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After My Fiancé's Affair, I Realized He's Not the One Novel Cover

After My Fiancé's Affair, I Realized He's Not the One

The delivery receipt sat on the kitchen counter like a coiled snake, innocent white paper that shouldn't have meant anything at all. I picked it up while wiping down the counters after breakfast, barely glancing at it initially. Just another piece of Byron's work clutter that had migrated home in his laptop bag. But something made me look twice. The name of a bakery I didn't recognize. An address near his office. A date from three weeks ago. Sweet pancakes with maple syrup and whipped cream. Delivered daily for the past month. My hand stilled on the counter, the cleaning cloth forgotten.
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Chapter 1

The delivery receipt sat on the kitchen counter like a coiled snake, innocent white paper that shouldn't have meant anything at all.

I picked it up while wiping down the counters after breakfast, barely glancing at it initially. Just another piece of Byron's work clutter that had migrated home in his laptop bag. But something made me look twice. The name of a bakery I didn't recognize. An address near his office. A date from three weeks ago.

Sweet pancakes with maple syrup and whipped cream. Delivered daily for the past month.

My hand stilled on the counter, the cleaning cloth forgotten. The baby kicked—a small flutter against my ribs that I'd grown used to over the past five months. I pressed my palm against the swell of my stomach, feeling suddenly cold despite the warmth of our sunny kitchen.

I hated sweet breakfast foods. Always had. Byron knew this. Seven years together, and he'd watched me order eggs and bacon, toast with butter, hash browns with salt and pepper a thousand times. I'd never once reached for pancakes drowning in syrup, never craved the sticky sweetness that some people loved in the morning.

So why had he been ordering them?

The receipt trembled slightly in my fingers. I read it again, slower this time, as if the words might rearrange themselves into something less suspicious. But no—there it was, clear as daylight. Thirty days of sweet pancakes. Thirty mornings of someone who wasn't me.

I should have thrown it away. Should have convinced myself there was a reasonable explanation. Maybe he was treating his entire team. Maybe it was for client meetings. Maybe, maybe, maybe.

But I couldn't make myself believe it.

That evening, I made his favorite dinner—pot roast with roasted vegetables, the kind of meal that usually made him smile and kiss my forehead in thanks. He ate with his usual enthusiasm, scrolling through his phone between bites, completely at ease. Normal. Everything was so devastatingly normal.

"How's work been?" I asked, keeping my voice light as I pushed carrots around my plate. The baby had killed my appetite hours ago, or maybe it was the knot of anxiety that had been growing in my chest since I found that receipt.

Byron looked up, fork paused halfway to his mouth. "Same old. You know how it is. Meetings, deadlines, the usual chaos."

"Are you eating okay during the day?" I tried to make it sound casual, wifely concern instead of interrogation. "You've been leaving so early lately. I worry you're skipping breakfast."

He smiled at me, that familiar warm smile that had made me fall in love with him seven years ago. "I'm trying to be healthier, actually. Been getting fruit and yogurt at the office. Maybe some granola. Nothing too heavy."

The lie rolled off his tongue so smoothly that for a moment, I almost believed him. Almost forgot about the receipt burning a hole in my purse upstairs.

"That's good," I heard myself say. "I'm glad you're taking care of yourself."

We finished dinner in comfortable silence, and I hated how easy it was for him to deceive me. How practiced he seemed. How many other lies had I swallowed without question?

Later that night, after he'd kissed my cheek and headed for the shower, I sat on the edge of our bed and listened to the water running. My heart hammered against my ribs, each beat seeming to echo the baby's restless movements. Seven years. We'd been together for seven years. We were supposed to be getting married in three months. Our baby was due in four.

And he was lying to me about breakfast.

His phone sat on the nightstand, face down like it always was lately. I'd never been the type to snoop. Never needed to be. Trust had been the foundation of everything we'd built together.

But trust was a luxury I could no longer afford.

My hand shook as I reached for it. The shower was still running—I had time. Just a quick look. Just to prove myself wrong, to laugh at my own paranoia and go back to planning our wedding.

The phone unlocked with his passcode, the one he'd never changed, the one he'd given me years ago when we first moved in together. See? my mind tried to rationalize. If he was really hiding something, he would have changed it.

I opened his messages.

Tiffany S. was the third name down, right below mine and his mother's. The preview showed a message from this morning: "Thanks for breakfast again! You're spoiling me 😊"

The bathroom door was still closed. The shower still running. I had time.

I tapped the conversation open.

Weeks of messages flooded the screen. Good morning texts. Inside jokes I didn't understand. Discussions about movies I'd never heard him mention. And there, buried in the thread from two weeks ago: "I love how you remember I like sweet pancakes. Byron never pays attention to the little things like you do."

Except Byron was the one who'd sent that message thread. And someone named Tiffany had replied: "That's because I actually care about what makes you happy. 💕"

The phone slipped from my fingers onto the comforter. The shower shut off in the bathroom, and I heard Byron humming—actually humming—as he toweled off.

I looked down at my pregnant belly, at the engagement ring on my finger that suddenly felt like it weighed a thousand pounds, and something inside me cracked wide open.

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