Girlfriend Got Her Birthday Gifts, Then The Eviction Notice Landed-tessa

The first thing I noticed when Frankie opened her birthday gift was not joy.

It was ownership.

She pulled the tissue paper apart, lifted the bag I had bought her, and held it against her chest like it was proof that the day still belonged to her.

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I sat across from her at the restaurant with my hands folded around a glass of water, watching her smile over the candle in the little dessert the server had brought.

For four years, I had mistaken comfort for love.

Frankie was twenty-nine, bright when she wanted to be, funny when the room belonged to her, and very good at making help feel like devotion instead of labor.

She had moved into my apartment slowly, first with a drawer, then a suitcase, then a ring light for the online business she said would take off any month now.

By the time I understood that she was not visiting anymore, the closet was half hers and the rent was still all mine.

I paid the lease, the utilities, the groceries, the internet, and the quiet little costs she never counted because she never saw them leave her own account.

She bought food now and then, or a candle, or some little item she could point to when she wanted to say she contributed.

I let that be enough because I loved her.

The phone changed that.

I am not proud of checking it, but I am not going to pretend the discovery arrived through some noble accident.

Trust had been hard for me long before Frankie, and when her phone buzzed beside the couch one night, something in me went cold instead of curious.

Jonah’s name sat near the top of her messages.

I knew him from the grocery store where she used to work before she decided retail was beneath the future she imagined for herself.

He had laughed with me once while we waited for Frankie to clock out, and I remembered thinking he seemed harmless.

There is a special kind of humiliation in realizing the man you joked with knew a private version of your life.

The first message I saw was from him.

“You have a boyfriend. I don’t want to be a party to this any longer.”

I read it three times before I scrolled up.

They had flirted for months while she worked there, and the flirting had not stayed flirting.

It had happened more than once.

Then, after she left the job and started spending whole days in the apartment I paid for, she had reached back out to him.

She missed what they had, she wrote.

She knew I would be visiting my brother soon, she wrote.

Jonah refused her.

He did not refuse because he loved me or owed me anything.

He refused because, somewhere between being selfish and being decent, he had decided he did not want to be part of betraying another man.

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