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He didn’t cheat with his body, He cheated with his presence Novel Cover

He didn’t cheat with his body, He cheated with his presence

Sienna and Kade survived eight years and two cities. Then she found the messages. No explicit photos, no scandalous affairs—just a year of emotional closeness given to his labmate. The breaking point? Discovering that the night Sienna had a severe fever, Kade’s devoted bedside vigil wasn't for her. He was staying up to comfort the other woman. Sienna walked out into the night. Now Kade is unraveling, chasing a woman who realizes that an occupied mind is worse than an empty bed.
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Chapter 1

The vibration against my pillow pulled me from the edge of sleep at 2 AM. I fumbled for my phone, squinting against the harsh blue light that cut through the darkness of our bedroom. Kade stirred beside me, his breathing still deep and even.

The notification was an iMessage. From Margot.

"I'm looking at that February document again. Thank you for staying up with me that night. You saved my life."

My finger hovered over the screen. I should have just turned off the vibration and rolled back over. Should have let sleep reclaim me. But something about those words—"that February night"—sent a cold spike through my chest.

February. The month I'd been sick. Really sick.

I tapped the message thread, and suddenly I was wide awake. My heart began to pound as I scrolled upward, past weeks of casual exchanges, past spring break plans and work complaints, searching for that specific date. The one burned into my memory.

February 15th. The night my fever had spiked to 103 degrees.

There it was. The timestamp that would change everything.

I remembered that night in fragments—shivering so violently my teeth chattered, the way the room seemed to tilt and spin, how Kade had sat on the edge of our bed with his laptop balanced on his knees. I'd felt so grateful, even through the haze of illness, that he was staying close. Watching over me.

But the chat history told a different story.

Margot: "I can't do this presentation. I'm going to fail my defense."

Kade: "Send me the Google Doc link. I'll help you fix it."

Margot: "It's 11 PM. Aren't you taking care of Sienna?"

Kade: "She just fell asleep. It's quiet here now. I'm fully focused on you."

The words blurred as my eyes filled with tears. Quiet here now. As if I was just background noise that had finally been muted.

I scrolled down, watching their conversation unfold in real time. Timestamp after timestamp showing Kade's responses, each one more engaged than the last. He'd been editing her slides, restructuring her arguments, crafting her talking points. All while I lay burning with fever three feet away.

Margot: "You're amazing. I don't know what I'd do without you."

Kade: "That's what friends are for. Besides, you'd do the same for me."

Friends. The word felt like a blade between my ribs.

My hands began to shake—not from fever this time, but from something much colder. I kept reading, unable to stop myself even as each message felt like another small death.

Margot: "I owe you dinner when this is over."

Kade: "I'll hold you to that. 😉"

The emoji was the final blow. Casual, flirtatious, intimate in a way that made my stomach lurch. I pressed my hand to my mouth, fighting the urge to be sick.

How many nights had there been like this? How many times had I thought Kade was being the perfect boyfriend, staying close when I needed him, only to discover he was using my illness as an excuse to have uninterrupted time with her?

I looked over at him now, sleeping peacefully, one arm flung across the space where I should have been lying. His face was relaxed, almost boyish in the dim light. The same face that had looked down at me with such apparent concern that February night, asking if I needed more water, if the fever was breaking.

Lying. He'd been lying the entire time.

The betrayal hit me in waves. Not just the secret help he'd given Margot, but the way he'd performed care for me while his attention was elsewhere. The way he'd made me feel cherished and protected while simultaneously making me feel like an inconvenience to be managed.

I set the phone down carefully, my movements deliberate and quiet. The rage building in my chest felt dangerous, like it might explode outward if I moved too quickly. Instead, I channeled it into something productive.

I slipped out of bed, my bare feet silent on the hardwood floor. Kade didn't stir. In the closet, I pulled down my overnight bag—the one I used for work trips and weekend visits to my sister. My hands moved automatically, folding clothes with mechanical precision.

This wasn't a decision born of impulse. This was clarity, sharp and clean as broken glass.

I packed methodically: underwear, jeans, sweaters, my favorite books. The small things that would make wherever I was going feel less temporary. Each item I placed in the bag felt like a small act of reclamation.

Kade shifted in bed, mumbling something incoherent. I froze, but his breathing settled back into sleep's rhythm.

I zipped the bag closed and carried it to the bedroom door. My laptop bag sat on the dresser—I grabbed that too. Everything else could wait. Everything else could be retrieved later, when I was ready to have that conversation.

In the hallway, I paused. Our apartment suddenly felt foreign, like a stage set for a play I no longer wanted to perform in. The photos on the walls—our vacation to Maine, his birthday party last year, the two of us at his company picnic—all of them felt like evidence of an elaborate lie.

Kade stirred again as I reached the bedroom doorway.

"Mmm... Sienna?" His voice was thick with sleep. "What are you doing?"

I turned back, my heart hammering against my ribs. He was propped up on one elbow, squinting at me in the darkness.

"I felt stuffy," I said, surprised by how steady my voice sounded. "I'm going downstairs to get some air."

"Oh." He rubbed his eyes, already sinking back into the pillow. "Okay. Don't be long."

I walked to the front door, my bags in hand. Behind me, I heard the soft sounds of Kade settling back into sleep. At the door, I paused with my hand on the handle.

"Quick back," he mumbled from the bedroom, his words slurred with exhaustion. "Don't make me worry."

Don't make me worry.

The irony was almost laughable. As if his worry had ever been genuine. As if his concern hadn't always been conditional, divided, performed.

I turned the handle and stepped into the hallway, pulling the door closed behind me with a soft click. The sound was final, decisive. On the other side of that door, Kade would sleep peacefully for hours, maybe not even noticing I was gone until morning.

By then, I would be somewhere else entirely. Somewhere quiet, where I could think clearly about what came next.

The timestamp on Margot's message would be waiting for me when I was ready to face it again. But for now, I had taken the first step toward something that felt like freedom.

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