Belated Love: He Broke Down When I Walked Away

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Chapter 1

After Jonathan Rogers and I broke up, he developed a habit—every few days, he'd log into my Amazon account and clear out my shopping cart.

Sanitary pads, cat food, makeup remover.

He never said a word, never asked where I was living, just kept shipping everything to my default address.

Until Black Friday night, after buying a box of tissues, he casually clicked on my [Wish List].

At the top was a wedding planning case study book.

Added three years ago.

He stared at the screen for a long time.

Then he started clicking—pay, pay, pay.

The same book, seventeen copies.

Delivery notifications flooded my phone.

The last message was from him: [Let's get married, okay?]

[Chapter 1]

This was day forty-seven since Jonathan and I broke up.

I was in the middle of a face mask when the makeup remover arrived. The delivery guy called, his voice cutting through the quiet night: [Ms. Rowan Lynn, you have a package. I left it in the parcel locker.]

I said [okay], didn't think much of it.

Half an hour later, I peeled off the mask and logged into Amazon to check on the freeze-dried cat food I'd ordered.

Then I saw that order.

Makeup remover. Forty-eight bottles.

Enough to last me three years.

Paid by: Jonathan.

I scrolled down.

A long list of [Pay] entries stared back at me.

Sanitary pads, cat food, makeup remover, and even the electric toothbrush that had been sitting in my cart for six months.

All paid by the same person. Jonathan.

I scrolled to the bottom of the orders.

In September 2021, a box of whole milk.

October 2021: Two boxes of overnight pads.

November 2021, a neck massager—the one I'd saved for two years but couldn't bring myself to buy.

Every order had [Gift for a friend] selected.

The system auto-generated a gift message.

He never changed the default text.

So in every order note, the same line appeared: [Wishing you a pleasant life, welcome back anytime.]

I looked at that line and laughed.

Forty-seven days.

He'd wished me a pleasant life one hundred and thirty-five times.

Jonathan, you really don't know how to talk.

Jonathan and I broke up without any big fights—it was as quiet as a silent film.

That day, I made four dishes and soup as usual, waiting for him to come home for dinner.

When I put the food on the table, I realized I'd forgotten again that I don't like scallions, yet I'd habitually sprinkled them all over his favorite steamed fish.

And he, after five years together, still took an ice-cold Coke from the fridge for me during my period.

He never remembered that  I don't eat scallions, yet I remembered all his allergens, that he doesn't eat spicy food, cilantro, or any fishy seafood.

In that moment, all my strength drained away.

I dumped the rice I'd served him and said calmly, "Jonathan, let's break up."

He froze, his brow furrowing slightly, as if he thought I was being unreasonable.

"What's wrong now?"

I didn't answer, just quietly went to the bedroom to pack.

He didn't stop me.

Maybe in his mind, I was just throwing a tantrum and would come back in a few days.

But he didn't know—what broke me was never some earth-shattering event, but these disappointments soaked into daily life, suffocating and inescapable.

I opened the Family group on Amazon, the one with just the two of us.

Jonathan's profile picture was black, the same as during our Cold War.

I clicked Leave Group.

A confirmation prompt appeared on screen.

I clicked confirm.

Three seconds later, a friend request popped up on WhatsApp.

It was Jonathan.

Still, that black square profile picture.

The verification message read:

[Don't reject it.]

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