Sometimes, it’s not the betrayal itself that breaks you—it’s realizing that everything you took seriously was just a joke to someone else. That the future you carefully built… never meant the same thing to them.
My boyfriend let his new little sister submit an application to transfer me hundreds of miles away. He called it a prank. I called it a reason to leave.
So I packed my bags, boarded the plane, and started a new life without him in it.
The day before the transfer deadline, I saw my name on the student exchange list for the university’s satellite campus hundreds of miles away. The applicant was Liam, my boyfriend.
My fingers trembled as I dialed his number.
His voice was casual, light. “Oh, that. Maya submitted it for me. She said it would be a funny prank to play on you. You just have to go in and withdraw the application. No big deal.”
Maya. The freshman who had insisted on becoming Liam’s little sister.
I held the phone in silence for a full minute before hanging up.
That was when I realized the future I had carefully planned for four years was nothing more than a joke to him.
I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just sat there in the study room, staring at the portal on my laptop while the words blurred into nonsense.
Liam and I had a plan. We were supposed to stay on the main campus this semester and prepare together for the national academic competition. We had built that goal piece by piece over two years. But now the system showed I had been assigned alone to the southern campus.
If I hadn’t checked the portal on a whim, I might never have known until it was too late.
I called him again because part of me still hoped he would say he was sorry.
Instead, he laughed.
“Maya thought it would be funny,” he said. “A little prank to see if you’d notice before you got sent away. The deadline hasn’t passed yet. Just cancel it.”
His words were light, but each one landed like a shard of ice in my chest.
“So you think this is small?” I asked, hating how shaky my voice sounded.
He sighed, already impatient. “Are you really going to make a big deal out of this? Just withdraw it and move on. Maya was playing around.”
“What if I hadn’t noticed in time? She used my student ID and password. I could report her to the dean.”
His voice turned cold instantly.
“Ava, you’re being seriously unreasonable. It was a joke. And now you want to report her? When are you going to cut her some slack?”
My grip tightened around the phone.
He kept going.
“I’ve told you a million times. She’s a freshman. She just transferred here. She doesn’t know anyone. I’m like her campus big brother. What’s wrong with me looking out for her?”
Then he delivered the final blow.
“If you report her, you might as well report me too.”
And then he hung up.
The dial tone rang sharply in my ear.
I sat frozen in my chair, staring at my reflection in the dark screen of my phone, while the library around me faded into a distant blur.
Five years. I had known Liam for five years and dated him for four.
We had already planned everything. After graduation, we would stay in this city, get an apartment, adopt a cat. Our future had always felt smooth and certain, like a train already locked onto its tracks.
But now I was staring at a cold digital notification that made my entire life feel like the punchline to a joke I had never agreed to be part of.
On the screen, the cursor hovered over the “Withdraw” button.
One click. That was all it would take. One tiny movement, and life would go back to normal.
But his voice kept echoing in my head.
She was just playing around.
Are you really going to make a big deal out of this?
Something in me cracked.
A deep, bone-tired weariness rose from the soles of my feet and swallowed everything else. Suddenly, I didn’t even have the strength to lift my hand and click the button waiting right in front of me.
