Follow
Chapters
Share
After My Groom Fell for My Roommate, I Married Another Novel Cover

After My Groom Fell for My Roommate, I Married Another

The Manhattan skyline glittered like a jewelry box from the rooftop terrace of The Peninsula, a constellation of lights that had always made me feel on top of the world. Tonight, though, those same lights felt like they were watching me—witnessing my complete and utter humiliation. I stood frozen near the champagne tower, my fingers still wrapped around the stem of a flute I hadn't touched in twenty minutes. The silk of my Marchesa gown felt suddenly suffocating, each delicate crystal bead a reminder of how perfectly I'd planned this night. How perfectly I'd planned my entire life. "Ladies and gentlemen," Dalton's voice carried across the terrace through the speakers, and I turned toward him with a smile that felt like glass about to shatter. He looked handsome in his tuxedo, the same way he'd looked handsome since we were sixteen—familiar, safe, the future I'd never questioned. "I have an announcement to make." My heart skipped with anticipation. This was supposed to be our moment—the official announcement of our wedding date, the crowning achievement of our childhood romance. I lifted my champagne slightly, ready to toast to our future.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

I showed up at eight in the morning with three movers and a latte.

The hallway outside our dorm still smelled like last night — someone's leftover Thai food, the ghost of a dozen different perfumes. I'd texted the moving company at six-thirty while the Plaza's thousand-thread-count sheets were still warm around me, and they'd been remarkably enthusiastic about the short notice, probably because I'd agreed to their premium rate without blinking.

The black card was already earning its keep.

I pushed open the door.

Carly was on her bed, still in yesterday's makeup, holding court for the three girls who lived down the hall — Sophie, Britt, and Maya, the kind of girls who refreshed social media the way other people breathed. They'd all been at the party last night. I'd seen their phones out.

They looked up when I walked in.

Carly's expression moved through surprise, then something more carefully arranged — a soft, concerned look, like she was already deciding how to play this. Her sympathy face. I knew it well.

"Noelle," she started.

"Don't." I set my coffee on my desk and turned to the lead mover, a broad-shouldered man named David whose professionalism I was developing a deep appreciation for. "Everything on this side of the room. Start with the closet."

David nodded and got to work.

The room went quiet except for the sound of hangers sliding along the rod and boxes being opened and sealed. I sat on my bare mattress and scrolled through my phone, not because I had anything urgent to read, but because it felt important to appear as though I'd been awake for hours doing interesting things.

Which, technically, I had.

I could feel Carly watching me. The silence stretched. Sophie whispered something to Britt. I didn't look up.

"So that's it?" Carly said finally. Her voice had that particular tone she used when she wanted to seem like she was trying to be gentle. "You're just... leaving?"

"I'm just leaving."

"Noelle." She paused, recalibrating. "I know you're hurt. And I understand that. I do. But you have to know that Dalton and I never meant to—"

"David," I said, "the shoes in the back of the closet too, please. All of them."

"Got it," David said.

Carly pressed her lips together.

It took forty-five minutes. My entire life in that room — the clothes, the books, the framed photographs, the jewelry organizer, the coffee machine I'd bought us both at the start of the semester — packed into boxes with quiet efficiency while Carly sat two feet away and said nothing that mattered.

When the last box was loaded on the cart, I picked up my coffee, pulled my coat off the hook by the door, and took one long look around the room.

Carly was standing now, arms crossed, the sympathy face finally dropped. "Running away to cry?" she said.

She couldn't help herself. I'd been counting on that.

I looked at her for exactly one second. Then I smiled — the kind of smile that doesn't reach your eyes because it doesn't need to.

"No, sweetheart," I said. "Upgrading."

I peeled five hundreds off the stack in my coat pocket and handed them to David. Then I did the same for each of the other two men. The bills were crisp. New.

The look on Carly's face was worth every cent.

I walked out without looking back.

