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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 5

The video went up at 8:47 on a Friday night.

I know because I was at my kitchen table with the Meridian contract open, reviewing the brand guidelines Elena had sent over, when my phone started buzzing in a way that meant more than one notification. More than five. The kind of buzzing that means something has already caught fire.

Blaire saw it first. She was on the couch with her laptop, and I heard the specific silence that meant she was reading something she didn't want to read out loud yet.

'Dani.'

'I see it.'

Same setup as before. Same cream linen background. Same careful lighting that made her look like she was posing for a grief documentary. But this time Juliet had upgraded — longer, more deliberate, the kind of video you script in advance and film four times until the tears hit at exactly the right moment.

She didn't say my name. She didn't have to.

She talked about stress. About what prolonged harassment does to a woman's body. She pressed one hand flat against her stomach — just for a moment, just briefly, the way you do when you want the audience to arrive at a conclusion you're not technically stating.

Then she said it. Soft. Almost reluctant. Like it was something she hadn't planned to share.

She was pregnant.

The comments detonated.

I read three of them. Just three. A woman I'd never heard of called me a homewrecker. Another said *she's literally carrying his baby and you're out here playing victim.* A third was just my full name, tagged, shared to a page I'd never seen.

I closed the app.

I picked up my phone and called Blaire, even though she was sitting eight feet away from me.

She answered on the first ring.

'She just made her biggest mistake,' I said.

Blaire looked at me across the apartment. Her jaw was set. Her eyes were already thinking.

'Yeah,' she said. 'She did.'

***

We worked through the night.

Blaire had a contact — someone from her years at a media company, the kind of person who knew which photos ran where and when. By eleven-thirty, she had confirmed what the archive had already suggested: Nathaniel Reed had been photographed at an international finance conference in Singapore. Timestamped. Published. Verifiable by anyone with a search engine and thirty seconds.

The dates didn't lie. The conception window Juliet's timeline required simply didn't exist.

I pulled up the stairwell recording. I had listened to it twice in four days, which was two times more than I ever wanted to. I listened to it again now, not because I needed to, but because I needed to remember exactly what we were working with.

*Juliet. Please. Just sign the papers. I've waited three years. I can't keep doing this — she thinks I'm going to marry her.*

Caiden's voice. Stripped raw. Every syllable of it a confirmation that whatever Juliet was claiming, the geography of their relationship for the past three years had not allowed for what she was implying.

I built the document carefully. Timestamped screenshots down the left margin. The Singapore conference photos, sourced and credited. The stairwell audio, transcribed with exact timestamps. Juliet's four DM accounts, their escalation pattern mapped in chronological order. The original likes — 2:17 a.m., moving backward through my life — cross-referenced against the dates she claimed she'd been the one under siege.

I wrote the statement in plain language. No flourishes. No performance. Just the sequence of events, the evidence, and the math that didn't add up.

By two in the morning, it was done.

I closed my laptop.

'We're not releasing it yet,' I said.

Blaire was still at the coffee table, both hands around a mug that had been empty for an hour. She nodded slowly. 'Waiting for what?'

'The right moment.' I stacked the papers neatly. 'She's not done escalating. We don't respond to the opening move.'

Blaire looked at me for a second. Then she leaned back against the couch cushions with the look of someone who has just confirmed something they already suspected.

'Okay,' she said. 'We wait.'

***

The right moment came two days later, at 5:12 on a Tuesday afternoon.

I stepped out of the elevator into the marble lobby of my office building, portfolio under one arm, thinking about the color revision Elena had flagged in the morning meeting. The lobby was doing its usual end-of-day thing — people moving through in clusters, the security desk busy, the revolving door spinning.

She was standing near the far column.

Juliet Reed. In person, finally, after weeks of existing only as a profile photo and a voice in a stairwell I was never supposed to enter.

She was wearing a pale green dress that cost more than my first freelance check. Sunglasses — indoors, in the lobby, at five in the afternoon. Beside her, one hand on the small of her back, stood a young man. Early twenties. Visibly attractive in the way of someone who had recently been told so. She had arranged them both with the precision of a woman who understood sight lines.

She was smiling at me. That gentle, practiced smile. The one that said *I've already won* in a language that required no translation.

I stopped walking.

I looked at her. Not at the man. Not at the dress. At her. For exactly as long as I needed to.

I saw what she'd done with the outfit. The green that was designed to make her look effortless. The sunglasses that said *I'm unbothered* while broadcasting the opposite. The man beside her who was supposed to make me feel replaced, or threatened, or small — some feeling that would show on my face in a lobby full of witnesses.

All that effort. All of it aimed at me.

'You wore that outfit for me,' I said. 'That's more attention than I'll ever give you.'

I walked past her. Through the revolving door. Onto the sidewalk where the city was doing its ordinary, indifferent Tuesday.

I didn't look back.

Behind me, the door kept spinning.

My phone was in my pocket. The document was saved, archived, ready. Blaire had her finger on it.

Juliet Reed had just given us exactly what we needed.

Now we wait for the right room.

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