as I was. I trusted easily. I loved openly. And for that, I was discarded and betrayed like I meant nothing. Tossed aside like a ragged doll.
That day in class, I saw my crush glancing at me with a kind of focus that made my heart stutter. When he passed me a folded note asking me to meet him after school, I smiled so wide I thought my cheeks would split. I was elated—convinced that my time had come. As soon as the final bell rang, I dashed home, completed my chores in record time, and took a long bath, scrubbing and smoothing myself until I felt beautiful and smelled like vanilla soap and coconut oil. I was light on my feet, giddy with excitement, practically floating to our meeting place. He was already there when I arrived—cool, confident, and radiant in the golden hour sun. One of the most sought-after boys in school had noticed me, and I was basking in his attention like it was sunlight. He bought us drinks and snacks, and I devoured them with the joy of someone who believed she was living a dream. With every bite, every glance, I thought: This is it. This is what they talk about in books and movies. This is what I’ve been waiting for. But I didn’t know yet—that dreams, when trusted too quickly, can become nightmares. Halfway through the snacks and drink, something shifted. A strange heaviness settled in my stomach, and my head began to spin. I felt queasy, uneasy—like the room was tilting on its side. My vision blurred. My body no longer felt like mine. And then—nothing. When I opened my eyes, everything was a haze. My head throbbed like a drumbeat, disoriented and sharp. Confusion filled every part of me as I tried to sit up. Where am I? What’s happening? Why is my dress torn? My mind spun with questions I couldn’t answer. Then I heard laughter—mocking, cruel. “The princess is finally awake,” one of them sneered. “So glad you could be joining us today.” And there he was—my crush—and his friends. Their eyes held no shame, only amusement. The horror of what had happened crashed into me like a tidal wave. I had been raped. My body violated. My trust shattered. He leaned in and whispered, “You can go, as long as you promise to be a good girl. Don’t tell your parents. No one will believe you anyway. You act like a saint, but we all know what you really are.” I was frozen. Silent. Terrified. My voice lodged deep inside my throat. I was too ashamed to scream, too broken to cry. The threats etched themselves into my skin like scars: No one will want you. You’re damaged. You’re soiled. In that moment, something inside me died. My virtue—gone. My self-respect—crushed. My esteem—torn beyond recognition. I wished for death, pleaded silently for it, but it didn’t come. Instead, I had to gather what little dignity I had left and walk away from that room, carrying a weight no child should ever bear. I don’t remember the walk home. My feet moved, but everything else was numb—my heart, my skin, my soul. I could still feel them on me, their laughter echoing in my head like a sick chorus. Every step felt like I was dragging the broken pieces of a girl who no longer existed. When I reached the front door, I stood outside for a long time, staring at it, unsure how to go in and pretend everything was normal. My body trembled as I adjusted my torn dress, trying to smooth out the wrinkles like it could hide what had been done. My hands still smelled faintly of the drink he gave me. I scrubbed them on my skirt, as if I could rub away the shame. Inside, the house was quiet. My parents weren’t home yet. Relief and fear flooded me at once. I ran to the bathroom, locked the door, and turned on the shower. The water was scorching, but I didn’t care. I scrubbed my skin until it was red and raw, but no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t wash them off me. I couldn't wash me off me—the girl who trusted too easily, smiled too brightly. I stared at my reflection afterward. My eyes looked hollow. My lips were trembling, but no sound came out. I wanted to scream, but I didn’t. I couldn’t. I had already been silenced.POV: Layla BrooksMondays had a rhythm—predictable, a little bitter, and always salvaged by caffeine.I walked into the office just past eight, cradling a cinnamon latte, the city still yawning itself awake behind me. My blouse was tucked perfectly, my mind only slightly less so. It was getting easier to show up now, to press “play” on this version of life again, even when grief still echoed in small corners of me.Lucas waved from his desk as I passed. “Morning, superstar.”I rolled my eyes. “You say that like I didn’t almost spill coffee on myself ten minutes ago.”“Confidence is 90% pretending not to be a disaster.”“Well then,” I smiled, “I’m thriving.”Zoe arrived moments later, cheeks flushed, energy bright. She’d been settling in well as our intern, and though still eager to please, she had started to show flashes of real insight during brainstorming sessions.I’d also started noticing the way her eyes flickered toward Lucas more than once.The way she always seemed to need his