---

The Plaza penthouse was quiet when I returned, the kind of quiet that costs money — no street noise, no neighbors, just pale winter light coming through floor-to-ceiling windows and the faint sound of the city twenty-five floors below.

I sat on the edge of the bed, coat still on, and called my mother.

She picked up on the first ring. Of course she did. She'd probably been awake since five o'clock, mainlining coffee and monitoring every social media platform in the greater New York area.

"Noelle Eleanor Foster," she said. "I have been waiting for your call for fourteen hours."

"I know, Mom."

"Fourteen hours. Do you know what I went through last night? Do you know what your father and I—"

"Mom. I need to tell you something, and I need you to let me finish before you respond."

Silence. Then: "I'm listening."

I told her. All of it — the dorm room, the champagne, the pop-up ad that I probably should not have clicked on, the hospital suite, the marriage certificate, the wire transfer. I kept my voice level. Matter-of-fact. The way you describe something that happened to someone else.

The silence on the other end was different when I finished.

"You married a dying stranger," my mother said slowly, "that you met yesterday."

"Technically we met around two in the afternoon, so it was the same day."

"Noelle."

"The ten million cleared, Mom. I checked."

"This is a crisis," she said. "This is a genuine crisis. I'm calling your father. I'm calling Dr. Reeves. We're coming to get you—"

A door opened somewhere behind me. I turned reflexively.

Cassian walked through the hallway in a charcoal sweater, holding a cup of coffee, looking exactly the way he'd looked yesterday — devastatingly, inconveniently handsome, and completely unbothered by the existence of the universe around him.

I forgot I was holding the phone.

"Noelle?" My mother's voice sharpened. "Noelle, are you there?"

"Yeah. Sorry. Could you—" I turned the camera slightly, just enough.

Full silence.

Five seconds. Ten.

"Mom?"

"Turn the camera back," she said quietly.

I did.

She stared. Cassian set his coffee down on the kitchen counter without looking at us, utterly indifferent, which somehow made everything worse.

"That's your husband," my mother said.

"Yes."

Another long pause.

"Noelle." Her voice had completely changed. All the panic, the crisis, the calling Dr. Reeves — gone. Replaced by something that sounded almost like reverence. "This is the best decision you have ever made."

"Mom—"

"I'm sending a care package. Does he have any dietary restrictions? Actually, it doesn't matter. I'll send everything."

I pressed my fingers to my eyes. "Please don't—"

"I'll call you tomorrow. Kiss him for me."

She hung up.

---

By evening, I had a bedroom.

Not shared — my own, down the hall from Cassian's, with a closet that had somehow already been half-stocked with hangers. Cassian explained the arrangement the way a man explains a flight itinerary: separate bedrooms, no interference, the card stays active. His voice was easy, unhurried, like none of this required particular negotiation.

I told him that worked for me.

What I didn't say was that when I'd walked through the penthouse that afternoon — the clean dark surfaces, the floor-to-ceiling windows, the quiet weight of real money present in every detail — I'd felt something I hadn't expected.

At home.

Dinner appeared at seven without me asking for it. Pan-seared salmon, roasted vegetables, a specific kind of sparkling water I hadn't ordered but had mentioned once, briefly, in the hospital suite when a nurse asked if I had any preferences.

I looked across the table at Cassian.

He was reading something on his phone, entirely at ease, and didn't look up.

I picked up my fork.

Outside, Manhattan glittered the same way it always had. But from up here, twenty-five floors above all of it, I was starting to think it looked a little different.

