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My Brother’s Best Friend Chose Me Over Him Novel Cover

My Brother’s Best Friend Chose Me Over Him

Chloe has spent years overlooked as Ryan’s younger sister, but her life changes when his best friend, the enigmatic Liam, starts focusing on her. As a hidden romance blossoms between them, Chloe is torn between her family loyalty and her heart. Meanwhile, Liam faces a difficult choice that could shatter his oldest friendship. He must eventually decide if his love for Chloe is worth betraying the lifelong bond he shares with Ryan.
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Chapter 4

The rain was doing that thing again—coming sideways, finding every gap.

Jaylen had the heat turned low, just enough to keep the windows from fogging. The city slid past in long amber streaks. I watched a stoplight bleed red across the wet asphalt and thought about how beautiful it was, the way rain unmade everything solid.

We'd been quiet for six blocks. Not uncomfortable quiet. The other kind—the kind that had its own texture, its own weight.

Then Jaylen pulled to the curb.

Not at my building. We were still four blocks away. He put the car in park and left the engine running and looked straight ahead through the windshield, both hands loose on the wheel.

'I need to tell you something,' he said.

My chest registered it before he spoke again. Something in the quality of the silence—the way he'd set his hands, the particular stillness in his shoulders.

'I've been in love with you for a very long time.' He said it the way you say a true thing. No setup. No performance. Just the fact of it, dropped clean into the space between us. 'You don't have to do anything with that. I'm not asking you to. I just needed you to know.'

The rain hit the roof in a steady, indifferent rhythm.

I felt it land in my body before I could think about it—a warmth that started somewhere below my sternum and moved outward, the kind of warmth that doesn't ask permission. My hands were still in my lap. I didn't move them.

'Jaylen—'

'You don't have to say anything.'

'I'm not—' I stopped. Started again. 'I want to.'

He turned then. Just slightly. Enough that I could see his profile go still.

'I feel it,' I said. My voice came out quieter than I intended. 'Whatever this is between us. I feel it.' I pressed my thumbnail into my opposite palm without thinking. 'But there's this whole part of me that's just—gone. A month of my life that I can't reach. And I don't know who I was inside that month. I don't know what I felt, or what I chose, or what I walked away from.' My throat tightened. 'What if I can't trust what I feel right now? What if I'm not—whole enough to get this right?'

He was quiet for a long moment. The stoplight ahead cycled green. Neither of us moved.

'Then I'll wait until you are,' he said.

That was it. No negotiation. No conditions. No performance of selflessness designed to make me feel grateful. Just a statement of intent, steady and complete, like something he'd already decided long before tonight.

He put the car in drive.

He didn't kiss me. He drove me home, walked me to my lobby door, and said good night the same way he always did—a single nod, unhurried, like he had nowhere else to be. I watched the car pull away through the lobby glass.

I lay awake until four in the morning staring at my ceiling, the heat of those words still sitting in the center of my chest, going nowhere.

***

Naomi arrived at the coffee shop before me and had already claimed the corner table and ordered my lavender latte. She stood up when she saw me and hugged me for slightly too long—the kind of hug that carries a debt in it.

She looked good. She looked like someone who had been worrying quietly for a long time and was trying hard to seem like she hadn't.

'You look better,' she said, settling back into her chair. 'Every time I see you, you look more like yourself.'

'Which self?' I said, and then immediately: 'Sorry. That came out sharper than I meant it.'

'No.' She shook her head. 'You're allowed.'

We talked about small things first. Her job. A show she'd seen. A mutual friend's apartment situation. The conversation moved easily, the way it always did with Naomi—she was warm and fast and genuinely funny, and I'd missed her more than I'd let myself acknowledge.

But there was a shape to what she wasn't saying. A careful architecture of omission. Every time a particular subject approached, she rerouted—smoothly, affectionately, but I caught it every time.

'You don't have to do that,' I said.

She looked up. 'Do what?'

'Navigate around me. I can tell when a conversation has rooms I'm not being taken into.' I wrapped both hands around my cup. 'I'm not fragile, Naomi. I'm just—incomplete. There's a difference.'

She held my gaze. Something in her expression shifted—the careful warmth gave way to something more honest and a little sad.

'I helped plan that night,' she said quietly. 'The rooftop. I've been carrying that.'

'That's not yours to carry.'

'Madelynn—'

'I mean it.' I kept my voice even. 'Whatever happened that night, I'm not excavating it. I'm not going backward looking for something to blame or something to grieve. I'm building forward.' I paused. 'That's the only direction I know how to go right now.'

She nodded slowly. Her eyes were bright.

We sat with that for a moment.

Then she asked, carefully, how my physical therapy was going. And I said it was hard but getting easier. And she asked if I was spending much time with Clark. And I said not as much as Clark seemed to want—he kept engineering situations and then disappearing from them with transparently bad excuses.

Naomi laughed. 'He's terrible at it.'

'Genuinely awful.'

'But his heart—'

'His heart is completely obvious, yes.'

I said Jaylen's name then—naturally, mid-sentence, describing some moment from the week. I didn't notice how I'd said it until I caught Naomi's expression: that specific stillness, watching me without watching me.

'What?' I said.

'Nothing.' She smiled into her cup. 'Nothing at all.'

I didn't push. But I felt it—the warmth again, the same one from last night, rising without permission from somewhere below my sternum.

Naomi left first, claiming an afternoon obligation. She hugged me again at the door—same duration, same weight of feeling in it—and then walked out into the rain.

I stayed at the table a few more minutes, my sketchbook open in front of me, pencil in hand. I hadn't drawn anything. I was just sitting in the warmth of the coffee shop, listening to the rain against the glass, thinking about a man who had said *I'll wait until you are* and driven away without asking for anything.

My pencil moved. A line. Then another.

I looked down.

I'd drawn his hands on a steering wheel.

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