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After My Fiancé Chose His Mistress, I Married His Rival Novel Cover

After My Fiancé Chose His Mistress, I Married His Rival

The morning sunlight streamed through the tall windows of the bridal suite, casting a golden glow over the ivory lace of my wedding gown. I ran my fingers along the intricate train, admiring how the delicate patterns caught the light. After three years of planning, tomorrow I would finally become Mrs. Christopher Zhou. "Perfect," I whispered, a smile playing on my lips as I snapped a photo of the dress for my final pre-wedding social media update. The luxury venue in downtown Seattle had exceeded all my expectations—crystal chandeliers suspended from vaulted ceilings, marble floors polished to a mirror shine, and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Elliott Bay. I reached for my phone, quickly typing a message to my florist. *Can we add more rose petals for the aisle? I'm thinking a denser scatter near the altar.* The response came almost immediately: *Absolutely, Stella! We'll make sure it's perfect.* Perfect.
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Chapter 2

My phone buzzed against the hotel nightstand, its vibration seeming to echo the trembling in my chest. I stared at the screen, expecting Christopher's name—perhaps some pathetic attempt to explain away his betrayal. Instead, James Sterling's name flashed across my screen.

James Sterling. My childhood nemesis. The boy who'd pulled my pigtails in third grade and then somehow always managed to beat me at every science fair through high school. The man who'd made that ridiculous bet with me three years ago, his eyes glinting with that infuriating confidence as he'd said, "If you're still unmarried by twenty-five, Stella Wang, you're marrying me instead."

I almost declined the call but found myself answering anyway.

"I saw your Instagram post," James said without preamble, his voice deep and sure. "Tomorrow's your twenty-fifth birthday."

"James, I'm not in the mood for—"

"A bet's a bet, Stella." Something in his tone made me pause. There wasn't a hint of mockery or triumph—just calm certainty. "I'll be your groom tomorrow."

I laughed, the sound brittle even to my own ears. "You can't be serious."

"Deadly serious." No hesitation. No humor. "You need a groom. I'm stepping up."

"This isn't some childhood game anymore, James. My life just imploded." My voice cracked despite my best efforts.

"Which is exactly why I'm not letting you face this alone." His voice softened slightly. "Meet me at the elementary school playground. One hour. We need to talk face to face."

He hung up before I could respond. Typical James—always had to have the last word.

I sat frozen, staring at my phone. The absurdity of the situation struck me suddenly, and I laughed until tears streamed down my face. My fiancé had just left me for his pregnant sister, and now my childhood rival was offering to marry me instead.

What kind of cosmic joke was this?

* * *

I needed clothes. My wedding dress hung mockingly in the hotel closet, but everything else was still at the downtown loft I shared with Christopher. The thought of facing him made my stomach churn, but I needed my things if I was going to meet James—or do anything else with what remained of my life.

The drive to our—no, Christopher's—loft passed in a blur of city lights and unshed tears. I parked in my usual spot, wondering if Christopher had already changed the security code. He hadn't. The elevator ride to the twelfth floor felt like ascending to my own execution.

I slid my key into the lock, hoping irrationally that the apartment would be empty. It wasn't.

Laughter—his laughter—drifted from the living room. I stepped inside quietly, some masochistic part of me needing to see it with my own eyes.

Christopher and Anna sat on our gray sectional sofa—the one I'd spent weeks selecting. Her legs were draped casually over his lap, her hand resting on her still-flat stomach. Between them lay an open book with pastel illustrations of baby cribs and mobiles.

"What about Elijah if it's a boy?" Anna was saying, her voice light and happy. "It means 'Jehovah is God.'"

Christopher's fingers traced circles on her ankle. "I like it. Add it to the list."

They hadn't noticed me yet, standing in the shadow of the entryway. They looked... comfortable. At home. As if I had never existed.

I slipped past the living room toward the bedroom, grateful that our open floor plan included a hallway that shielded me from their view. I grabbed a suitcase from the closet and mechanically filled it with essentials—clothes, toiletries, important documents.

On my way out, I paused in the kitchen. Something felt wrong. The wine rack stood empty—Christopher must have moved my collection. But there was something else...

My father's chef knives. The hand-forged set he'd left me when he died, his way of blessing my secret passion for cooking even as I pursued my marketing career. They weren't in their wooden block.

A sick feeling washed over me. I glanced toward the living room, where Christopher and Anna remained oblivious to my presence, then quietly slipped out the front door and took the service elevator down to the alley where the building's dumpsters stood.

The first dumpster contained nothing but regular trash. The second one made my heart stop.

There, tossed carelessly among pizza boxes and wilted flowers—probably from our canceled rehearsal dinner—lay my father's knife collection. The hand-carved wooden case was cracked, the blades scattered and exposed to the elements.

I stared at them, these precious extensions of my father's hands, now discarded like they meant nothing. Like I meant nothing.

Something inside me hardened, a protective shell forming around my wounded heart. I carefully gathered each knife, returning them to their damaged case. These knives had survived my father's death. They would survive this too.

As I closed the dumpster, my phone buzzed with a text from James: "I'm waiting."

I clutched my father's knife case to my chest and walked toward my car, leaving behind the remnants of a life that had been built on lies. Ahead of me lay an elementary school playground and a childhood bet that suddenly felt like my only lifeline.

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