Fiancé Chooses Another Woman Novel Cover

Fiancé Chooses Another Woman

9.0 / 10.0
The key turned in the lock with its familiar click, but tonight something felt different. I pushed open the front door to our apartment, my lab bag heavy on my shoulder after another late evening analyzing data. The hallway stretched before me, dimly lit by the single lamp we always left on. I expected the usual silence of Cayden already asleep, maybe the soft glow of his phone screen from the bedroom. Instead, I heard laughter. Soft, intimate laughter that made my stomach clench. I set my bag down carefully, my movements suddenly deliberate and quiet. The sound was coming from the kitchen, along with the gentle clink of wine glasses. My heart hammered against my ribs as I moved toward the archway, each step feeling like I was walking through thick honey. The scene that greeted me felt like a physical blow.

Fiancé Chooses Another Woman Chapter 1

The key turned in the lock with its familiar click, but tonight something felt different. I pushed open the front door to our apartment, my lab bag heavy on my shoulder after another late evening analyzing data. The hallway stretched before me, dimly lit by the single lamp we always left on. I expected the usual silence of Cayden already asleep, maybe the soft glow of his phone screen from the bedroom.

Instead, I heard laughter. Soft, intimate laughter that made my stomach clench.

I set my bag down carefully, my movements suddenly deliberate and quiet. The sound was coming from the kitchen, along with the gentle clink of wine glasses. My heart hammered against my ribs as I moved toward the archway, each step feeling like I was walking through thick honey.

The scene that greeted me felt like a physical blow.

Cayden stood behind Paislee at the kitchen island, his hands resting on her waist as she leaned back against him. Her dark hair cascaded over his arm, and she was wearing my silk blouse – the cream one I'd been looking for all week. The wine bottle between them was nearly empty, two glasses catching the warm light from the pendant lamp above.

"You're so much more fun than she is," Paislee murmured, tilting her head back to look up at him. "Always so serious, always buried in those boring research papers."

Cayden's laugh was low, intimate. "She doesn't understand how to just... live in the moment."

The words hit me like ice water. Seven years. Seven years of building a life together, of planning our wedding, of believing in his promises that he would always protect me, always choose me. And here he was, holding another woman in our kitchen, wearing my clothes, drinking our wine.

Paislee turned in his arms, her fingers tracing the collar of his shirt – the shirt I'd bought him for his birthday last month. "I understand you," she whispered, standing on her tiptoes. "I see who you really are."

I should have stormed in. Should have demanded explanations, thrown the wine glasses against the wall, screamed until the neighbors called the police. Instead, I found myself backing away, my hand pressed against my mouth to keep from making a sound.

The rational part of my mind, the scientist in me, took over. I needed evidence. I needed to understand the full scope of what was happening before I acted. So I retreated to our bedroom, my movements mechanical, and sat on the edge of the bed we'd shared for three years.

Over the following weeks, I became a ghost in my own home. I watched. I observed. I documented every small betrayal like data points in a cruel experiment.

Paislee grew bolder, more brazen. She would emerge from the guest bathroom in the morning wearing my robe, the one with my initials embroidered on the pocket. "Oh, I hope you don't mind," she'd say with false sweetness, her eyes glittering with malice. "Mine is in the wash."

She used my perfume, the expensive bottle Cayden had given me for Christmas. The scent would linger in rooms after she'd left, marking her territory like an animal. When I confronted her about it, she just smiled. "Cayden said I could borrow it. He likes how it smells on me."

The worst part was watching Cayden allow it all. The man who had once promised to shield me from any harm now stood by silently as Paislee systematically invaded every aspect of my life. When she made cutting remarks about my appearance or my work, he would look uncomfortable but say nothing. When she "accidentally" broke my favorite mug, he bought her a replacement instead of addressing her carelessness.

"She's just trying to fit in," he'd say when I finally brought up her behavior. "Give her time to adjust."

But I could see the way his eyes followed her movements, the way his voice softened when he spoke to her. The way he found excuses to touch her hand when passing dishes at dinner, the way he laughed at her jokes that weren't even funny.

Three weeks after that first night in the kitchen, the storm hit.

I was at Murphy's Bar downtown with Maya and a few other friends from the lab, trying to pretend everything was normal. The rain hammered against the windows, and the wind howled like something alive and angry. My phone buzzed with weather alerts, warnings about flooding and dangerous driving conditions.

"I should head home," I told Maya, glancing at the storm outside. "This is getting worse."

I pulled out my phone and called Cayden, my fingers trembling slightly as I waited for him to answer.

"Hey," his voice was distant, distracted.

"The storm's really bad. Can you come pick me up from Murphy's? I don't think I should drive in this."

There was a pause, and I could hear music in the background, laughter. Female laughter.

"Actually, I'm kind of in the middle of something. Can you get an Uber?"

"Cayden, the roads are flooding. Please, I just need—"

"Look, Paislee's stranded at that new club on Fifth Street. I need to go get her first. She doesn't have anyone else to call."

The words hung in the air between us like a death sentence. In that moment, with rain lashing the windows and my friends watching me with growing concern, I finally understood the truth I'd been trying to avoid for weeks.

He was choosing her. On this stormy night, when I needed him most, he was choosing her.

"Right," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the thunder. "Of course you are."

I ended the call and stared at the black screen, watching my reflection fracture in the dark glass like everything else in my life.

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Fiancé Chooses Another Woman of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10

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