POV: Layla BrooksMara arrived just after sunset.She didn’t text beforehand. No grand gesture. Just a gentle knock at the door of my apartment, followed by her familiar silhouette framed in warm hallway light.“I brought food,” she said, holding up a paper bag like a peace offering. “And a bottle of something that pretends to be wine.”I opened the door wider. “Then you can definitely come in.”She smiled, and I could tell she was studying me—quietly, carefully, the way people do when they’re trying to gauge how deep the wounds go without asking outright.The last time we’d sat together, I had barely spoken. My head was fogged by fear, my body still recovering from the trauma of being held against my will. This time was different. I was different.She set the bag down on the kitchen counter and pulled two glasses from the cabinet like she had lived here once. Maybe in some ways, she had. Not this physical space—but the emotional one. The part of me that remembered how it felt to laug
POV: Layla BrooksI didn’t know how to prepare for a return to normal when nothing about me felt normal anymore.I stood in front of the mirror that morning, smoothing down the fabric of a navy-blue blouse I had once worn to a product launch. The fabric still fit. The shape still flattered. But the girl who had worn it last time was gone—or at least no longer untouched by the ache of truth.I drew in a steadying breath, then another.And then I stepped out the door.The city hadn’t waited for me. Buses still roared past. Horns still blared. The air still carried the scent of roasted coffee and rush-hour urgency. But something in me moved slower, like I was still catching up with time.At the office building, the glass panels gleamed too bright, and the lobby smelled of citrus polish and fresh ink. People waved. Some stared. Most just looked past me like I hadn’t been missing for days that felt like years.“Layla?” Zoe’s voice rang behind me as I reached the elevator.I turned.The int
POV: Layla BrooksThe morning after felt oddly still.No nightmares. No screaming in my chest. Just a heavy ache behind my eyes and a softness to the light that filtered through the curtains. For the first time in a long while, I didn’t wake up bracing for the worst.I stayed in bed longer than I should have, listening to the quiet hum of the house. I heard the clinking of teacups, the soft rhythm of my mother’s steps in the kitchen. The world was still spinning, unbothered by the cracks in my life. But I was breathing. That was something.Downstairs, the dining table was already set. Tea, toast, a bowl of grapes. My mom sat at the far end with her hands wrapped around a mug like it was the only warmth she could hold onto.“You’re up,” she said gently, her eyes scanning me for unspoken things.I nodded and slid into the seat across from her. She didn’t push words on me, didn’t rush me to talk. She just passed me the cup of tea she’d made.That cup of tea said everything.It said: I’m
POV: Layla BrooksComing home didn’t feel like safety. It felt like walking into a memory I hadn’t finished unpacking.Everything looked the same—the pale walls, the wind chimes on the porch, the faint scent of rosemary diffused from the hallway. But I wasn’t the same girl who had left this house days ago. I carried things now. Truths that had been locked away for years, and a pain that had finally been spoken into the light.My mother met me at the door. Her arms wrapped around me before I could fully step inside. She didn’t cry, not immediately. She just held me like she could press my body into hers and undo everything that had happened.“My baby,” she whispered. “You’re safe now.”I nodded into her shoulder.But safety, I had learned, wasn’t always about location. It was about knowing you were believed. That someone would fight for you—even when the truth hurt.Inside, the living room was silent. My father sat on the edge of the couch, as if he’d been waiting, rehearsing, struggl
POV: Layla BrooksThe white walls of the hospital felt louder than the screams in the warehouse.They hummed with sterile quiet. Too clean. Too calm. Like grief and fear didn’t belong here. Like pain was meant to be disinfected and tucked beneath crisp sheets and fluorescent lights.I lay still, eyes open.Sleep hadn’t come.Even after the sedative.Even after the doctor murmured gently, “You’re safe now.”I didn’t feel safe.Not really.Because safety wasn’t just about where you were. It was about what still lived inside you.And inside me, something was still screaming.The IV dripped slowly beside me, its rhythm steady. My arms bore the fading bruises from the restraints, and my throat was raw from thirst, from fear, from silence.But what hurt most wasn’t visible.It was the way my body flinched at the sound of footsteps in the hallway. The way my muscles locked every time someone opened the door, even if it was a nurse. The way I waited for Ethan’s face to appear again.I’d survi
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