
His Lies, Her Stolen Future
His Lies, Her Stolen Future Chapter 1
The key turned in the lock with the same familiar click it had for three years, but something felt different the moment I stepped into our apartment. The air carried an unfamiliar sweetness—jasmine perfume where my vanilla scent should have lingered. My heart hammered against my ribs as I dropped my suitcase by the door, the sound echoing through what should have been our sanctuary.
"Colten?" My voice cracked slightly as I called out to the empty space. "I'm home early!"
Silence answered me. But not the comfortable silence of an empty home waiting for its occupants to return. This was different—heavy with secrets I couldn't yet name.
I moved deeper into the living room, my eyes catching on details that didn't belong. A silk scarf draped over the back of our leather couch—powder blue, not my usual jewel tones. Women's magazines scattered across the coffee table where Colten's architectural journals should have been. My fingers trembled as I picked up one of the glossy publications, the pages falling open to an article about "Preparing Your Nursery for Baby's Arrival."
The magazine slipped from my hands, hitting the hardwood floor with a soft thud that seemed to echo through my chest. My breath came in short, sharp bursts as I forced myself to keep moving, to keep searching for explanations that made sense.
In the kitchen, I found more evidence of another woman's presence. Prenatal vitamins lined up next to the coffee maker. Ginger tea boxes stacked where my Earl Grey used to sit. The refrigerator door was covered with appointment cards—all bearing the name "Magnolia Montgomery" in flowing script.
Montgomery. Colten's last name.
My legs gave out, and I gripped the marble countertop to keep from collapsing. The cold stone bit into my palms as I stared at those cards, willing them to disappear, to be some cruel joke my exhausted mind was playing on me.
But they remained, stark and real against the white refrigerator door.
I stumbled toward our bedroom—no, what used to be our bedroom—driven by a masochistic need to confirm what my heart already knew. The door stood slightly ajar, and I pushed it open with shaking fingers.
The sight that greeted me drove the air from my lungs in one devastating blow.
Wedding photos. Dozens of them, displayed on every surface like monuments to my destruction. Colten in a black tuxedo, his arm wrapped around a radiant bride in flowing white. The same smile I'd fallen in love with eight years ago, directed at someone else entirely. Someone I recognized with a sick twist in my stomach.
Magnolia Kelley. My former tutoring student. The girl I'd sponsored through college, whose mother's medical bills I'd helped pay, whose tears I'd dried when she struggled with her coursework.
I picked up the largest frame with trembling hands, studying the image as if it might transform into something less devastating if I looked hard enough. They looked happy. Genuinely, radiantly happy. Colten's hand rested protectively on Magnolia's still-flat stomach, and she gazed up at him with the same adoring expression I'd once reserved for him alone.
The date stamp in the corner read exactly one year ago. One year. While I'd been in Switzerland, dreaming of our future, planning our life together, sending him letters he apparently never read, he'd been building a new life with her.
"Haven?"
The frame slipped from my numb fingers, crashing to the floor in an explosion of glass and silver. I spun around to find Colten standing in the doorway, his face pale with shock and something that might have been guilt.
He looked exactly the same—those warm brown eyes that used to make me feel safe, the strong jawline I'd traced with my fingers countless times, the dark hair that always fell just slightly over his forehead. But now he seemed like a stranger wearing the face of the man I'd loved.
"You're early," he said, as if that explained everything. As if the timing was the problem, not the betrayal scattered across our bedroom floor.
"Apparently not early enough." My voice sounded foreign to my own ears, hollow and brittle. I gestured toward the destruction at my feet, toward the photos that remained standing like accusers. "When were you planning to tell me? Or were you just going to let me figure it out on my own?"
Colten stepped into the room, his hands raised as if approaching a wounded animal. "Haven, I can explain—"
"Explain what?" The words exploded from me with a force that surprised us both. "Explain how you married my student while I was gone? Explain how you're having a baby with her? Explain how you turned our home into a shrine to your new life?"
His face crumpled, and for a moment, I saw a flash of the man I'd fallen in love with. "It's not what you think. It's complicated—"
"Complicated?" I laughed, but the sound held no humor. "Marriage certificates tend to be pretty straightforward, Colten. You're either married or you're not. And according to what I found, you very much are."
Footsteps echoed from the hallway, and we both turned toward the sound. My heart stopped as Magnolia appeared in the doorway, one hand pressed protectively to her rounded belly, tears already streaming down her pale cheeks.
"Haven," she whispered, her voice breaking on my name. "I never wanted you to find out like this."
His Lies, Her Stolen Future of Contents
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