
After My Fiancé's Affair, I Realized He's Not the One
Chapter 2
I didn't sleep that night.
I lay beside Byron in our bed, feeling the space between us like a canyon even though our bodies were only inches apart. He slept peacefully, his breathing deep and even, completely unaware that I'd just excavated the ruins of our seven-year relationship on his phone. The baby kicked restlessly against my ribs, as if sensing my turmoil. I pressed my hand against the movement, whispering silently that everything would be okay, even though I had no idea if that was true.
The ultrasound photo sat on my nightstand, the one from last week's appointment. Byron had squeezed my hand when we first saw the tiny profile, heard the rapid heartbeat filling the examination room. He'd kissed my temple and said he couldn't wait to meet our daughter. Our daughter. The words had made me cry happy tears then.
Now they just made me feel sick.
I stared at that grainy black-and-white image in the darkness, at the curve of a small nose and the bump of a tiny fist, and something hardened inside my chest. This baby deserved better than a father who could lie so smoothly over pot roast. Better than a mother who would accept betrayal for the sake of keeping the peace.
I deserved better too.
By the time dawn filtered through our curtains, I'd made my decision. I needed to see it with my own eyes. Needed to watch him interact with this Tiffany woman who loved sweet pancakes and heart emojis. Phone messages could be explained away, rationalized, minimized. But seeing them together—that would be undeniable truth.
Byron's alarm went off at six-thirty. I kept my eyes closed, listening to him shuffle around the bedroom, getting dressed for work. He kissed my forehead before leaving, his lips gentle against my skin. "Love you," he murmured. "Have a good day."
The words that used to fill me with warmth now felt like shards of glass.
"You too," I managed to say, my voice thick with fake sleep.
After the front door clicked shut, I lay there for another ten minutes, listening to the silence of our empty apartment. Then I got up and started getting ready.
I chose my outfit carefully—a fitted navy dress that showed my pregnancy clearly, paired with the necklace Byron had given me for our sixth anniversary. I wanted him to see exactly what he was risking. Wanted this Tiffany to see the pregnant fiancée she was helping him betray.
I made lunch around eleven—nothing elaborate, just a sandwich and fruit, the kind of simple meal I'd brought to his office dozens of times before. My hands were steady as I packed it into a brown bag, though my heart felt like it might beat its way out of my chest.
The drive to his office took twenty minutes through late-morning traffic. I'd been there countless times—dropping off forgotten files, meeting him for lunch dates, attending the company holiday party where everyone had congratulated us on our engagement and upcoming baby. His colleagues knew me. His boss had shaken my hand and said Byron was lucky to have found someone so supportive.
I wondered if they knew about Tiffany too. If they'd watched it develop and said nothing. If I'd been the only one blind to what was happening right under my nose.
The parking garage was half-empty. I found a spot near the elevator and sat for a moment, gripping the steering wheel, trying to steady my breathing. The baby shifted, pressing against my bladder, reminding me that I wasn't just doing this for myself anymore.
Inside the building, the elevator felt too small, too bright. I watched the floor numbers climb—three, four, five—and with each one, my pulse quickened. What would I find when those doors opened? Byron bent over Tiffany's desk, sharing some private joke? His hand on her shoulder? His smile, the one I'd thought belonged to me, directed at someone else?
The elevator chimed. Sixth floor.
I stepped out into the familiar hallway, my heels clicking against polished tile. The lunch bag felt heavy in my hand. Through the glass walls of the office, I could see the usual bustle—people at desks, someone at the printer, the soft glow of computer monitors.
And there, near the back corner by the windows, I saw him.
Byron stood beside a desk where a young woman sat, her dark hair pulled into a high ponytail. She was laughing at something he'd said, her head tilted back, her hand resting on his arm. He leaned closer, pointing at something on her computer screen, and even from this distance, I could see the easy intimacy between them. The way they occupied each other's space like they'd done it a thousand times before.
My feet moved forward on their own, carrying me through the glass doors, into the office that suddenly felt like foreign territory. Someone called out a greeting—Janet from accounting, maybe—but I didn't respond. Couldn't. All my focus had narrowed to that corner desk, to my fiancé standing too close to a woman who wasn't me.
Byron looked up as I approached. For one crystalline second, I watched his expression cycle through surprise, confusion, and then something that might have been fear. His hand dropped from Tiffany's shoulder.
"Madison," he said, and my name sounded wrong in his mouth, like he'd forgotten how to say it properly. "What are you doing here?"
I stopped a few feet away, very aware of every eye in the office turning toward us. The lunch bag dangled from my fingers. My other hand moved instinctively to rest on my pregnant belly, and I saw Tiffany's gaze drop to it, her smile faltering.
"I brought you lunch," I said quietly. My voice was steady, which surprised me. "I thought we could eat together. Unless you already have plans?"
The silence that followed felt thick enough to drown in.
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