You may also like

After Huxley Betrayed Me at Our Wedding Novel Cover
8.9
After turning down Colby Harris' proposal for the 99th time, I was taken aback when I received a wedding invitation from him. The bride wasn't me, but his former flame, Georgina Lawrence. Feeling completely disillusioned, I impulsively accepted Huxley Griffin's proposal, a prominent figure in London society. Huxley was so ecstatic that he organized a grand fireworks display, publicly announcing our engagement. I thought I had found someone who would bring me lifelong happiness. That was until I accidentally overheard a conversation between him and a friend. "You really don't have that bad of a taste, but causing a car accident on the wedding day is a bit extreme, isn't it?" There was a cold chuckle that followed. "It's about her rare blood type to treat Georgina. I've already devoted the rest of my life to this. What more can she want?" "The title of Mrs.
Betrayed in Pregnancy Novel Cover
8.4
The Sunday morning sunshine streamed through the windows of Café Boulud, casting a golden glow across our table. I absently traced the rim of my water glass, trying to focus on what Lauren was saying rather than the anxiety gnawing at me. "So the fifth-month checkup is this Thursday?" Lauren asked, her eyes bright with genuine excitement as she glanced at my growing belly. I nodded, placing a protective hand over the small, firm bump beneath my floral maternity dress. "Yes. Ryan promised he'd be there this time." "This time?" Lauren's perfectly shaped eyebrow arched upward. I shifted uncomfortably in my seat. "He's had to miss the last two appointments. Business trips." The words sounded hollow even to my own ears. Ryan's "business trips" had been increasing in frequency lately, each one coinciding suspiciously with important pregnancy milestones.
Betrayed Wife's Escape After Husband's Cruel Deception Novel Cover
8.5
The candles on my birthday cake had burned down to stubs by the time I gave up waiting. I'd spent hours preparing Reid's favorite meal—beef Wellington with truffle sauce, the recipe I'd perfected over years of marriage. The dining room looked beautiful with the crystal wine glasses I'd inherited from my grandmother and the silver candelabra that had been our first anniversary gift. I smoothed down the red dress I'd saved for tonight. It was new, purchased months ago with this evening in mind. The fabric hugged my curves perfectly, making me feel young and desirable—things I desperately wanted Reid to see in me again. "Maybe he got caught in traffic," I whispered to myself, checking my phone for the twentieth time. No calls. No texts. I called his office.
His Mistress Wore My Promotion Novel Cover
9.6
The Ritz-Carlton ballroom sparkled with success and champagne. I stood at the podium, the signed $3 million contract in my trembling hands, trying to keep my voice steady as I announced the largest deal in our company's history. The room erupted in applause—genuine from most, obligatory from a few. My eyes found Ethan's across the room, searching for a flicker of pride, acknowledgment, anything. His face remained a perfect mask, unreadable even to me after six years of marriage. "This partnership will transform our agency's trajectory," I concluded, my professional smile firmly in place. "Thank you all for your support." As I stepped away from the microphone, our colleagues swarmed around me with congratulations. Through the crowd, I caught glimpses of Ethan, now standing near the bar with Ashley hovering at his side, her hand casually brushing against his sleeve in a gesture too intimate for an assistant. "Olivia, this is groundbreaking," said Mark Chen, one of our junior managers. "How did you convince Westfield to commit to the full package?" I began explaining my strategy when Ethan's voice cut through the chatter.
If you and I cannot escape the sea of sin Novel Cover
9.6
Chapter 1 I’ve always loved dogs, so when I was a child, Grandfather placed a leash in my hand. He told me the boy technically my uncle, Anthony, would be my pet. From that day on, I learned to swing the whip. Laughing, I lashed him until he bled, all the while respectfully calling him Uncle. Later, the dog broke its chains and turned on its master. In public, I remained the unassailable heiress of the Jessica empire. In private, late at night, he would grip my throat, force me to my knees, and demand to know when I’d give him a child. I took it all in silence. Until the day I learned I was pregnant—and overheard him soothing his long-lost first love. “Marry me,” he said. “I’ll deal with Jessica so she won’t be in your way.” My fingers found the scar on my arm. No