
After My Fiancé Kissed His Assistant, I Left Him
Chapter 2
The morning Victor and Melody left for Chicago, I stood in our bedroom watching him adjust his tie in the mirror. He didn't look at me once.
"The car will be here in ten minutes," he said, straightening his cufflinks. "Make sure you remember to water the plants while I'm gone."
I nodded, my fingers unconsciously twisting the engagement ring that still felt foreign on my hand. Two days had passed since our confrontation about Melody's videos. Two days of icy silence and separate beds.
"I'll be back Friday," Victor added, finally meeting my eyes in the mirror. "We'll talk then."
Then he was gone, leaving only the lingering scent of his cologne and a hollow ache in my chest.
---
Two days later, I was curled up on the couch with a cup of tea, trying to focus on a book when my phone exploded with Victor's ringtone. I hesitated before answering.
"Maeve!" His voice was a thunderous roar that made me hold the phone away from my ear. "What the hell did you do?"
My heart hammered against my ribs. "What are you talking about?"
"Don't play innocent!" Victor's voice cracked with fury. "Melody's in the hospital! She had a severe allergic reaction!"
A cold wave washed over me. "I don't understand—"
"The suit jacket you packed!" he shouted. "She put it on during our meeting and within minutes she was struggling to breathe! They had to administer epinephrine!"
My fingers went numb around the phone. "Victor, I didn't—"
"She could have died!" His voice dropped to a dangerous whisper. "And you know what's funny? The doctors found traces of peanut dust in the jacket folds. Peanut dust, Maeve! You know she's deathly allergic to peanuts!"
The room spun around me. "I would never—"
"I've called the police," he cut me off. "They're coming to arrest you for attempted poisoning. For malicious intent. You'll be lucky if you don't spend time in jail for this."
The line went dead.
---
Twenty minutes later, two officers stood in our living room. One was young with kind eyes that couldn't quite mask his discomfort. The other was older with a face like carved granite.
"Ms. Harper?" the older one said. "We need you to come with us."
"I didn't do anything," I whispered as they led me toward the elevator. "This is a mistake."
The precinct was a fluorescent-lit nightmare. They put me in a small room with a metal table and chairs bolted to the floor. Detective Maria Rodriguez was a sharp-eyed woman who looked like she'd seen every trick in the book.
"Tell me about your relationship with Victor Anderson," she said, folding her hands on the table.
I stared at her, tears blurring my vision. "We're engaged. Or we were."
"And Melody Hill?"
My throat closed up. "His assistant."
Detective Rodriguez nodded slowly. "And the videos?"
I looked up sharply. "You know about them?"
"Social media has a way of leaving traces, Ms. Harper." She leaned forward. "So does physical evidence. We tested the jacket. The peanut dust was concentrated in specific areas—like someone had sprinkled it deliberately."
"I didn't touch her jacket," I said, my voice breaking. "I would never hurt anyone."
She studied me for a long moment. "The problem is, you had motive. The videos show a clear pattern of infidelity. Your fiancé accused you of jealousy. And now his assistant is in the hospital."
"I was leaving him," I whispered. "That's all."
---
Four hours later, they released me. No charges filed. No evidence beyond Victor's accusation. But the damage was done.
I stood on the sidewalk outside the precinct, my fingerprinted hands trembling as I clutched my phone. The afternoon sun felt too bright after the artificial lights inside.
My phone buzzed with a text from Victor: "You're finished in this city."
Something broke inside me then—something vital and irreparable.
I drove home in a daze, parked illegally outside our building, and took the elevator up. Our apartment felt like a museum of someone else's life.
I packed only what mattered—clothes, my laptop, the journals I'd kept for years. I left the engagement ring on the kitchen counter where he'd be sure to see it.
Then I got in my car and headed north.
The city fell away behind me, its gray towers giving way to green hills and open sky. Each mile put distance between me and the nightmare of the past few days.
Vermont wasn't just a place. It was safety. It was my best friend Dakota's warm house with its crooked porch swing and garden full of sunflowers.
As I crossed the state line, my phone lit up with Victor's number. I watched it ring until it stopped, then blocked his number with shaking fingers.
The road stretched ahead of me, winding through forests just beginning to turn autumn colors. For the first time in days, I took a deep breath that didn't hurt.
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