
Discovering Fiancé's Hidden Marriage
Chapter 3
Morning light filtered through the blinds as I stared at my phone. Twenty-seven missed calls from Ryan. Forty-three text messages. Each one more desperate than the last.
*Please, Natalie. We need to talk.*
*This isn't what you think.*
*I love YOU. She means nothing.*
*Don't throw away six years over a misunderstanding.*
Misunderstanding. As if finding a marriage certificate was somehow ambiguous.
I pulled the curtains aside and looked down at the street. There he was, pacing in front of our building, still wearing yesterday's clothes. His hair—usually perfectly styled—stuck out at odd angles. He'd spent the night there after I changed the locks.
My doorman, Miguel, approached him with firm gestures that clearly meant "leave." Ryan thrust a massive bouquet into Miguel's hands. Even from twelve floors up, I could see Miguel's reluctant acceptance.
My phone buzzed with a text from the doorman: *Ms. Carter, Mr. Mitchell insists these are for you. Should I send them up?*
I typed back: *No thank you, Miguel. And he's not allowed upstairs.*
Five minutes later, my phone chimed with an email notification. Subject line: "Read the card, Natalie."
I opened it to find a photo of the card attached to the bouquet:
*We're meant to be. What we have is real. The rest is just business. Don't let pride destroy us. -R*
Pride. As if my dignity was merely an inconvenience to his plans.
I deleted the email and turned away from the window.
* * *
Two weeks later, I was back at the Seattle Conservatory, teaching a masterclass on Debussy. It felt good to be surrounded by music again, to lose myself in something that had always been mine, something Ryan had never touched.
"Notice how the dynamics shift here," I explained to the circle of students as my fingers danced across the keys. "Debussy isn't asking for volume—he's asking for color."
The door at the back of the recital hall burst open. The harsh fluorescent light from the hallway silhouetted a slender figure holding a phone aloft.
"Hello, everyone!" The voice was syrupy sweet and instantly recognizable from countless Instagram stories. "I'm Isabella Ross-Mitchell, coming to you live from the Seattle Conservatory!"
My fingers froze on the keys as Isabella sauntered down the aisle, her phone held high, capturing everything. She wore a cream designer dress that hugged her perfect figure, a massive diamond glittering on her left hand.
"Don't stop on my account," she said with a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "I've just always wanted to see where my husband got his start—you know, before he became successful."
The students shifted uncomfortably, glancing between us. I sat perfectly still, my back straight, my expression neutral despite the violent churning in my stomach.
Isabella leaned down to one of my youngest students, a fourteen-year-old girl named Lily. "You know," she stage-whispered, loud enough for her livestream to catch, "Ryan always says music was his first love. Well, after me, of course."
She giggled, touching Lily's shoulder familiarly. "He's such a romantic, my real husband."
The emphasis on "real" cut through me like a blade, but I refused to show it. Instead, I placed my hands back on the keys.
"As I was saying," I continued, my voice steady, "Debussy requires precision and emotional control. Let me demonstrate."
I launched into "Clair de Lune," letting the music wash over the room. I poured everything into those notes—my pain, my rage, my determination. For three minutes, there was only the music.
When I finished, Isabella was gone, but the damage was done. I could see it in my students' eyes—the questions, the pity.
* * *
Weeks passed. I threw myself into teaching, into rebuilding the career I'd put on hold for Ryan. Each day grew a little easier, each night a little less empty.
Chloe's gallery opening should have been a sanctuary—a celebration of art and friendship far removed from my personal drama. The white walls gleamed under perfect lighting, showcasing her latest exhibition of emerging Seattle artists.
"You look amazing," Chloe said, handing me a glass of champagne. "Revenge becomes you."
I laughed, smoothing down my black cocktail dress—one Ryan had never seen. "This isn't revenge. This is reclamation."
The gallery doors swung open, and a collective hush fell over the crowd. Isabella Ross stood in the entrance, one hand resting protectively over her visibly pregnant belly, the other holding her phone at the perfect angle to capture her grand entrance.
"Sorry I'm late," she announced to no one in particular, though her eyes locked with mine across the room. "The baby was kicking up a storm. Ryan's son is already so strong."
She glided through the crowd, her phone capturing every reaction, every whisper. I stood frozen, champagne halfway to my lips, as she approached.
"Natalie," she said, her voice dripping with false warmth. "I'm so glad to see you out and about. I was worried you might be hiding away, nursing a broken heart."
She turned to her phone. "I'm here with Ryan's ex, everyone! Isn't it wonderful how civilized adults can be? Make sure you follow @SeattleConservatory to see more of her... quaint little studio."
The champagne glass shattered in my grip, sending shards and liquid across the polished concrete floor. In the sudden silence that followed, I could hear the soft beep of Isabella's phone as she ended her livestream.
Her smile was triumphant as she leaned in close. "He was never really yours," she whispered. "And now everyone knows it."
As Chloe rushed over with napkins and concern, I stared at the blood beading along my palm where the glass had cut me. The physical pain was nothing compared to the humiliation burning through my veins.
But beneath that humiliation, something else was taking root—something cold and resolute. Isabella had just made this public. And if she wanted a war, I would give her one.
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