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Fiancé's Affair Unveiled at Our Wedding Novel Cover

Fiancé's Affair Unveiled at Our Wedding

The evening before my wedding should have been filled with excitement and anticipation. Instead, as I pushed open the heavy oak doors of the Hughes mansion, my heart hammered against my ribs with a strange sense of foreboding. "Holden?" I called out, my voice echoing through the cavernous foyer. "I'm here to finalize the flower arrangements for tomorrow." Silence greeted me. The housekeeper had stepped out, and the usual bustle of wedding preparations was nowhere to be seen. Something felt wrong. I made my way upstairs, the familiar path to Holden's bedroom feeling suddenly foreign under my feet. The door was slightly ajar, and I heard hushed voices from within. "I can't wait until tomorrow," a female voice purred—Elise's voice. "Once we're married, everything will be perfect." My steps faltered.
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Chapter 2

I woke to the sound of my phone buzzing insistently on the nightstand. My hand throbbed as I reached for it, the bandages a stark reminder of yesterday's betrayal. The hospital discharge papers lay scattered beside me—I hadn't even made it home last night, too shocked to leave the sterile safety of the hotel room my parents had booked.

The screen lit up with Elise's name. My stomach clenched as I opened the message.

"Good morning, bride-to-be," it read, followed by a winking emoji that felt like a knife twisting in my chest.

Then the photos started coming.

The first showed a formal document with ornate lettering and official seals. A marriage certificate. Holden's name was printed clearly beside hers—Elise Martinez-Hughes.

"Oh my God," I whispered, my fingers trembling as I swiped to the next image.

Holden and Elise standing before a justice of the peace, his arm around her waist, both smiling broadly.

"We got married three weeks ago," read the next message. "You were planning your wedding while I was planning our honeymoon."

Another photo showed them in bed together, Elise's wedding band gleaming on her finger as she posed seductively against my fiancé's bare chest.

"Did you really think he was waiting for you?" her message continued. "You were just a placeholder, Gabrielle. A business arrangement until I was ready to make it official."

The final message was a video. Holden kissing her neck as she giggled, saying, "This is only the beginning of your humiliation."

I threw the phone across the room, my bandaged hand screaming in protest as I clutched it to my chest. Tears burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not yet. Not for them.

---

"The florist canceled," my mother said quietly, her phone clutched in her hand. "And the caterer. And the photographer."

We sat in the hotel restaurant, picking at untouched breakfast plates. My father's jaw was clenched so tight I could see the muscle jumping beneath his skin.

"They're saying terrible things about you," he added, his voice breaking. "That you're... unstable. That you attacked Holden in a jealous rage."

"What?" I nearly choked on my coffee. "That's completely false!"

"It's all over social media," my mother said, sliding her phone across the table. "The Hughes family has been telling everyone you had some kind of breakdown."

I scrolled through the posts with growing horror. Photos of me from yesterday, looking disheveled and distraught as I helped my parents after the egg attack. Captions describing how I'd "gone crazy" when I discovered Holden was "just helping his bodyguard with some security matters."

My phone rang with a call from my best friend since college. I answered with shaking hands.

"Gabby," she began awkwardly. "I just wanted to say... I think we need some space. This whole situation seems really... intense."

Before I could respond, she hung up.

Three more calls came in quick succession—all friends canceling plans, distancing themselves with practiced ease. The Hughes family had effectively erased me from our social circle overnight.

---

"We should go home," my father said firmly. "Pack some things and figure out our next steps."

The drive to our family home was silent, each mile adding to the weight of dread in my chest. Something felt wrong even before we turned onto our street.

"There are cars in our driveway," my mother whispered as we pulled up.

Not just cars—black limousines with tinted windows. And flowers. Dozens of arrangements lining our front walk, but not the bright blooms of a wedding. These were funeral wreaths, black roses, and white lilies.

"What the hell?" my father muttered as he helped me from the car.

The front door stood open. Inside, our living room had been transformed into a macabre scene that made my blood run cold.

Black fabric draped every surface. Candles flickered on every table. And there, prominently displayed on our mantelpiece where family photos once stood, were enlarged portraits of my parents—framed in black, as if they were already dead.

"Oh my God," my mother gasped, clutching her chest.

I stepped forward, my broken hand throbbing as I took in the scene. A coffin-shaped guest book lay open on our coffee table. Funeral programs with my parents' names printed in somber font were arranged in neat piles.

And then I heard it—soft moans coming from behind our couch.

I moved forward in a daze, my body numb with shock. As I rounded the corner, I saw them.

Holden and Elise, tangled together on our family's couch, surrounded by mock funeral displays of my living parents. Her head was thrown back in ecstasy as he kissed her neck, right beneath the framed photo of my mother's face.

They were so absorbed in each other they didn't even notice me standing there, watching them defile my home and my heart in the most intimate way possible.

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