
Fiancé's Secret Love Affair Revealed at the Gallery
Chapter 2
The morning sun cast long shadows across our hotel suite as I sat at the edge of the bed, Christian's phone still burning in my memory from the night before. He moved around the room with casual ease, packing his camera gear for another day of "exploration."
"Christian," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "I saw Sara's Instagram yesterday. She posted the exact same photos you took of me—but hours before you even picked up your camera."
He paused, his hands stilling on the camera strap. When he turned to face me, his expression was perfectly composed—too composed. "What are you talking about?"
"The cypress trees. The stone steps. The dock. Identical angles, identical lighting. How is that possible?"
Christian's laugh was light, dismissive. "Marlowe, Lake Como is a tourist destination. Everyone takes similar shots. It's probably just coincidence."
"These weren't similar. They were identical."
He crossed the room and sat beside me, his hand finding mine with practiced tenderness. "Baby, you're being paranoid. Maybe she saw my photos somewhere and copied them? You know how these social media influencers are—they steal content all the time."
The ease with which the lie rolled off his tongue made my stomach clench. "But she posted them first—"
"Are you sure about the timestamps? Sometimes those apps glitch." His thumb traced circles on my palm, the same gesture that had once comforted me. Now it felt like manipulation. "Marlowe, I'm worried about you. This jealousy isn't like you."
Jealousy. The word hit like a slap. "I'm not—"
"Sara's just someone from the art scene. You've met her maybe twice." His voice carried that patient tone people use with children or the unstable. "Why would you even be following her social media?"
The question hung in the air, and suddenly I felt foolish. Was I being paranoid? The doubt crept in like poison, making me question what I'd seen with my own eyes. Christian's face showed nothing but concern and love—the same face I'd trusted for seven years.
"I... I just thought it was strange," I whispered.
He pulled me close, pressing a kiss to my temple. "I love you, Marlowe. Only you. Don't let your imagination create problems that don't exist."
---
The following weekend, Christian surprised me with tickets to the symphony. "I know how much you love classical music," he said, straightening his tie in our bedroom mirror. "Tonight is just about us."
The concert hall buzzed with pre-performance energy as we found our seats in the orchestra section. Christian looked handsome in his dark suit, his hand warm in mine as the lights dimmed. For a moment, I almost believed we could return to what we'd been before doubt had poisoned everything.
Then I saw her.
Sara Butler sat three rows ahead and to the right, her auburn hair catching the stage lights. She wore a deep blue dress that hugged her curves, and when she turned slightly to speak to her companion, I caught her profile—elegant, confident, beautiful.
My grip on Christian's hand tightened involuntarily.
"You okay?" he whispered.
"Fine," I managed, but my attention was split between the opening notes of Mozart and the woman who had somehow invaded my relationship.
As the first movement swelled, I watched Christian from the corner of my eye. He seemed absorbed in the music, his free hand resting on his chest in that gesture he made when deeply moved. But then Sara shifted in her seat, glancing back over her shoulder.
Their eyes met.
What I witnessed next made my blood freeze. Christian's hand moved from his chest to his heart in a deliberate motion—once, twice. A signal. Sara smiled, a secret, intimate expression that spoke of shared moments I'd never been part of.
During the romantic second movement, as violins sang of love and longing, I watched Christian mouth words toward Sara's section. Even from my angle, I could read his lips: "I love you."
He was still holding my hand.
The music continued around us, beautiful and haunting, while my world crumbled in silence. Christian squeezed my fingers during a particularly moving passage, playing the devoted fiancé while conducting a love affair three rows away.
I sat frozen, trapped between the performance on stage and the one beside me, wondering how long this had been going on. How many concerts, gallery openings, dinners had been stages for their secret communication?
When the final notes faded and applause thundered through the hall, Christian turned to me with shining eyes. "Wasn't that incredible?"
I nodded, unable to speak, as Sara disappeared into the crowd without a backward glance.
---
By Tuesday, I'd made my decision. If Christian could lie to my face with such practiced ease, if he could conduct an affair in plain sight while holding my hand, then I needed proof that couldn't be dismissed or explained away.
I called in sick to work and drove to his studio district, parking across the street with a clear view of the entrance. The morning crawled by with no sign of him. I'd brought coffee and a book, trying to look like someone waiting for a friend, but my hands shook every time a car turned down the street.
At 2:17 PM, Christian's silver sedan pulled up to the curb.
Sara got out of the passenger side.
They walked to the studio entrance together, her hand resting on his lower back in a gesture of casual intimacy. Christian unlocked the door and held it open for her, his other hand briefly touching her waist as she passed.
The door closed behind them.
I sat in my car, engine off, watching the windows of his second-floor studio. Occasionally, shadows moved behind the frosted glass. At one point, the lights dimmed. My imagination filled in the details I couldn't see, each possibility more painful than the last.
Three hours and forty-seven minutes. That's how long they stayed inside while I sat in my car, my heart breaking in real time. When they finally emerged, Sara's hair was mussed, her lipstick gone. Christian's shirt was wrinkled in a way that told its own story.
They kissed goodbye on the sidewalk—not a peck, but a deep, lingering kiss that spoke of intimacy and promises. Then Sara walked to her own car while Christian watched her go, his face soft with an expression I'd once thought was reserved for me.
As I drove home through rush hour traffic, one thought echoed in my mind: How long had I been living a lie?
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