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After My Fiancé Stole Our Apartment Fund for His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Fiancé Stole Our Apartment Fund for His Mistress

The cursor blinked at me from the bank's transfer page, mocking. I'd typed in the routing number for the Manhattan apartment three times, my fingers steady despite the coffee I'd skipped that morning. Fifty thousand dollars. Three years of double shifts, skipped vacations, and homemade lunches packed in Tupperware. The down payment that would finally give Elliott and me a real home in the city. I hit confirm. The screen refreshed. My stomach dropped. Available Balance: $87.43. The apartment around me—our cramped one-bedroom in Queens with its perpetually dripping faucet—suddenly felt smaller.
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Chapter 1

The cursor blinked at me from the bank's transfer page, mocking. I'd typed in the routing number for the Manhattan apartment three times, my fingers steady despite the coffee I'd skipped that morning. Fifty thousand dollars. Three years of double shifts, skipped vacations, and homemade lunches packed in Tupperware. The down payment that would finally give Elliott and me a real home in the city.

I hit confirm.

The screen refreshed. My stomach dropped.

Available Balance: $87.43.

The apartment around me—our cramped one-bedroom in Queens with its perpetually dripping faucet—suddenly felt smaller. I refreshed the page. The number didn't change. My hands found the locket at my throat, the one with Dad's photo inside, and I pressed it hard enough to leave an indent.

The transaction history loaded in fragments. There it was: a single wire transfer dated two days ago. Recipient: Atelier Luxe Personal Shopping Services. Amount: $50,000.00.

I called Elliott four times. Voicemail. Voicemail. Voicemail. The fourth time, he picked up.

"Babe, I'm in a meeting."

"Where's the money?" My voice came out steadier than I felt.

A pause. Then that smooth, easy tone he used when explaining why he'd missed dinner again. "I borrowed it. It's an investment opportunity—guaranteed returns in a week. You'll thank me when we're putting down seventy-five thousand instead of fifty."

"You borrowed fifty thousand dollars without asking me?"

"I'm asking you to trust me." The edge in his voice was new. "This is why you're stuck in that accounting job, Isla. No vision. No risk tolerance."

The line went dead.

I sat there on our sagging couch, staring at the screen until the numbers blurred. The faucet dripped. Somewhere outside, a car alarm wailed.

---

The charity gala at the Plaza was Elliott's world, not mine. I'd borrowed a black dress from my coworker and stood near the bar, nursing a glass of champagne I couldn't taste. Crystal chandeliers threw fractured light across marble floors. Women in gowns that cost more than my car glided past, trailing perfume and laughter.

Elliott worked the room in his tailored suit, the one I'd helped him pick out last year. He moved like he belonged here, shaking hands with men whose faces I recognized from Forbes covers. His cologne—that expensive one he'd started wearing recently—reached me even from across the room.

Then she appeared.

Sabrina James cut through the crowd like a yacht through still water. Her dress was champagne silk, her dark hair swept into something artful and effortless. But it was the bag on her arm that stopped my breath.

Himalayan Hermès Birkin. Rare. White leather with diamond-encrusted hardware that caught the light like ice.

I knew that bag. I'd seen it in a magazine article about unattainable luxury. Fifty thousand dollars.

Elliott's face transformed when he saw her. Not the polite smile he gave investors. Something warmer. Hungry.

"Elliott!" Sabrina's voice carried, cultured and bright. She air-kissed both his cheeks, lingering. "I had to come thank my anonymous donor in person. This bag—" She held it up, turning it so the diamonds caught every eye in the vicinity. "It's a dream. Whoever sent it knows me so well."

Elliott's eyes found mine across the room. He raised his champagne glass, and his mouth curved into something that wasn't quite a smile.

A smirk.

The floor tilted. I set down my glass before I could drop it.

---

I caught him in a hallway lined with gilt-framed mirrors. My reflection looked pale, unfamiliar.

"We need to talk. Now."

Elliott glanced back toward the ballroom. "Isla, this isn't the time—"

"You spent my money on her."

"Our money. And I told you, it's an investment. Sabrina's family controls half the commercial real estate in Manhattan. One introduction from her is worth—"

"Fifty thousand dollars?"

Footsteps clicked behind us. Sabrina appeared, her smile perfectly calibrated between concern and condescension.

"Is everything alright?" She touched Elliott's arm, her fingers pale against his dark sleeve. "You look tense."

"We're fine," Elliott said, but he was already turning toward her, his body angling away from me.

He reached out to guide Sabrina back toward the gala. His sleeve rode up.

The tattoo was fresh, the skin around it still slightly red. Numbers inked in elegant script: 40.7580° N, 73.9855° W.

Coordinates.

My eyes dropped to Sabrina's ankle, visible through her strappy heels. The same numbers. The same fresh ink.

Something in my chest cracked. Not broke—that would come later. This was the first fracture, the one that would spread until everything shattered.

"How long?" My voice sounded far away.

Elliott's hand went to his cufflinks. Adjusted them. "Isla, you're being dramatic—"

I slapped him.

The sound echoed off marble. Sabrina gasped, stepping back. Elliott's head snapped to the side, and when he looked at me again, the mask was gone. His eyes were cold.

"We're done," I said. "Keep the investment. Keep her. Keep everything."

I walked past them both, past the ballroom where champagne still flowed and diamonds still glittered. Past the doorman who held the door with practiced invisibility.

Behind me, I heard Sabrina's voice, sweet as poison: "Elliott, darling, who was that?"

The November air hit my face like a slap I'd given myself. I kept walking.

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