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Betrayal at the Vineyard Novel Cover

Betrayal at the Vineyard

The soft click of our apartment door closing echoed through the silence like a death knell. I looked up from the wedding seating chart spread across our dining table, my heart doing that familiar flutter it always did when Dalton came home. Tomorrow was supposed to be the happiest day of my life. "Joanna." His voice was different—cold, clinical. Not the warm tone of the man who'd whispered promises to me for nine years. I turned, my smile already forming, but it died on my lips when I saw the manila envelope in his hands. The way he held it, like it contained something toxic, made my stomach clench with sudden dread. "We need to talk." Those four words. Every woman knows those four words mean the end of something. I set down my pen, my injured right hand trembling slightly as I faced him fully.
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Chapter 1

The soft click of our apartment door closing echoed through the silence like a death knell. I looked up from the wedding seating chart spread across our dining table, my heart doing that familiar flutter it always did when Dalton came home. Tomorrow was supposed to be the happiest day of my life.

"Joanna." His voice was different—cold, clinical. Not the warm tone of the man who'd whispered promises to me for nine years.

I turned, my smile already forming, but it died on my lips when I saw the manila envelope in his hands. The way he held it, like it contained something toxic, made my stomach clench with sudden dread.

"We need to talk."

Those four words. Every woman knows those four words mean the end of something. I set down my pen, my injured right hand trembling slightly as I faced him fully. "What's wrong? You look—"

"Miley's pregnant." The words hit me like physical blows. "It's mine."

The room tilted. Nine years. Nine years of building a life together, of planning this wedding, of believing in us. "That's... that's impossible. You said you hadn't seen her since—"

"Since three months ago." His eyes were flat, emotionless. "When I told you I was working late."

The betrayal sliced through me, sharp and clean. But it was nothing compared to what came next.

Dalton dropped the envelope on the table, and several photographs spilled out. My breath caught in my throat. They were intimate photos of me—photos I'd trusted him with during our most vulnerable moments together. Photos that were meant to be private, sacred.

"What is this?" My voice came out as a whisper.

"Insurance." He straightened his tie with the same casual gesture he used in business meetings. "I'm going to marry Miley first. The baby needs legitimacy, and my mother insists on it. We can have our ceremony after."

I stared at him, this stranger wearing my fiancé's face. "You're asking me to... what? Wait while you marry another woman?"

"I'm not asking." His tone grew harder. "I'm telling you. Unless you'd prefer these photos to find their way to your mother's bridge club? Or maybe the hospital where she volunteers?"

My mother. My fragile, broken mother who'd barely survived the scandal that had destroyed her years ago. The mention of her was a direct hit to my most vulnerable spot, and Dalton knew it. He'd watched me protect her, sacrifice for her, shield her from anything that might trigger another breakdown.

"You wouldn't." But even as I said it, I could see in his eyes that he absolutely would.

"Your mother's mental state is so delicate, isn't it? What do you think seeing these would do to her? Knowing her precious daughter is capable of such... behavior?" He gestured dismissively at the photos. "The shame might just finish what that old scandal started."

I sank into the chair, my legs suddenly unable to support me. The seating chart crinkled under my elbow—all those carefully written names of people who would witness our love tomorrow. Or what I'd thought was our love.

"How long?" I managed to ask.

"How long what?"

"How long have you been planning this? The photos, the timing—this isn't spontaneous."

Something flickered across his face—guilt, maybe, or just annoyance at being caught. "Miley contacted me when she found out about the pregnancy. She wanted to do the right thing."

"The right thing." I laughed, but it came out broken. "And what about me? What about nine years of doing the right thing? What about my hand?" I held up my damaged right hand, the one I'd destroyed saving his life during the earthquake. "What about everything I gave up for you?"

"This is different. This is about family, about responsibility."

"I am your family!" The words tore from my throat. "I was going to be your wife in twelve hours!"

"And you still will be. Just... after."

The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. He was asking me to stand aside while he married another woman, to wait like some discarded mistress for my turn. And if I refused, he'd destroy my mother.

I looked at the photos again, bile rising in my throat. These moments of trust, of love, weaponized against me. "You planned this. You kept these photos just in case you needed leverage."

"I kept them because I love you." The words sounded hollow even to him. "This doesn't change anything between us."

"It changes everything." But even as I said it, I could feel myself breaking, crumbling under the weight of his threats. My mother's face flashed in my mind—fragile, trusting, already confused about why I'd seemed so stressed lately.

Dalton must have seen my surrender because his posture relaxed slightly. "You'll agree then?"

I closed my eyes, feeling something vital inside me die. "Do I have a choice?"

"There's always a choice, Joanna. You're just making the smart one."

Smart. As if there was anything intelligent about agreeing to this humiliation. But with my mother's sanity hanging in the balance, what choice did I really have?

"Fine." The word felt like poison on my tongue. "But I want those photos destroyed after."

"Of course." His relief was palpable. "I knew you'd understand."

Understand. As if understanding was the same as acceptance. As if agreeing was the same as forgiveness.

Dalton gathered the photos, sliding them back into the envelope with efficient movements. "I'll handle the wedding cancellation. We'll reschedule for after Miley and I—"

"Get out." My voice was steady now, eerily calm. "Just... get out."

He hesitated at the door. "Joanna, I do love you. This is just—"

"Temporary?" I met his eyes one last time. "Nothing about this is temporary, Dalton. You've made sure of that."

After he left, I sat in the silence of our apartment—my apartment now, I supposed—staring at the wedding seating chart. Tomorrow was supposed to be the beginning of our forever.

Instead, it would be the end of everything I'd believed in.

My phone buzzed. A text from my mother: "So excited for tomorrow, sweetheart! I can't wait to see you in your grandmother's dress."

I stared at the message until the words blurred through my tears. Tomorrow, I'd have to look into her trusting eyes and lie. I'd have to break her heart gently, carefully, making sure the pieces didn't cut too deep.

Because that's what love was, wasn't it? Protecting the people you cared about, even when it destroyed you.

Even when the person you'd protected everyone else from turned out to be the one you'd loved most.

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