The beginning.

678 Words
“f**k… right there…” The sound slipped through the hallway like a blade, sharp and unmistakable, stopping Denise mid-step. The clubhouse corridor smelled of leather, smoke, and oil, but suddenly all she could taste was panic. Her heart slammed violently against her ribs, each beat louder than the last, as if her body already understood what her mind was desperately refusing to accept. She had been called here in a rush. An accident, they’d said. Something about John getting hurt. She hadn’t even taken the time to lock her apartment door. She’d abandoned her phone, her bag, her half-finished meal, driven too fast with shaking hands and whispered prayers. The image in her head had been blood, pain, sirens. Not this. Not moaning. The sounds coming from behind the closed door were slow, breathless, and undeniably intimate. They rose and fell in a rhythm that had nothing to do with suffering. Nothing to do with injury. Denise’s feet felt glued to the floor as her mind scrambled for explanations. Maybe she was at the wrong room. Maybe someone else was inside. The clubhouse was always full of people, voices, secrets. It could be anyone. It couldn’t be John. Her Johnny. Her hand hovered inches from the door handle, trembling. For a brief, fragile moment, she clung to denial like a lifeline. Maybe the woman inside was with another club member. Maybe John really was hurt somewhere else, waiting for her. Maybe she was about to make a terrible mistake by opening this door and humiliating herself for nothing. Then she heard it. A low, broken groan. Male. Familiar. The sound wasn’t loud, but it didn’t need to be. Denise had heard that groan a hundred times in quiet bedrooms and whispered moments meant only for the two of them. It was the sound John made when he forgot the world existed. When he let go. Her lungs burned as if she’d forgotten how to breathe. There was no more room for excuses. No space left for hope. The truth pressed down on her chest, heavy and merciless, and still her body moved before her mind could stop it. Her fingers closed around the cold metal handle. She opened the door. The room was dim, lit only by a flickering lamp in the corner. The air was thick, heavy with heat and the scent of s*x. Denise saw tangled limbs, bare skin, and familiarity in the worst possible way. She saw John. Not injured. Not hurt. Alive. Whole. Engaged in something that had nothing to do with love and everything to do with betrayal. Time shattered. The world narrowed to a single, unbearable point as five years collapsed in on themselves. Every shared memory rushed through her at once. Childhood laughter. Prom nights. Promises whispered in the dark. Plans that stretched into forever. All of it cracked and splintered, falling apart like glass under her feet. John turned at the sound of the door, his expression shifting from pleasure to shock in the span of a heartbeat. He said her name, but it barely reached her. The women beside him froze, wide-eyed, scrambling for the sheet as if modesty could undo what had already been done. Denise couldn’t move. She couldn’t scream. Couldn’t cry. Couldn’t even look away. Something inside her went terrifyingly quiet. This was the moment her life split into before and after. Before trust. Before innocence. Before loving someone so completely it felt permanent. And after—where nothing would ever feel simple again. She took a step back, then another, the doorframe pressing against her spine like a final warning. John was still speaking, still trying to explain, but the words blurred into noise. Excuses meant nothing in the face of what she’d seen. Denise turned and walked away. Each step down that hallway felt like walking over the remains of everything she’d believed in. She didn’t know where she was going. She only knew one thing with brutal clarity. The man she loved was gone. And whatever came next would change her forever.
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