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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 2

The key felt like lead in my palm as I stood before the Tudor-style home Dalton and I had chosen together. Our dream house—the one where we'd planned to raise our children, host Christmas dinners, grow old on the porch swing. Now, just three days after Dalton's ultimatum, I was here to collect the last of my belongings.

I hadn't told him I was coming. Part of me hoped he wouldn't be home, that I could slip in and out like a ghost, taking the remnants of my shattered dreams without having to face him again.

My hand trembled as I inserted the key, my damaged right fingers stiff and uncooperative as always. The door swung open to reveal a house I barely recognized. The neutral palette I'd carefully selected had been replaced with gaudy splashes of color. Throw pillows in electric pink littered the sofa. A pair of stilettos lay discarded by the staircase.

"Oh! You're here."

I froze at the voice. Not Dalton's, but Miley's—honeyed and triumphant. She stood at the top of the stairs, one hand resting protectively over the slight swell of her stomach, the other displaying a massive diamond ring that caught the afternoon light. My engagement ring had been replaced with something twice its size, twice as ostentatious.

"I came for my things," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.

Miley descended the stairs with deliberate slowness, her silk robe—my silk robe, the one Dalton had given me for our anniversary—trailing behind her. "Dalton boxed most of it up. He's at work, by the way." Her smile was razor-sharp. "He's been working so hard to prepare for the baby."

I moved toward the study where I'd left some of my books, but Miley followed, hovering like an unwelcome shadow.

"It's funny," she continued, fingering the pendant at her throat, "how quickly things change. One minute you're planning a wedding, and the next..." She shrugged delicately. "Well, I suppose he finally chose the mother of his child over his convenient companion."

The words sliced through me, but I refused to bleed in front of her. "Nine years is hardly convenient, Miley."

"Nine years without giving him what he really wanted—a family." Her hand returned to her stomach. "I managed that in one night."

I turned away, focusing on gathering my books. The room smelled different—Miley's cloying perfume had already erased any trace that I'd ever existed here.

"You know what the funny thing is?" I asked, surprising myself with my calm. "I was going to tell him at our wedding that I was pregnant too."

It was a lie—a desperate, impulsive lie—but the flicker of panic in her eyes was worth it. For one brief moment, her mask slipped, revealing something calculating and cold beneath.

"You're lying," she hissed.

"Am I?" I smiled thinly. "I guess we'll never know."

* * *

The restaurant was Dalton's mother's choice—an upscale French place where the portions were tiny and the prices astronomical. Mrs. Harris had insisted on this "family dinner" to "discuss arrangements moving forward." As if my life could be rearranged as easily as furniture.

"The salmon here is divine," Mrs. Harris remarked, not looking up from her menu. "Though perhaps Miley should avoid it. Mercury, you know. Not good for the baby."

The baby. Every mention was a twist of the knife. I stared at my water glass, watching condensation gather like tears.

"Joanna will have the chicken," Dalton said, ordering for me as he always did. "She loves their chicken."

"Actually," I countered quietly, "I'll have the steak. Rare." I never ordered steak, and certainly never rare, but tonight I craved something bloody.

Mrs. Harris's eyebrows rose a fraction. "How... assertive of you, dear."

Miley placed her hand over Dalton's on the table, her ring catching the candlelight. "We've been thinking about moving the wedding up. The doctor says I'm further along than we thought."

Further along. The timeline didn't add up—if she was so far along, she would have been pregnant while Dalton and I were still together, still planning our future. I caught Dalton's eye, but he looked away quickly.

"Well," Mrs. Harris said, sipping her wine, "I think that's sensible. No need to wait when there's a little Harris heir on the way." She turned her cold gaze to me. "Joanna, dear, you should be grateful for any arrangement that keeps you in Dalton's life. Not many men would be so... accommodating."

Accommodating. As if allowing me to marry him after he married another woman was some grand gesture of generosity. As if I should thank him for the privilege of being his second choice.

Dalton remained silent, studying his menu with unusual intensity.

"Yes," Miley agreed with false sweetness, reaching across to pat my hand. "I'm more than happy to share, knowing how much history you two have. It's the modern way, isn't it?"

I withdrew my hand, feeling something harden inside me. This charade, this public humiliation—it was too much.

"Excuse me," I murmured, rising from the table. "I need some air."

Outside, I gulped in the cool evening breeze, my mother's pendant heavy against my chest. She would be devastated when I told her about the postponement—or would it be cancellation? I wasn't sure anymore what I was agreeing to, what twisted arrangement Dalton expected me to accept.

One thing was becoming clear, though. Something about Miley's story didn't add up. And I intended to find out exactly what she was hiding.

* * *

The coffee shop was busy enough that I could blend into the background, my face hidden behind a large latte and yesterday's newspaper. I'd been following Miley for three days, noting her patterns—when she left the house, where she went, who she met.

Today she'd come here, to this artsy little café across town, far from her usual haunts. She sat at a corner table, nervously checking her watch every few minutes until her phone rang.

"James," she answered, her voice low but carrying just enough for me to hear. "Yes, I'm alone."

I angled my newspaper slightly, watching as her entire demeanor changed. Gone was the sweet, vulnerable pregnant woman. In her place was someone calculating, intense.

"We need to be careful about keeping the timeline believable," she said, twisting a strand of hair around her finger. "Dalton's ex is getting suspicious. I saw her watching me yesterday."

Ex. The word stung, but I forced myself to focus.

"No, he doesn't suspect anything. He's too wrapped up in guilt about how he handled everything with her." Miley laughed softly. "Men are so easy to manipulate when they think they've done something wrong."

I leaned closer, straining to hear as her voice dropped even lower.

"The doctor appointment is tomorrow. Make sure everything looks right—I need to be exactly twelve weeks along." She paused, listening. "Yes, that matches what I told him. Just stick to the plan and soon we'll have everything we wanted."

As she ended the call, I ducked behind my newspaper, mind racing. Twelve weeks would put conception right when Dalton and I were still together, still planning our wedding. But more importantly—who was James? And what exactly was the plan they were so carefully maintaining?

I had a feeling I was about to uncover a deception that went far beyond what even Dalton realized.

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