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After Catching My Fiancé Begging His Mistress to Stay Novel Cover

After Catching My Fiancé Begging His Mistress to Stay

The rooftop smelled like white peonies and rain that hadn't fallen yet. I got there forty minutes early. I'd told the florist twice where the candles should go, and she'd nodded the patient nod people give brides. I wasn't a bride yet. Three years to the day, and I was about to fix that. The dress was custom. Silk so quiet it didn't even rustle. I'd had the seamstress tuck the velvet box into a hidden pocket at my hip so Caiden wouldn't see it until I wanted him to. Manhattan blinked behind me, all those gold windows like applause waiting to happen. My heels sank a little into the soft grout between the tiles.
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Chapter 1

The rooftop smelled like white peonies and rain that hadn't fallen yet.

I got there forty minutes early. I'd told the florist twice where the candles should go, and she'd nodded the patient nod people give brides. I wasn't a bride yet. Three years to the day, and I was about to fix that.

The dress was custom. Silk so quiet it didn't even rustle. I'd had the seamstress tuck the velvet box into a hidden pocket at my hip so Caiden wouldn't see it until I wanted him to. Manhattan blinked behind me, all those gold windows like applause waiting to happen. My heels sank a little into the soft grout between the tiles. I didn't move them. I wanted to be exactly here when he stepped off the elevator.

The elevator chimed.

He came out in the navy shirt I'd bought him for his birthday, sleeves rolled, hair still a little damp at the temples. He saw me, and for a half second his face did the thing I'd been chasing for three years — surprise, softness, the small private smile that I'd convinced myself belonged only to me.

Then it tightened.

I didn't notice in time. I was already walking toward him, already lifting the box, already opening my mouth.

"Caiden." My voice didn't shake. I was proud of that, later, in the way you're proud of small things on bad nights. "Three years ago you asked me to share a cab in the rain. I've shared everything since. Marry me."

The ring caught the candlelight. A plain platinum band. He hated showy things.

He went still. Not the still of a man overwhelmed. The still of a man calculating. His eyes drifted maybe an inch to the left of mine, the way they did when a server got an order wrong and he didn't want to embarrass them.

"Dani." Soft. Almost kind. "I'm not ready. I don't think I will be."

The peonies kept smelling like peonies. The skyline kept doing what skylines do.

He stepped closer. Kissed my forehead. His lips were warm and dry and they stayed a beat too long, like he was apologizing in a language I didn't speak yet.

"I love you," he said. "I just need time."

And then he left.

The elevator chimed again, closing this time. I stood there in a thirty-thousand-dollar dress with an open ring box in my palm and a waiter pretending very hard to fold napkins twenty feet away. My fingers wouldn't close the box. I watched them, like they belonged to a stranger, until the velvet finally snapped shut on its own.

The peonies. The peonies were absurd.

***

I didn't cry in the cab. I didn't cry in the elevator up to our apartment. I peeled the dress off in the dark and left it in a white heap by the bed, like something that had drowned.

Near midnight I made him tea. Lavender, the way he liked. I told myself we could fix this. People got cold feet. People needed time. I'd give him time. I'd carry the tea down and knock on whichever friend's couch he'd run to, and we'd laugh about this in a year.

That was the version of me that took the elevator to the lobby. She doesn't exist anymore.

I heard his voice through the crack of the stairwell door. Not the lobby. The emergency stairs. The mug went hot in my hand.

"Juliet. Please." His voice — Caiden's voice, the one that ordered wine and closed deals — was unrecognizable. Stripped. Begging. "Just sign the papers. I've waited three years. Three years. I can't keep doing this — she thinks I'm going to marry her."

A pause. Whatever she said on the other end, I didn't need to hear it.

"I know," he whispered. "I know. I love you. I've always loved you."

My hand tightened on the cold iron railing. I watched the steam curl off the mug and felt every memory in my body shift one inch to the left, the way his eyes always did. The lasagna he made the first night I stayed over. The playlist titled For D that opened with a song I'd never picked. The cat we'd adopted on a Sunday in October — Mochi, he'd said, like it had just occurred to him.

I set the mug down on the concrete step. Carefully. I didn't want it to clink.

I took the stairs back up in bare feet so he wouldn't hear.

***

He came home at four-fifty-two in the morning. I know because I'd been watching the microwave clock change for three hours, sitting at the kitchen table in the dark, still in his old gray T-shirt. Mochi was a warm weight against my ankle. I didn't move him.

Caiden flinched when he flicked the light on.

"Dani — you're up."

"Sit down."

He didn't. He stood in the doorway with his keys still in his hand.

"I went downstairs around midnight," I said. My voice was so level it scared me. "I made you tea. I heard you in the stairwell."

His face did three things in two seconds. Confusion. Then the careful blank. Then something underneath that I'd never been allowed to see — naked, and tired, and not for me.

"Dani, whatever you think you heard — "

"You said her name." I tilted my head. "Juliet. You said you'd waited three years. You said I thought you were going to marry me — like it was something to be managed."

"It's not — " He stopped. Started again. "She was — she's someone from college, it's complicated, I never — "

"Mochi," I said quietly. "Who named him?"

He looked at the cat. Looked at the floor. Looked, finally, slightly to the left of my face.

"Get your things," I said. "Tonight. Whatever you can't carry, I'll courier in the morning."

He reached for my hand across the table. I stepped back. Exactly one step. Enough.

I walked to the door and opened it.

He stood there a long time before he moved. I'll give him that. When he finally passed me, he smelled like her perfume — something soft and powdery, a scent I'd thought, for three years, was just the cleaner he used on his shirts.

I closed the door. I did not lock it yet. I wanted that for myself, later, when I could feel my hands again.

***

Blaire showed up at nine in the morning. I hadn't called her. She had two tote bags over one shoulder, a Le Creuset pot balanced on her hip, and the expression of a woman who had already decided several things on the cab ride over.

"Move," she said, and walked past me to the stove.

I watched her set the soup down. Watched her open my cabinets like she lived here, because for the next week she would. She ladled a bowl, set it in front of me, put the spoon in my hand, and closed my fingers around it.

She didn't ask. She didn't hug me. Blaire knew, the way Blaire always knew, that some griefs collapse if you touch them too soon.

She sat across from me. Poured herself coffee. Took one sip.

"Tell me everything," she said. "From the beginning."

The steam rose between us. Somewhere in the apartment Mochi was crying at a door that wouldn't open again.

I opened my mouth.

And I told her.

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