
After My Fiancé Kissed His Assistant, I Left Him
Chapter 4
The bell above the coffee shop door jingled as I settled into my favorite corner seat. Three days in Vermont had begun to heal something inside me—the constant knot in my stomach had loosened slightly. I opened my laptop, fingers hovering over the keyboard. For the first time in years, I was writing for myself, not for Victor's approval.
The caffeine hadn't even kicked in when the bell jangled again. The sound was followed by a silence that made my skin prickle.
"Maeve."
Victor's voice sliced through the coffee shop's cozy atmosphere. I looked up slowly, my hands freezing over the keyboard.
He stood there in his charcoal designer suit, looking like he'd stepped out of a Manhattan boardroom rather than into a Vermont coffee shop with its mismatched chairs and local artwork. His eyes scanned the room with barely concealed contempt before landing on me.
"What are you doing here?" I managed, my voice smaller than I intended.
"What am I doing here?" He laughed, the sound sharp and humorless. "I'm here to bring you home."
I glanced around nervously. The barista had stopped wiping the counter, two other customers had paused their conversations.
"This isn't the place," I said quietly.
Victor ignored me, striding across the room until he towered over my table. "Did you think you could just run away? After everything I've done for you?"
My heart hammered against my ribs. "Victor, please—"
"Please what?" His voice rose. "Please forgive you for sleeping with some hillbilly to make yourself feel better about being a failure?"
Heat rushed to my face. "That's not what happened."
"Then what is this?" He snatched my phone from the table, holding it up. "You've been posting pictures with him all over social media."
Before I could respond, his hand clamped around my wrist, yanking me toward the door. "We're going home. Now."
Panic flooded my system. I couldn't move, couldn't speak. My body remembered too well what happened when I defied him.
"That's not happening."
Zane's voice cut through my paralysis. He stood in the doorway, his tall frame blocking the exit. His eyes flicked to Victor's hand on my wrist, then back to Victor's face.
"Who the hell are you?" Victor demanded, his grip tightening.
"Zane Harvey." He stepped forward, his voice calm but firm. "Maeve's boyfriend."
The word 'boyfriend' hung in the air between us. I felt Victor's grip loosen slightly as he processed this information.
"Boyfriend?" Victor's laugh was ugly. "Is that what you're calling him now?"
Zane moved closer, positioning himself between us. "I'm calling myself whatever will make you back off and leave her alone."
Victor's jaw clenched. "Do you have any idea who I am?"
"I know exactly who you are," Zane replied evenly. "And I know you're not welcome here."
For a moment, Victor's face contorted with rage. Then something shifted in his expression—calculation replacing anger.
"This isn't over," he said, stepping back. "We'll discuss this privately, Maeve."
As he brushed past Zane, I caught the murderous look in his eyes.
---
Dakota's living room was bathed in the soft glow of lamplight as I finished telling them everything. The words had poured out of me like blood from a wound—all the years of ghostwriting Victor's pitches, crafting his words, building his reputation while receiving no credit.
"He never wrote a single winning pitch," I said, my voice hoarse. "Every client, every deal—they were all mine."
Dakota's eyes were wide with shock. "Maeve, why didn't you tell me?"
"I don't know." I laughed bitterly. "Maybe because I convinced myself it was love."
Zane leaned forward, his expression fierce. "That's not love. That's exploitation."
"He'll never admit it," I whispered. "No one would believe me anyway."
"Then make them believe you," Zane said firmly. "Reclaim your work. Your voice. Your story."
I stared at him, something stirring in my chest—not hope exactly, but perhaps its precursor.
"How?" I asked.
Zane's eyes held mine. "Start by stopping hiding."
The words settled over me like a challenge. For five years, I'd been invisible, writing in shadows. Maybe it was time to step into the light.
But first, I needed to face Victor one last time.
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