
After My Fiancé's Betrayal, I Became His Worst Nightmare
Chapter 2
I stared at Zach, his cold calculation finally revealing the stranger I'd been loving all these years. The hollowness in my chest gave way to something else—something hot and unfamiliar. Rage.
"Get out," I whispered, my voice steadier than I'd expected.
"Don't be dramatic, Vivian." He adjusted his cufflinks, barely looking at me. "We need to handle this rationally."
"I said get out!" I grabbed the nearest object—a crystal paperweight my father had given me—and hurled it at the wall beside him. It shattered spectacularly, tiny fragments catching the light like diamonds. Like the engagement ring I'd never receive.
Zach's eyes widened, his composure finally cracking. "You're hysterical. This isn't like you."
"You have no idea who I am," I realized, the truth of it washing over me like a wave. "And neither did I, until tonight."
I moved toward the door, holding it open. "Leave. Now. We're done."
When he finally left, I collapsed against the door, Snowball pressing his warm body against my legs. My hands trembled as I pulled out my phone, scrolling past dozens of concerned messages until I found the name I needed.
Michael.
He answered on the first ring. "Viv? Are you okay? I just heard—"
"Can you come over?" My voice broke. "Please?"
"I'm already on my way."
Thirty minutes later, Michael sat beside me on the balcony of my suite, the city lights glittering below us like a universe of distant stars. He hadn't asked questions, hadn't offered platitudes. He'd simply brought coffee (real coffee, not the pretentious blends Zach insisted on), and his steady, comforting presence.
"I've ended things with Zach," I said finally, watching steam curl from my mug. "And Heather... God, all these years..."
"I'm so sorry, Viv." His voice was gentle, but there was steel beneath it. "What they did was unforgivable."
I looked at him then—really looked at him. Michael Bennett had been in my life forever, a constant I'd somehow never fully seen. His kind eyes, the slight worry line between his brows, the way he leaned toward me slightly, attentive but never invasive.
"Why did you come tonight?" I asked suddenly.
He looked surprised. "Because you called."
"That's it? Just because I called?"
"That's all it's ever taken, Viv." He said it so simply, as if it were the most obvious thing in the world.
Something shifted inside me then, a tectonic plate realigning after years of pressure. I thought of all the times Michael had been there, steady and unwavering, while I'd been blinded by Zach's flashier charm. I thought of the person I'd become with Zach—smaller, dimmer, always accommodating—and how different I felt in Michael's presence.
"Marry me," I said.
Michael's coffee sloshed over the rim of his cup. "What?"
"Marry me," I repeated, the words feeling right, powerful. "Not tomorrow or next week. But someday. When we're ready."
His expression shifted from shock to something else—wonder, maybe. "Vivian, you've had a terrible night. You don't have to—"
"I'm not proposing because I'm hurt or desperate," I interrupted, surprising myself with my certainty. "I'm proposing because tonight, for the first time in years, I'm seeing clearly. And what I see is you, Michael. It's always been you."
He set his coffee down carefully, then took my hands in his. "Are you sure?"
"I've never been more sure of anything."
His smile began slowly, then bloomed across his face like sunrise. "Then yes, Vivian Carter. When we're ready, I would be honored to marry you."
The next morning, Michael invited me to his architectural studio in Chelsea—a converted warehouse space filled with light and innovative designs. It was nothing like the sleek, soulless office where Zach conducted his business dealings.
"This is where the magic happens," Michael said, showing me blueprints for sustainable community centers and affordable housing projects. His passion was palpable, infectious.
"These are amazing," I said, genuinely impressed. "Why have I never been here before?"
His expression softened. "You never asked."
Another revelation, another piece of myself reclaimed. I'd stopped asking for things I wanted long ago, trained to prioritize Zach's world instead.
"Well, I'm asking now," I said, taking his hand. "Show me everything."
But as Michael guided me through his creative sanctuary, my phone buzzed with notifications. A society columnist had published a scathing piece about my "public meltdown" and "erratic behavior" following the gala.
The byline made my blood freeze. The columnist was a longtime friend of the Evans family—and Zach's revenge was just beginning.
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