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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.
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Chapter 3

I heard the Rolls-Royce before I saw it.

Not the engine — those things run quiet enough to make you doubt your own ears — but the reaction. A ripple of turned heads near the Columbia gate, the particular hush that moves through a crowd when something interrupts the ordinary frequency of a Tuesday morning. I was coming down the main path with my bag on one shoulder and a coffee I'd barely touched, already running the mental checklist for my nine o'clock, when I saw it parked at the curb. Black. Long. Completely, aggressively out of place.

Cassian was leaning against it.

Charcoal coat, hands in his pockets, watching me the way a man watches something he's been waiting for and isn't surprised to see. No oxygen mask today. No hospital suite. Just him, standing in full morning light on the edge of an Ivy League campus like he'd been here before and found it unremarkable.

I stopped walking.

He tilted his head slightly. That almost-smile.

I crossed the distance between us at a pace that I hoped communicated both composure and the fact that I was deeply confused. "What are you doing here?"

"Walking you to class." He pushed off the car and offered me his arm, unhurried, like this was a thing we did.

I stared at his arm. Then at his face. Then at the small cluster of students near the gate who were already very visibly not looking at us, which meant they were absolutely looking at us.

I took his arm.

We walked.

The effect was immediate and ridiculous. I watched it happen in real time — the double takes, the slowing feet, the phones that appeared in peripheral vision like sunflowers turning toward light. Cassian noticed none of it, or performed noticing none of it with such precision that the difference was irrelevant. He asked me about my schedule. I told him. He nodded like he was filing it away.

That itched at something, but I let it go.

We were cutting across the center quad when I saw Dalton.

He was with two guys from his old friend group, coming from the direction of Butler Library, and he clocked us from twenty feet away. I felt the moment he recognized what he was seeing — his stride stuttered, almost nothing, just a half-beat — and then he was changing course, heading toward us with his jaw set and his eyes doing that thing where he thought he looked controlled.

I kept walking.

"Noelle." Dalton stopped in front of us. His gaze moved to Cassian — a quick, involuntary assessment — and something shifted in his expression. Something that looked, if I was being honest, like a man recalculating a situation he thought he understood. "I didn't know you were— I mean, I heard—"

"Dalton." I kept my voice even. Friendly, almost.

Cassian didn't stop walking. He simply moved us slightly sideways, a smooth adjustment that didn't break stride, and drew me closer with the arm I was holding. Not possessive. Factual. Like he was clarifying something that had been ambiguous.

"I believe you already had your chance with my wife," he said, without looking at Dalton.

That was it. No pause. No particular emphasis. Just the words, dropped like a file being closed.

We kept walking.

I didn't look back. I didn't need to. I could feel Dalton standing there the way you feel a silence after a door shuts — complete, and final, and entirely his own.

By noon, three separate people had texted me screenshots.

By nightfall, it had a caption.

---

The argument started at seven o'clock.

I'd made it through my last class, made it through the car ride back, made it through twenty minutes of staring at my phone in the penthouse kitchen before I found it — a calendar notification I'd never created, blocking off a forty-minute window between my eight and nine-thirty on Thursdays for what was described, in clean professional font, as *security perimeter check, Columbia east entrance.*

I pulled up the rest of the week. There were six of them.

"Cassian."

He was in the living room with a book, which he lowered with the unhurried patience of a man who had been expecting this for approximately forty-eight hours.

"You had my schedule rerouted through your security detail," I said. "Without telling me."

"Adjusted," he said. "Not rerouted."

"That's not — that's not the point. You don't get to make decisions about my schedule without—"

"Your building's east entrance has a dead zone in camera coverage between seven-fifty and eight-ten." His voice was conversational. "I had it fixed. The schedule adjustment keeps you out of that window."

"You could have told me."

"You would have argued."

"I'm arguing now."

"Yes," he agreed mildly. "This is less efficient."

I set my phone on the counter with more force than necessary. "Cassian, I'm serious. You don't get to just—"

He exhaled. One hand moved to his chest.

Something in his face shifted — the color, or maybe the way he was holding himself, something just wrong enough that my nervous system responded before my brain did.

He pressed his palm flat against his sternum and swayed very slightly against the doorframe.

I crossed the room in about three steps.

"Hey." I grabbed his arm, my other hand going automatically to his chest, searching for something to confirm or deny the fear already spiking through me. "Hey, look at me—"

His heartbeat was perfectly steady under my palm. Slow. Even. The heartbeat of a man who had absolutely nothing wrong with him.

I went still.

His chin dropped slightly. I felt it before I saw it — the almost-imperceptible warmth of a smirk pressing against my hair.

I shoved him. Not hard. Hard enough.

"You are unbelievable," I said.

He straightened from the doorframe, fully restored to his normal self, and had the audacity to look comfortable.

"You stopped arguing," he observed.

"Because I thought you were dying."

"You always think I'm dying." A pause. "It's very considerate of you."

"If you do that again," I said, pointing at him, "I will let you finish."

His eyes moved to my hand still on his chest. Then back to my face.

I removed my hand and stepped back.

"The security detail stays," he said, and his voice was different now — quieter, the ease stripped back just enough to show the edge underneath. "I won't apologize for that."

I looked at him for a long moment.

The anger was still there. So was something else — something that had moved into my chest the moment I'd seen him sway and hadn't fully moved back out.

"Tell me next time," I said.

He held my gaze. Then he nodded, once.

I picked up my phone and walked to my room.

In the hallway, out of his sight, I pressed my back against the wall and stood very still for a moment.

My palm still felt warm.

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