
After My Fiancé Slept with My Sister, I Sold Our House
Chapter 1
The taxi smells like pine air freshener and old leather, and I press my temple against the cool window as the city slides past in streaks of amber and gray. Eleven days. Eleven days of back-to-back client meetings in Houston, bad hotel coffee, and a mattress that felt like a slab of compressed disappointment. All I want is my couch, a glass of wine I actually chose, and silence that belongs to me.
I don't call ahead. Christian has a habit of turning a quiet evening into a production — candles he didn't light until he heard my key in the lock, dinner reservations made five minutes before I walked in the door. I've learned to prefer the unperformed version of things.
The cab pulls up to the house at 7:43 p.m. I know the time because I check my watch out of habit, the same way I check everything — receipts, contracts, the fine print at the bottom of pages other people skim. The house sits at the end of a tree-lined street in a neighborhood I chose, in a style I approved, on a mortgage I carry alone. Christian calls it "our home." I've never corrected him.
I pay the driver, haul my roller bag up the front path, and fit my key into the lock. The door swings open with the particular ease of a well-maintained hinge — I had them replaced last spring — and I drag my luggage into the entryway, letting it thump against the hardwood.
"Christian?" My voice is automatic, not expectant. I'm already thinking about the wine rack.
The living room light is on. I can hear something — a low sound, almost like murmuring — and I round the corner from the entryway with my coat still on, my bag still over my shoulder, my mind already three steps ahead in the direction of a hot shower.
Then I stop.
The couch. My couch, the slate-gray sectional I spent two weekends selecting, the one I had delivered on a Tuesday and assembled myself because Christian threw out his back conveniently the night before. On that couch, in the warm lamplight of the living room I painted last October, my fiancé and my sister are tangled together in a way that leaves absolutely nothing open to interpretation.
Alana's dark hair fans across Christian's shoulder. His hand is in it.
I don't scream. I don't drop anything. I simply stand in the doorway and feel something move through me — not heat, not the sharp spike of rage I might have expected, but something colder and far more final. Like a door closing somewhere deep in my chest. Like a lock turning.
I have spent eighteen years making sure Alana never went without. Eighteen years of double shifts and deferred dreams and a running spreadsheet I kept not out of resentment but out of the quiet, careful knowledge that records matter. I put her through school. I bought her winter coats. I told myself it was love, and maybe it was — but love, I am learning, does not immunize you from being consumed by the people you give it to.
Seven years with Christian. Seven years of building something I believed in, brick by careful brick.
They notice me at the same moment. Alana pulls back first, and I watch Christian's hand drop from her hair as he reaches up to adjust his glasses — a gesture I have seen a thousand times, always preceding something he knows is dishonest.
"Jenna." His voice carries the particular steadiness of a man who has rehearsed this. "I know how this looks. But this is — it's complicated. You have to understand that you and I have been disconnected for a long time. Your emotional unavailability—"
I hear the words. I register them the way you register background noise in a room where something important is happening elsewhere.
Alana's expression shifts into the soft, wounded configuration she has worn since childhood whenever she wanted something and needed someone else to feel responsible for giving it to her. Her voice, when it comes, is gentle. Careful. Devastating in its calculation.
"Jenna, please. We didn't want it to happen this way. But Christian and I — what we have is real." A pause, perfectly weighted. "You've always done the right thing. You've always taken care of me. I'm asking you to do that now. Step aside. Let us be happy. It's what a good sister would do."
The room is very quiet.
I look at her. I look at him. I take in the tableau of them on my couch, in my house, under the light I chose, and I feel the last eighteen years arrange themselves into a shape I can finally see clearly.
I don't say a word.
I pick up my bag, turn, and walk down the hall to my home office. The door closes behind me with a soft, definitive click. I turn the lock.
Then I sit down at my desk, open my laptop, and begin to make a list.
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