
After Catching My Fiancé’s Affair, I Planned His Downfall
Chapter 3
I found the photo in a box Thiago kept on the top shelf of our closet — the one he never touched, the one I'd never asked about. His college graduation. He was twenty-two, squinting into the sun, and Paula had her arm around him like she was afraid someone might try to take him. She looked so proud it almost hurt to look at.
I had it professionally restored and reframed. Matte black frame, archival glass. The kind of thing you do for something that matters.
I also picked up a cashmere scarf in the dusty rose I'd seen Paula admire in a shop window three weeks ago when we'd all had brunch together. She'd touched it and put it back without checking the price tag, which told me everything. And the Dutch oven — a Le Creuset in the sage green she'd mentioned twice in passing, once to Thiago and once to me, the kind of thing a woman mentions when she's given up expecting anyone to actually listen.
I had listened.
I showed up at her door on a Wednesday afternoon with everything wrapped and a smile that cost me nothing.
Paula opened the door and her face did exactly what I needed it to do.
'Daniella.' She said my name like it was a gift. 'What is all this?'
'I was in the neighborhood,' I said. 'And I found something I thought you'd want.'
I stayed for three hours.
I deferred to her opinions on everything — the neighborhood, the new restaurant on her block, whether Thiago worked too hard. I laughed at her stories about him in high school, the ones I'd heard before, and made sure she couldn't tell. I asked about her sister's health. I remembered the sister's name.
When I unwrapped the photo and handed it to her, Paula went very still. Her fingers moved over the frame like she was reading something in braille.
'He was so young,' she said quietly.
'He looked so happy,' I said. 'You both did.'
She looked up at me with something wet in her eyes and I held her gaze, warm and steady, and thought: there it is.
By the time I left, she was already texting him. I saw the notification light up on her phone as I pulled on my coat. I didn't need to read it. I knew what it said.
---
The Sunday dinners became a ritual.
I treated them like client deliverables — researched, calibrated, executed without visible effort. Roast chicken with herbs from the farmers' market. Braised short ribs that took four hours. A lemon tart I made from scratch because Paula had once mentioned her mother used to make one.
Every week I adjusted the temperature. Warm enough to keep Paula pushing. Not so hot that Thiago felt the walls moving in before I was ready.
It was working. I could hear it in the way Paula talked to him now — the pointed questions about the future, the comments about how a man his age should be thinking about settling down, the way she looked at me across the table with unmistakable approval. She had decided I was the right woman for her son. She was going to make sure he knew it.
Thiago started to look slightly hunted at Sunday dinners. Just slightly. He'd catch his mother's eye and then look at me and I'd smile at him over my wine glass, easy and unhurried, and he'd relax again.
Good, I thought. Feel the warmth. Don't look down.
---
The bar anniversary was a Lower East Side institution — loud, crowded, the kind of place where the drinks were strong and everyone talked too much. Our friend group had been coming here for three years, which apparently warranted a celebration, which apparently warranted a private table in the back and a bottle of something expensive.
I wore a black dress and my hair down. I sat next to Thiago and laughed at the right moments and kept my hand on his arm the way I always did, the way that looked like affection and felt like nothing at all.
Dorian arrived twenty minutes late, which was on time for him. He dropped into the seat across from me, caught my eye for exactly one second, and then turned to the table like nothing had passed between us.
Halfway through the night, he reached under the table and produced a bag.
Not just a bag. The bag — the limited-edition one that had sold out in forty minutes and was currently reselling for three times retail. Ivory canvas, the signature hardware, the kind of thing that made women stop mid-sentence.
He set it on the table in front of me.
'From Thiago,' he said, with a smile so clean it was almost admirable. 'He asked me to hold onto it. Didn't want to carry it all night.'
Every head at the table turned.
I looked at Thiago. His face had gone very still — the particular stillness of a man who has just been handed a grenade and told to smile about it.
I performed surprise beautifully. My hand went to my mouth. My eyes went wide. 'Thiago.' I said his name like it meant something. 'This is — when did you —'
'I've been planning it,' he said, because what else could he say.
I leaned over and kissed his cheek and felt him exhale.
Across the table, Kylie had gone very quiet. I didn't look at her directly. I didn't need to. I could feel it — the way the air around her had changed, gone tight and brittle. She was staring at the bag the way people stare at things they've decided they deserve more than you do.
Dorian refilled his glass and said nothing, and the corner of his mouth did something that wasn't quite a smile.
---
Simone texted me at 9:47 the next morning.
Heard something last night. Thin walls in that back hallway. K went after T about the bag. Got loud. She wanted to know why he never does that for her. He told her she was being ridiculous. She said she was done being careful. He told her she had too much to lose.
I read it twice. Then I typed: Thanks. How are you feeling about the Hendricks thing?
We moved on. That was how it worked.
I set my phone face-down and looked out the window at the city, gray and bright at the same time, and thought about Kylie's face when she'd seen that bag. The way composure had cracked right down the middle, just for a second, before she'd pulled it back.
A fracture. Small, but real.
I opened the notes app. Added a line under the date.
Then I picked up my coffee and went back to work.
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