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Cheater Loses All at Once Novel Cover

Cheater Loses All at Once

The champagne glass caught the light as Layla raised it above the crowd, her smile too bright, too knowing. I watched from across Quentin's parents' living room, my own glass frozen halfway to my lips. "To Quentin," Layla announced, her voice carrying over the birthday chatter. "The father of my beautiful boy." The room didn't go silent. That's what struck me first. Conversations continued. Someone laughed. Marcus Thompson nodded like she'd said something perfectly normal. My neighbor Elena glanced at me with something that looked like pity. They knew.
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Chapter 1

The champagne glass caught the light as Layla raised it above the crowd, her smile too bright, too knowing. I watched from across Quentin's parents' living room, my own glass frozen halfway to my lips.

"To Quentin," Layla announced, her voice carrying over the birthday chatter. "The father of my beautiful boy."

The room didn't go silent. That's what struck me first. Conversations continued. Someone laughed. Marcus Thompson nodded like she'd said something perfectly normal. My neighbor Elena glanced at me with something that looked like pity.

They knew. Everyone knew except me.

My champagne glass trembled. The golden liquid rippled, distorting my reflection in its surface. Layla's eyes found mine across the room, and her smile sharpened. She took a deliberate sip, savoring something far more potent than alcohol.

"What did you just say?" The words scraped out of my throat.

Quentin materialized beside Layla with the speed of a man who'd been anticipating disaster. His hand closed around her elbow—not gentle, not loving. Controlling.

"Say less," he told her. Not a request. A command.

But I was already moving, threading through clusters of guests who suddenly found their shoes fascinating. The birthday cake sat abandoned on the table, its candles melting into colorful puddles. Forty candles. Forty years of Quentin's life, and how many of them had been lies?

"Explain." I stopped three feet from them, close enough to see Layla's pupils dilate with something like excitement. "Explain right now, Quentin."

He released Layla's arm and turned to me with that expression I'd seen a thousand times—the one that said I was overreacting, being emotional, misunderstanding simple things. The expression that had worked for years.

"Gabriella, you're making a scene." His voice stayed low, reasonable. The voice that had once soothed Sophie to sleep. "Layla's had too much to drink. You know how she gets."

"A boy." My tongue felt thick. "She said you're the father of her boy."

Layla laughed—a bright, crystalline sound that shattered against my eardrums. "Oh, Gabby. Don't tell me Quentin never mentioned little James? He's three now. Growing like a weed."

Three years old. Sophie was five. The math arranged itself in my mind with sickening clarity, each number a small detonation. I'd been pregnant when it started. Swollen and vulnerable and trusting, while Quentin—

"That's enough." Quentin's jaw tightened. "Layla, go home."

"Why?" She tilted her head, and I saw it then—the calculation behind the tipsy facade. This wasn't champagne talking. This was planned. "She should know. Everyone else does. Even your parents suspected years ago."

The room had gone quiet now. No more polite conversation to cushion the blow. I felt forty pairs of eyes on my back, could practically hear their thoughts: Poor Gabriella. How did she not know?

My hands clenched until my nails bit crescents into my palms. The pain felt distant, happening to someone else's body. "Get out."

I wasn't sure which of them I was talking to. Maybe both. Maybe everyone who'd known and said nothing while I played the devoted wife, the perfect mother, the woman who had everything.

"Gabriella—" Quentin reached for me.

I stepped back. "Don't."

Layla gathered her purse with exaggerated care, still smiling. "Happy birthday, Quentin. See you Thursday for James's doctor appointment?"

She left a smear of red lipstick on Quentin's cheek as she passed, her heels clicking a victory march across the hardwood floor. The front door closed with a soft click that echoed like a gunshot.

Quentin's mother appeared beside me, her papery hand finding mine. She squeezed once—an apology, an acknowledgment, a funeral for the family we'd pretended to be.

"I think," she said quietly, "you two should go home."

Home. Our beautiful house with its carefully curated furniture and family photos. The home I'd built while Quentin built another one somewhere else.

I looked at my husband. Really looked. The guilt in his eyes wasn't fresh. It was aged, weathered, something he'd been carrying so long he'd learned to hide it behind birthday smiles and bedtime stories. Behind I love yous that meant nothing.

"Yes," I said. "We should go home."

Because whatever happened next needed to happen away from witnesses. Away from the people who'd watched me be a fool and done nothing to stop it.

Quentin's hand hovered near my lower back as we walked to the door—that proprietary touch that usually guided me through crowds, that marked me as his. I moved just enough that he missed, and his hand fell back to his side.

Behind us, someone finally cut the birthday cake. I heard the knife sink through frosting and sponge, a wet, final sound.

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