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After Leaving My Fiancé, I Found True Love Novel Cover

After Leaving My Fiancé, I Found True Love

I smoothed down the pale chiffon of my gown for the hundredth time, forcing another smile as I greeted yet another of Ryan's business associates whose name I'd forget the moment they walked away. The Sterling name had drawn Manhattan's elite to the top floor of this gleaming skyscraper, where floor-to-ceiling windows showcased the city lights like stars you could almost touch. This should have been the happiest night of my life—our engagement party, the official announcement that after ten years, Ryan Sterling was finally making good on a childhood promise. But something was wrong. I could feel it in the pit of my stomach. "Madison, darling, you look absolutely stunning," cooed one of Ryan's aunts, air-kissing both my cheeks. "Though perhaps a touch too pale. Wedding jitters already?" I managed a laugh that sounded hollow even to my own ears. "Just excited, I suppose." My eyes scanned the crowded room again. Ryan was now forty-five minutes late to our own engagement party.
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Chapter 1

I smoothed down the pale chiffon of my gown for the hundredth time, forcing another smile as I greeted yet another of Ryan's business associates whose name I'd forget the moment they walked away. The Sterling name had drawn Manhattan's elite to the top floor of this gleaming skyscraper, where floor-to-ceiling windows showcased the city lights like stars you could almost touch. This should have been the happiest night of my life—our engagement party, the official announcement that after ten years, Ryan Sterling was finally making good on a childhood promise.

But something was wrong. I could feel it in the pit of my stomach.

"Madison, darling, you look absolutely stunning," cooed one of Ryan's aunts, air-kissing both my cheeks. "Though perhaps a touch too pale. Wedding jitters already?"

I managed a laugh that sounded hollow even to my own ears. "Just excited, I suppose."

My eyes scanned the crowded room again. Ryan was now forty-five minutes late to our own engagement party. I'd called him six times, each call going straight to voicemail. The whispers had already started—subtle glances, the slight raising of eyebrows, the way conversations hushed when I approached.

Finally, the elevator doors opened, and there he was—tall, impeccably dressed in a tailored black suit, his dark hair perfectly styled. My heart leaped, then immediately sank. Ryan wasn't looking for me. He was deep in conversation with his father, Arthur Sterling, their expressions serious and closed off. I watched as Ryan nodded curtly at whatever instruction his father was giving him before they separated, Arthur heading straight for the bar while Ryan greeted his business partners.

I took a step toward him, but a waiter appeared with a tray of champagne, momentarily blocking my path. By the time I navigated around him, Ryan had disappeared into the crowd again. My fingers rubbed against each other in that old habit I couldn't break—phantom piano keys, playing music I hadn't touched in years.

The champagne reception was in full swing when I finally spotted Ryan across the room. He was surrounded by his groomsmen, all laughing at something. I started making my way toward him when a flash of light caught my eye—a brilliant sparkle from a woman's wrist as she gestured animatedly. I froze, my heart stuttering painfully in my chest.

It couldn't be.

But it was. The Sterling family's ancestral diamond bracelet—a piece traditionally worn by the family matriarch, passed down through generations, and meant to be presented to me tonight as a symbol of my acceptance into the family—glittered on the slender wrist of Sienna Vance, a woman I recognized from Ryan's office events. Her red dress clung to every curve, her glossy dark hair cascading down her back as she laughed up at my fiancé with a familiarity that made my stomach turn.

The room suddenly felt too hot, too crowded. I couldn't breathe. Murmuring excuses to people who called my name, I slipped away toward the balcony, desperate for air that wasn't thick with perfume and betrayal.

The cool night air hit my flushed skin, bringing momentary relief. I gripped the railing, trying to steady my trembling hands. Before I could collect my thoughts, voices drifted through the partially open door behind me.

"—quite the show you're putting on," came a male voice I didn't recognize. "Bringing your mistress to your engagement party? Bold move, Sterling."

"It's not like Madison notices anything beyond her desperate need to please me," Ryan's voice replied, the casual cruelty in his tone slicing through me like a blade. "Besides, Sienna knows how to wear that bracelet properly. Look at her—class, sophistication. Everything Madison tries so hard to be and fails."

Someone else chuckled. "Still, man. Ten years is a long time to string someone along."

"If it weren't for repaying a debt of gratitude to her family, I would never marry her," Ryan said, his voice dropping lower. "It's business. Always has been."

I turned just in time to see him through the gap in the curtains, taking Sienna's hand, his thumb caressing the very bracelet that should have been mine. He leaned down and whispered something in her ear that made her laugh, then kissed her—not a friendly peck, but the kind of kiss that spoke of intimacy and possession.

Ten years of devotion shattered in an instant. The realization crashed over me like a wave, washing away a decade of willful blindness. I'd sacrificed everything—my music, my dreams, my self-respect—for a man who saw me as nothing more than an obligation.

Something shifted inside me. The pain was still there, raw and bleeding, but beneath it rose something else: rage. Pure, clarifying rage.

I straightened my spine, wiped the tears I hadn't realized were falling, and walked back into the party with purpose. I spotted Ryan immediately, now standing with a group of investors, Sienna nowhere in sight. I walked directly to him, took the champagne flute from his hand, and dropped my engagement ring into it with a soft 'plink.'

"Madison, what the hell—" he started, but I was already turning away.

"It's over, Ryan," I said, my voice steadier than I'd expected. "I'm done."

Arthur Sterling appeared at his son's side, his face thunderous. "Young lady, you cannot possibly—"

But I was already walking away, deaf to their protests and the sudden hush that had fallen over the party. I pulled out my phone and with shaking fingers booked a one-way ticket to Portland—home. The place I should never have left.

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