
Fiancé's Affair Unveiled
Chapter 3
I stood in the morning light of our sunroom, watching Sebastian pace across the marble floor like a man condemned. Three days had passed since I'd walked away from him in the garden, three days of silence that had apparently driven him to desperation. His parents flanked him like anxious bodyguards, their faces etched with the kind of panic that comes from watching empires crumble.
"Thea, please." His voice cracked on my name. "We can work through this. We can make it right."
I set down my coffee cup with deliberate care, the porcelain clicking against the saucer like a period at the end of a sentence. "There's only one way to make this right, Sebastian."
Hope flickered across his features, pathetic and eager. "Anything. Tell me what you need."
"If you want this wedding, if you want me, Kira goes to a facility. Professional help. And you never see her again." The words fell between us like stones into still water. "Choose."
The silence stretched until it became a living thing, coiling around us with suffocating weight. Sebastian's mouth opened, then closed. His eyes darted to his parents, to the floor, anywhere but my face.
"I..." He ran his hand through his hair, that familiar tell that meant he was about to lie or deflect. "You don't understand how complicated this is. My father, my stepmother—they've been through so much. I can't just abandon family because you're—"
"Because I'm what?" My voice was arctic. "Hurt? Betrayed? Unwilling to share my husband with his stepsister?"
"That's not what I meant." But his eyes were still on the floor, still avoiding the choice I'd laid before him. "Kira needs support, not abandonment. I can't do that to my parents."
There it was. His answer wrapped in excuses and deflection, but an answer nonetheless. After five years, after everything I'd sacrificed, he still couldn't choose me over her.
The numbness that had protected me for days cracked open, revealing something harder underneath—not heartbreak, but clarity. Crystal-clear, devastating clarity.
"Get out." The words emerged calm and final. "All of you. Get off my family's property and don't come back."
Mr. Harrison stepped forward, desperation making him bold. "Thea, think about what you're doing. The business implications—"
"Are your problem now." I walked to the window, my back to them, watching gardeners tend to roses that would outlive whatever we'd pretended to build together. "You have ten minutes before I call security."
I didn't turn around to watch them leave, but I heard Sebastian's footsteps pause at the doorway, heard his sharp intake of breath as if he wanted to say something more. But he didn't. He never did when it mattered.
The door closed with a soft click, and I was finally, completely alone.
* * *
A week later, the tabloids exploded.
I sat in Meridian Café, my laptop open to quarterly reports that couldn't hold my attention, when the headlines began trending. "Harrison Heir's Wedding Scandal." "Billionaire's Son Caught with Stepsister." "Elite Family's Twisted Love Triangle."
Someone had leaked everything—photos of the cancelled wedding venue, quotes from "anonymous sources" about Sebastian's betrayal, speculation about the Harrison family's financial dependence on mine. The story painted Sebastian exactly as he was: a weak man who'd destroyed his own future for a moment of selfish pleasure.
I should have felt vindicated. Instead, I felt nothing at all.
That's when Kira found me.
She burst through the café's glass doors like a hurricane in designer clothes, her hair wild, her makeup smeared. Every conversation in the elegant space stopped as she stormed toward my corner table, her heels clicking against marble like gunshots.
"You bitch!" Her voice shattered the refined atmosphere. "You vindictive, jealous bitch!"
I took a sip of my cappuccino, not looking up from my laptop. Around us, phones appeared like flowers turning toward the sun—everyone eager to capture the next act of this public drama.
"You couldn't stand that he chose me!" Kira's voice climbed higher, more shrill. "You were always just a placeholder, you know that? A convenient checkbook in a pretty dress! Sebastian stayed with you for the money, nothing else!"
Still, I didn't react. I scrolled through spreadsheets with steady fingers, my expression as calm as if she were discussing the weather. My silence seemed to fuel her rage, and she leaned across my table, her face inches from mine.
"He told me he never loved you! Not really! You were boring, frigid, nothing compared to what we have together!"
I finally looked up, meeting her wild eyes with complete composure. "Are you finished?"
The question, delivered in my most polite tone, broke something inside her. Kira's face contorted with fury, and she swept her arm across my table, sending my laptop, coffee, and papers flying. The crash echoed through the silent café like thunder.
"I'm not finished!" she screamed, but her voice was already breaking. "I'll never be finished! He's mine, he's always been mine, and I'll make sure you never—"
Security was already moving toward us, but I simply gathered my things with unhurried precision, my movements deliberate and dignified. I left a tip on the table—generous enough to cover the mess—and walked toward the exit without a backward glance.
Behind me, Kira's screams dissolved into incoherent sobs as security escorted her out through a different door.
I stepped into the afternoon sunlight, my phone already buzzing with messages from lawyers, publicists, and family members who'd seen the café incident trending on social media within minutes.
But all I could think about was my car—my grandmother's restored vintage convertible waiting in the valet stand. The one place where I still felt connected to unconditional love, to someone who'd valued me simply for existing.
I needed that connection now more than ever.
The valet stand was empty except for a confused-looking attendant who checked his records three times before delivering the news that would shatter my last piece of peace.
My grandmother's car was gone.
And in the security footage they showed me twenty minutes later, I watched Kira Harrison use a spare key—a key Sebastian must have stolen from my purse weeks ago—to drive away with the last tangible piece of my grandmother's love.
The pendant. My grandmother's pendant was in that car's glovebox, where I'd left it after having it cleaned.
Now it was gone too.
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