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[ FULL STORY ] She Wanted To Be “Friends” Until I Moved On Without Her[ FULL STORY ] She Wanted To Be “Friends” Until I Moved On Without Her

Chapter 3: PART 3: THE FLYING MONKEYS

The message Jenna had sent Lily from a fake account was a masterpiece of desperation. It was a long, rambling warning, claiming that I was "emotionally unstable," that I had "control issues," and that I was only using Lily to get back at my "true soulmate."

Lily showed it to me the next morning over coffee. She wasn't upset—she was laughing.

“‘A wolf in sheep’s clothing’?” Lily read aloud, mimicking a dramatic narrator. “Wow, Alex. I didn't know I was hanging out with such a dangerous predator. She really has a flair for the dramatic, doesn't she?”

I sighed, rubbing my face. “Lily, I am so sorry. I knew she’d be difficult, but I didn't think she’d drag you into this.”

Lily set her phone down and looked at me seriously. “Don’t apologize for her behavior. That’s your old habit talking. You aren't responsible for the crazy things Jenna does. But,” she added, her eyes narrowing, “this is getting into harassment territory. How do you want to handle it?”

“I’m going to handle it the way I handle every failing project,” I said. “I’m going to cut the funding and close the file.”

I sent one final text to Jenna. No emotion. Just a statement of fact. “Jenna. I know about the message you sent Lily. If you contact her, her family, or her workplace again, I will go directly to the police and file for a restraining order. I have the screenshots. This is not a negotiation. Do not reply to this message. Stay away from us.”

Then, I did what I should have done the night she dumped me. I blocked her. On everything. Phone, email, Instagram, LinkedIn. I even blocked her mother.

For three days, there was peace.

Then came the "Flying Monkeys."

In psychology, "Flying Monkeys" are the people a narcissist or a manipulator uses to do their dirty work. Jenna had a whole fleet of them.

First, it was our mutual friend, Mark. He called me on Tuesday night. “Hey man, look, I don’t want to get in the middle of this, but Jenna is in a bad way. She says you’re threatening her with legal action? Isn't that a bit extreme? She’s just hurt, Alex. She’s a kid compared to us.”

“Mark,” I said, my voice cold. “She harassed a woman I’m seeing. She sent anonymous, defamatory messages. If she’s a ‘kid,’ then she needs to learn that actions have consequences. If you want to be her friend, be my guest. But if you call me again to plead her case, I’m going to have to block you too.”

Mark went silent. “I... I didn't know she did that. She told me you were just trying to scare her so she wouldn't talk about the ‘affair.’”

“There was no affair, Mark. There was a breakup, an ‘Okay,’ and me moving on. She can’t handle that I’m not miserable.”

Next was the "public shaming." Jenna started posting on her public stories—quotes about "narcissistic abuse," "healing from toxic men," and "how to spot a sociopath." She didn't use my name, but she used enough specific details about our relationship that anyone who knew us could connect the dots.

My sister called me, sounding worried. “Alex, what is going on? People from your old neighborhood are asking me if you’re okay. Jenna is posting some really dark stuff.”

“She’s performing, Sarah,” I told her. “She’s trying to provoke a reaction. She wants me to call her, to yell at her, to defend myself. Because as long as I’m reacting, she still has power over me. I’m not giving it to her.”

“But your reputation...”

“My reputation is built on thirty-six years of being a decent man. If people want to believe a 25-year-old’s Instagram stories over a decade of knowing me, then they aren't people I need in my life anyway.”

That was the hardest part—the discipline of silence. Every fiber of my being wanted to post the screenshots of her harassment, to tell the world that she was the one who ended it, that she was the one who couldn't let go. But I knew that was exactly what she wanted. She wanted a mud-wrestling match.

So I stayed in the clean air. I focused on Lily.

Lily was a revelation. We started dating officially about three weeks after the breakup. It wasn't a "rebound." It was a realization. Being with Lily was like moving from a turbulent sea to a calm harbor. We talked about things that mattered. We laughed about things that were actually funny. There were no "tests," no hidden agendas, no sharp-edged sarcasm.

But Jenna’s desperation was reaching a boiling point. She had lost her audience. Her friends were starting to get tired of the constant drama. Her "Flying Monkeys" were returning to the forest because I refused to engage.

So, she decided to go for the one thing she knew would get a rise out of me.

On a Friday evening, I was at Lily’s apartment. We were cooking dinner—well, I was chopping vegetables while she debated the merits of different types of pasta. There was a knock at the door.

Lily frowned. “I’m not expecting anyone.”

She went to the door and looked through the peephole. Her shoulders tensed. She turned back to me, her face pale.

“Alex,” she whispered. “It’s her. She’s here.”

My heart hammered against my ribs. The audacity—the sheer, unadulterated madness of showing up at Lily’s home.

I walked to the door and told Lily to stay back. I opened it just a crack, keeping the chain on.

Jenna was standing there. She didn't look like the "cool, rehearsed" girl from the kitchen anymore. Her hair was a mess, her makeup was smudged, and her eyes were wide and frantic.

“Alex,” she breathed, trying to push against the door. “We need to talk. You can’t just block me. You can’t just replace me with her.”

“Jenna, leave,” I said, my voice a low growl. “You are trespassing. I told you what would happen.”

“I don’t care!” she shrieked, and I heard doors opening in the hallway—neighbors were looking out. “I loved you! How could you do this? How could you just say ‘Okay’ and walk away? I was testing you! I wanted you to fight for me!”

The truth came out. The "Friendship" was a test. The "Breakup" was a test. Her entire existence was a series of games designed to see how much I would endure.

“I’m calling the police, Jenna,” I said, reaching for my phone.

“Go ahead!” she screamed. “Tell them you’re a heartless monster! Tell them you abandoned me!”

She started pounding on the door, a rhythmic, desperate sound that echoed through the small apartment. Lily was standing behind me, her hand on my shoulder, steady and solid.

I realized then that this was the moment. This was the final hurdle. If I handled this wrong, it would haunt us forever. If I handled it right, it would finally be over.

I took a deep breath, looked Jenna in the eye through the gap in the door, and said the words that I knew would end the game once and for all.

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