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Behind the Lies I Was Always His Chapter 2

Behind the Lies I Was Always His Chapter 2
  • “Jonathan,” I hissed, grabbing his arm and pulling him away from the front desk. “I told you not to come here! What the hell are you doing here?”
  • He looked me over, eyes wide, mouth slightly open, like he couldn’t believe what he was seeing. And then, deadpan, he said it.
  • “Why the hell do you look like this?”
  • I froze. I knew what he meant. The oversized glasses, the black wig tangled over my face, the mismatched lipstick, the brown cardigan swallowing my frame. I looked like I belonged in a thrift store clearance bin, not the lobby of Steele Enterprises.
  • “That’s not important,” I muttered, crossing my arms. “I work here. Please leave. This is not the place for this.”
  • But Jonathan stepped closer, lowering his voice. “You need to go back.”
  • I scoffed. “No. Obviously, I’m not going back. Why would I? This is my life now.”
  • He let out a disbelieving chuckle. “Girl, this? This is not your life.”
  • “It is,” I said firmly. “This is where I work. This is what I do. This is who I am now.”
  • Jonathan didn’t budge. His jaw clenched, and he stared at me with those same sharp eyes I’d grown up resenting.
  • “Your father told me to find you because you stopped picking up his calls,” he said. “And I found you. You need to go home.”
  • My chest tightened. I looked around, panicked, as people walked past. I stepped in front of Jonathan, lowering my voice. “No. I will not go back to that man. I don’t even want to be associated with him. Please. Just understand that.”
  • Jonathan didn’t argue. He just stood there, breathing heavy, his hands balled into fists at his sides.
  • Then—my phone rang.
  • LUCA STEELE.
  • I winced.
  • “Damn it,” I muttered, already backing away. “I have to go. Jonathan, please, just leave me alone. And don’t tell my father you got a hold of me.”
  • He didn’t respond, but I couldn’t wait. I turned and power-walked out of the lobby, my heels clicking like rapid-fire across the marble floor.
  • I made my way two blocks down to Delucci’s, Luca’s go-to sandwich shop. It was this old brick deli tucked between a bank and a pharmacy—one of those places you’d walk past if you didn’t know what to look for. But Luca loved it. Specifically, he loved his sandwich.
  • A toasted sourdough panini, double turkey, provolone cheese, arugula, no tomato, light mustard—not too much. Cut diagonally. Not across.
  • And his drink: a double shot of espresso, three cubes of ice, splash of oat milk. Never almond. Never soy.
  • I placed the order like I’d done a hundred times. The cashier didn’t even ask anymore.
  • “Steele special?”
  • “Yeah,” I nodded. “Same time, same way.”
  • Lunch bag in hand, I checked my watch.
  • 12:48 p.m.
  • Perfect.
  • I hurried back through the revolving doors and up to the 25th floor. The moment I stepped out of the elevator, I could feel the tension again—stares, whispers, the silent weight of not belonging. I ignored it all and walked straight into Luca’s office.
  • He was typing, eyes locked on his screen.
  • I placed the lunch bag gently on his desk, exactly 12:59.
  • Right on time.
  • He didn’t speak. Just looked up slowly, his gaze falling on the sandwich, then flicking up to me.
  • Not admiration. Not surprise. Just… something like recognition.
  • Like he knew I didn’t have to ask. Like maybe he was finally starting to notice that I knew him better than most.
  • Still, he said nothing.
  • He opened the bag, took out the sandwich, checked the diagonal cut, and gave a small, almost imperceptible nod.
  • “Between six and seven,” he said suddenly, “I want you to—”
  • “Fries. Kebab. And a bouquet of red tulips for your mother,” I finished before he could.
  • He paused. His eyes narrowed, just slightly.
  • Then he leaned back, folding his hands together. “Yeah,” he said. “That’s what I mean.”
  • He dismissed me with a flick of his hand.
  • I turned, holding onto the smallest sliver of pride I had left, and left his office.
  • When I reached the cafeteria, it was already packed. Voices echoed. Laughter buzzed. No one made eye contact with me.
  • I stood with my tray for a few seconds, scanning for an open seat, but it was clear—I wasn’t welcome. People shifted away, looked down at their phones, got up when I got close.
  • I walked out.
  • Found my way back to the bathroom stall—the one I cried in that morning. Locked the door behind me and sat.
  • Balancing my tray on my lap, I took a small bite of my cold sandwich. It tasted like cardboard. Or maybe I just couldn’t taste anything over the knot in my throat.
  • I pulled out my phone, just to distract myself. To scroll. To breathe. But what I saw made me freeze.
  • 1 New Email – From: Carter Kingsley
  • I stared at it. No subject. Just the name. My blood turned cold.
  • How the hell did he get my work email?
Behind the Lies I Was Always His English Novel

Behind the Lies I Was Always His English Novel

Status: Ongoing Native Language: English

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