heartbreak, just the quiet tally of a countdown. When the seventh mark appeared, I would be free of him for good. --- My drifting consciousness snapped back as Anthony’s ragged breathing slowly eased. We clung to each other like any ordinary couple, limbs tangled. A flicker of warmth stirred in my chest. I opened my mouth to speak, but a sharp ringtone cut me off. Anthony snatched up his phone. Seeing the caller ID, he pulled out of me at once and answered, his voice softening. “Grace, what’s wrong?” Grace—Anthony’s long-lost first love, the girl who’d saved his life years ago. The woman he’d spent tens of millions wooing with flowers, yachts, and starlit villas. The one he’d proposed to ten times. Ice water poured over me, washing away every lingering trace of pleasure. I stayed silent. I swallowed the words that had almost spilled out in the heat of the moment— *I’m almost a month along.* “Anthony,” Grace’s wounded voice came through the speaker, “you went to see Jessica again, didn’t you?” His body still carried the heat of desire, but his eyes turned cold as they flicked toward me. Gently, he soothed her: “She’s just a bitch. If you don’t like it, I won’t touch her again.” Whatever Grace said next, Anthony didn’t bother lowering his voice as he headed for the bathroom. “Be good. Just say you’ll marry me, and I’ll deal with Jessica immediately. I won’t let her be an eyesore for you.” My heart plummeted. Ignoring the ache in my back and legs, I slid out of bed, wiped the sticky wetness from my skin, and curled up on the rug at the foot of the bed. I dragged the blanket over my naked body, trying to steal back a little warmth. A memory surfaced: eight years ago, after Anthony had tried to run from the Jessica family and been dragged back by Grandfather. Night after night, he’d slept curled on the floor of my room like a dog, utterly still. Back then, everyone thought my betrayal and torment had broken his spirit for good. No one knew that, under my deliberate cover, Anthony had been quietly trading stocks, investing, building a company—becoming Kingsport’s mysterious rising star. Years later, when Grandfather suffered a stroke and lay dying, with the Anthony's Group thrown into turmoil, Anthony finally struck. He nearly tore the family empire apart. In the end, it was me who saved the crumbling dynasty—kneeling on the floor, handing over every share of the Anthony's Group left to me in Grandfather’s will, then crawling into his bed. That day was my twentieth birthday. “Go shower. You can sleep in the bed tonight.” Anthony’s voice pulled me from the edge of sleep. His handsome features still held a trace of the tenderness he’d just shown the woman he loved. “Grace agreed to marry me. You’ll have to start calling her Mrs Jessica, Jessica.” A faint smile touched his lips—the first lively expression he’d shown me in a long time. It reminded me of eight years ago, when we’d fled the Jessica house hand in hand, betraying the world for our love. He’d grinned and shouted, “From today on, Jessica belongs to Anthony!” But now, even in our most intimate moments, he looked at me with nothing but hatred and impatience. That tenderness, that love—none of it was mine anymore. My throat tightened. I swallowed hard before answering evenly, “Congratulations.” Dazed, I walked into the bathroom and pulled up Gregory’s number. **Me:** Begin the plan. Gather the materials for submission. His reply came instantly. **Gregory:** Understood, Boss. I put my phone away and let scalding water pour over my skin. A cold, heavy ache settled in my chest, but beneath it bloomed a fierce, swelling hope. Six years and eleven months. I was finally close. This monstrous house, built on sin and cruelty—I would watch it crumble to dust with my own eyes. My fingers traced the six scars on my right arm, each one raised and distinct. I closed my stinging eyes. Just one more month. Once the seventh year was complete, once the seventh mark appeared, I could end this. I could leave for good.
Knocked Up by My Runaway Mate Novel Cover
8.0
Two pink lines. A secret she was dying to share. One cream envelope. An invitation to the wedding of the man she loved. When Kael Morrow chose his family’s empire over Lyra Thornfield, he thought he was making the practical choice. He didn't know he was walking away from his only heir. Three years later, the "arrangement" is over, but the bond remains. Lyra has returned to the city, not as a victim, but as a queen. She has a new name, a new fortune, and a beautiful secret named Lucas. Kael is desperate to bridge the gap, but how do you fix a heart that’s already turned to ice? "You ran to them, Kael. Now, watch me walk away."