
After My Fiancé's Betrayal, I Became His Worst Nightmare
Chapter 3
The morning after my world collapsed, a knock at my door jolted me from a fitful sleep. Snowball lifted his head from where he'd curled against me all night, a warm, steady presence when everything else had shattered.
"Who is it?" I called, my voice still raw from crying.
"It's me, Vivian. Please, I need to talk to you."
Heather. My stomach clenched at the sound of her voice—once so familiar, now poisonous. I considered ignoring her, but something fierce and unfamiliar pushed me to face her. This new Vivian wouldn't hide.
"Give me a minute," I said, quickly splashing water on my face and pulling on a robe.
When I opened the door, Heather stood there looking nothing like the confident betrayer from last night. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her normally perfect makeup absent. She'd clearly crafted this appearance of vulnerability.
"Can I come in?" she asked, her voice trembling.
"No." The firmness in my tone surprised us both.
Her eyes widened. "Viv, please. I need to explain—"
"Explain what? How you slept with my boyfriend? How you announced your pregnancy at my birthday party? Please, enlighten me."
She flinched, tears welling. "It wasn't supposed to happen like that. Zach... he manipulated me too. He said he was going to leave you, that he loved me—"
"Stop." I held up my hand. "I don't believe you, and I don't care. We're done, Heather."
Snowball appeared at my feet, growling softly. Even he could sense the threat she posed.
"You don't understand," she continued desperately. "Zach is the one who insisted I announce it that way. He wanted to hurt you, to control how everything happened. I'm just as much a victim—"
"A victim?" I laughed, the sound harsh even to my own ears. "You were my best friend for fifteen years. You knew everything about me—my fears, my hopes, the way I've loved him. And you chose to betray me in the cruelest way possible. That wasn't Zach's doing. That was you."
Her expression changed then, the mask of regret slipping to reveal something harder, colder. "You always had everything, Vivian. The perfect family, the perfect life. You never had to work for anything."
"You don't know the first thing about my life or what I've worked for," I said quietly. "Now please leave."
As I moved to close the door, she put her hand against it. "You'll regret this," she hissed, all pretense gone. "You think you can just cut us out? Zach has connections you couldn't imagine. And so do I."
"Is that a threat?"
"It's a promise. You'll learn what it feels like to lose everything you love."
I slammed the door in her face, my heart pounding. Snowball whined softly, and I knelt to stroke his soft fur. "It's okay, boy. We'll be okay."
Three days later, I returned home late after dinner with Michael. He'd been my rock, helping me navigate the social fallout, accompanying me to cancel the reservations and arrangements I'd made for what I'd thought would be an engagement celebration.
The hallway to my apartment was eerily quiet. I fumbled with my keys, a sense of unease creeping up my spine.
When I opened the door, the silence hit me first. No excited barking, no pattering of paws.
"Snowball?" I called, flipping on the lights.
Then I saw him—a small white heap on the doormat, barely moving. Beside him lay a note, the elegant script unmistakable: "Now you know how it feels to have something precious taken from you. —H"
"No!" I dropped to my knees, gathering Snowball's limp body. He whimpered faintly, his beautiful white fur stained with blood. "No, no, no!"
My hands shaking violently, I called Michael.
"He's hurt," I sobbed into the phone. "Snowball's hurt. They did something to him. Please help me."
Michael arrived in what seemed like seconds, his face grim as he gently took Snowball from my arms and rushed us to his car. "The emergency vet is ten minutes away," he said, his voice steady despite the fear in his eyes. "Hold on, buddy. Just hold on."
I cradled Snowball in the backseat, whispering promises I wasn't sure I could keep. "You'll be okay. We'll fix this. I love you so much."
But in the sterile brightness of the emergency clinic, with Michael's arm around my shoulders and the vet's solemn expression, I knew. Snowball's breathing grew more labored, his small body shuddering with each breath.
"I'm so sorry," the vet said quietly. "The poison has spread too far. We can make him comfortable, but..."
"No," I whispered, the word breaking. "Please, there must be something—"
Michael tightened his grip on my shoulder. "Viv..."
They let me hold him in those final moments. My sweet, loyal Snowball, who had been there through every heartbreak, every joy. His eyes, cloudy with pain, found mine one last time.
"I love you," I whispered as he took his final breath in my arms. "I'm so sorry I couldn't protect you."
As his small body went still, something inside me hardened into resolve. This wasn't just betrayal anymore. This was war.
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