
Black Friday Betrayal in the Mall Parking Lot
Chapter 3
I walked toward Dorian's desk with my chin up, trying to project confidence I didn't feel. Each step felt like walking through quicksand, heavy and deliberate, while dozens of pairs of eyes tracked my movement across the office floor.
His desk sat empty in the corner, his computer monitor dark, but his phone lay there charging—a sleek black rectangle that might hold all the answers I needed. The irony wasn't lost on me that the device he'd used to destroy my reputation over the weekend might be the very thing that could save it.
"Look who decided to show up," came a voice from behind me. I recognized it as Marcus from accounting, though I didn't turn around. "Brave of her, considering."
A few snickers followed, then someone else chimed in with a stage whisper clearly meant for me to hear: "Better keep your distance, man. You don't know where she's been."
My cheeks burned, but I kept walking. The cruel laughter that erupted made my stomach clench, but I forced myself not to react. They wanted a show, wanted to see me break down or lash out. I wouldn't give them the satisfaction.
I reached Dorian's desk and stood there for a moment, staring at his phone. My hands were trembling so badly I had to clasp them behind my back to hide it. Around me, the office buzzed with barely concealed excitement, like vultures circling roadkill.
"She's probably looking for more evidence to make up," someone whispered, not quietly enough.
"Or trying to delete the real evidence," came the reply, followed by more laughter.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath, trying to center myself. When I opened them, I noticed movement in my peripheral vision. A woman approached cautiously—Sarah from marketing, someone I'd shared coffee with a few times but didn't know well. She had kind eyes and graying hair pulled back in a neat bun.
She glanced around nervously, then leaned in close enough that only I could hear her.
"He's in the CTO's office," she whispered, her voice barely audible over the office noise. "Third floor, conference room C. They've been in there for about twenty minutes."
I looked at her, surprised by the unexpected kindness. Her expression was sympathetic, almost apologetic, as if she was sorry for what everyone else was putting me through.
"Thank you," I managed, my voice hoarse.
She gave me a small nod and quickly walked away, probably not wanting to be associated with me any longer than necessary. I didn't blame her. In the current climate, even talking to me felt like a risk.
But her information was exactly what I needed. If Dorian was in a meeting on the third floor, I had time. Not much, but enough.
My heart hammered against my ribs as I reached for his phone. The movement felt surreal, like I was watching someone else's hand extend toward the device. I'd never violated anyone's privacy like this before, never even been tempted to snoop through a partner's messages. But then again, I'd never had a partner systematically destroy my life either.
I grabbed the phone and walked quickly toward the break room, trying to look casual despite the fact that my pulse was racing so fast I felt dizzy. Behind me, I heard someone comment about my suspicious behavior, but I didn't stop to listen.
The break room was mercifully empty, just the hum of the refrigerator and the lingering smell of burnt coffee. I locked the door behind me—something I'd never done before, but these weren't normal circumstances.
My hands were shaking so violently I could barely hold the phone steady. The screen was locked, of course, protected by a six-digit passcode. For a moment, panic set in. What if I couldn't guess it? What if he'd changed it recently?
Then I remembered our six-month anniversary dinner just last month, how he'd made such a big deal about the date being special, about how it marked the beginning of something real between us. The irony was bitter now, but maybe it would work in my favor.
I typed in the numbers: 051523. The date we'd first kissed, first said we loved each other, first talked about moving in together. The date that had meant everything to me and apparently nothing to him.
The phone unlocked.
I stared at the home screen for a moment, overwhelmed by the violation I was about to commit and the necessity of it. Then I opened his messaging app, my finger trembling as I scrolled through his recent conversations.
Marissa's name was right there at the top, their last exchange from Sunday night. I tapped on it, expecting to find the evidence of their affair that I could use to prove his hypocrisy.
What I found was so much worse.
The messages between Dorian and Marissa read like a carbon copy of our own relationship. The same pet names he used with me. The same promises about their future together. The same intimate jokes and references to shared experiences.
"Can't wait to see you tonight, beautiful. You're the best thing that's ever happened to me."
"I love you too, babe. You make everything better."
"We should start looking at apartments together soon. I want to wake up next to you every morning."
My stomach lurched. These weren't the messages of a man having a casual affair. These were the messages of someone in love, someone building a relationship, someone making the same promises he'd made to me.
But that wasn't the worst part.
I scrolled back further in his message history, and other names caught my eye. Jessica. Amanda. Chloe. Each conversation thread looked disturbingly familiar.
With shaking fingers, I opened Jessica's messages. The same endearments. The same promises. The same declarations of love.
"You're my everything, Jess. I can't imagine my life without you."
"I love you more than words can say. You're the only woman for me."
"Let's talk about moving in together soon. I want to build a life with you."
Amanda's messages were identical in tone and content. So were Chloe's. Each woman was receiving the same carefully crafted romantic attention, the same promises of exclusivity and commitment, the same lies about being the only one.
I felt like I was going to be sick. This wasn't just cheating—this was systematic deception on a scale I couldn't have imagined. Dorian wasn't just having affairs; he was running multiple fake relationships simultaneously, convincing each woman that she was his one true love.
The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering onto the break room table. I stared at it in horror, my mind reeling as I tried to process what I'd discovered.
Marissa wasn't the other woman. She was another victim. They all were.
Dorian had been lying to us all.
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