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His Lies, Her Stolen Future Novel Cover

His Lies, Her Stolen Future

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.
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Chapter 3

The invitation to dinner arrived on cream-colored cardstock, Magnolia's flowing handwriting requesting my presence at Le Bernardin. *To clear the air between us,* she'd written. *For old times' sake.* I should have thrown it away, should have recognized it as another manipulation. Instead, I found myself seated across from her in the restaurant's hushed elegance, watching her perform her latest act.

"I'm so glad you came," Magnolia said, her hand resting protectively on her rounded belly. She looked radiant in a flowing maternity dress, the picture of expectant motherhood. "I've missed our friendship terribly."

I studied her face, searching for cracks in the facade. "Have you?"

"Of course." Her voice carried that familiar tremor of hurt. "Haven, I know things are complicated now, but you were like a sister to me. I never wanted it to be this way."

The waiter approached, and Magnolia's eyes lit up as she scanned the wine list. "The Château Margaux, please," she said without hesitation.

I leaned forward, my pulse quickening. "Magnolia, you're pregnant."

Her smile faltered for just a moment before she laughed, the sound light and musical. "Oh, silly me. I meant the grape juice special. Pregnancy brain, you know how it is."

But I'd seen the wine list. There was no grape juice special. The waiter looked confused, glancing between us before Magnolia quickly amended her order to sparkling water.

"Actually, I'm not feeling well," she said, pressing her hand to her forehead. "Could we perhaps order something light? The stress of everything has been so hard on the baby."

I watched her throughout the meal, cataloging every inconsistency. She ordered sushi without hesitation, then caught herself and switched to a salad. When she reached for her coffee, I saw her pause, as if remembering she should avoid caffeine, then take a large sip anyway when she thought I wasn't looking.

"Tell me about the pregnancy," I said, keeping my voice casual. "How far along are you?"

"Six months," she replied quickly. Too quickly. "The doctor says everything is progressing beautifully."

But her belly looked larger than six months, and I remembered seeing those prenatal vitamins in my kitchen weeks ago. The timeline didn't add up, but when I mentioned my concerns to Colten later that evening, his response was swift and defensive.

"Haven, you need to stop this." His voice carried an edge I'd never heard before. "Magnolia is carrying my child. Your jealousy is making you see things that aren't there."

"Jealousy?" The word stung more than I expected. "Colten, I'm trying to tell you something isn't right—"

"Enough." He turned away from me, his shoulders rigid. "I won't let you attack a pregnant woman because you can't accept that we've moved on."

His words hung between us like a physical barrier, and I realized with crushing clarity that he'd already chosen his side.

---

The private investigator's office smelled of stale coffee and old paper. Marcus Rivera had come highly recommended, his reputation built on discretion and results. I sat across from his cluttered desk, my hands folded tightly in my lap as he spread photographs and documents before me.

"Your instincts were right to be suspicious," he said, his weathered face grim. "Magnolia Kelley has been using multiple identities for years."

He slid a birth certificate across the desk. "According to this, she was born in 1995. But here—" He produced another document. "Her college application lists her birth year as 1993. And this medical record from her mother's supposed death? The dates don't match any of her previous claims."

My chest tightened as I studied the evidence. "What else?"

"She's run several small-scale cons over the years. Nothing major enough to warrant serious jail time, but a pattern of deception. Fake scholarships, insurance fraud, identity theft." Rivera's voice was matter-of-fact, but his eyes held sympathy. "She's good at what she does, Ms. Sullivan. She studies her targets, becomes what they need her to be."

I thought of all the times Magnolia had seemed to mirror my interests, my speech patterns, even my mannerisms. "She was studying me."

"For years, it appears. This wasn't a crime of opportunity—it was a long-term plan."

The evidence felt heavy in my hands as I left Rivera's office. I had proof now, documentation of Magnolia's lies. But as I sat in my car, staring at the papers that could destroy her carefully constructed world, I wondered if Colten would even believe them. Or if he'd simply accuse me of fabricating evidence out of spite.

---

Colten's office building gleamed in the afternoon sun, all glass and steel reaching toward the sky. I hadn't planned to come here, but the box of his belongings in my car seemed to mock me with every mile I drove. Better to end this cleanly, I told myself. Better to return what wasn't mine and walk away with whatever dignity I had left.

His assistant waved me through with barely a glance—I'd been a familiar face here for years. Colten looked up from his drafting table as I entered, his expression shifting from surprise to something that might have been hope.

"Haven." My name sounded different on his lips now, weighted with regret.

"I brought your things." I set the box on his desk, noting how his eyes lingered on the violin case visible among his belongings. "The watch you left at my place, your books, that sweater you always forgot to take home."

He stood slowly, his hands hovering over the box as if it contained something precious and fragile. "You didn't have to—"

"Yes, I did." I turned to leave, but something caught my eye. There, partially hidden beneath a stack of blueprints, was the corner of a silver frame. Our photo from last Christmas, the one I thought he'd thrown away.

Colten followed my gaze and his face flushed. "Haven, I can explain—"

"Can you?" I pulled the frame free, studying our smiling faces. We looked so happy, so certain of our future together. "Why do you still have this?"

He ran his hand through his hair, that familiar gesture of distress. "Because I can't forget. Because every morning I wake up and for just a moment, I forget everything that's happened. I reach for you, and you're not there."

My heart clenched at the raw honesty in his voice. "Colten—"

"I married her because I promised her dying mother I'd take care of her," he said in a rush. "But it doesn't feel like love, Haven. It feels like obligation. Like I'm playing a role in someone else's life."

The admission hit me like a physical blow. After weeks of watching him defend Magnolia, hearing him claim they'd moved on, he was finally telling me the truth. But it was too late, wasn't it? He'd made his choice, signed the papers, committed to a life with her and their child.

"Then why?" I whispered. "Why did you choose her?"

His eyes met mine, and I saw the man I'd fallen in love with eight years ago—confused, vulnerable, achingly familiar. "I don't know," he said. "I honestly don't know anymore."

I set the photo back on his desk, my hands trembling. "It doesn't matter now. You're married. You're having a baby. Whatever we had—it's over."

But as I walked toward the door, his voice stopped me.

"Is it? Is it really over, Haven?"

I didn't turn around, couldn't bear to see the hope in his eyes when mine was already crumbling. Because despite everything—the betrayal, the lies, the months of anguish—hearing him admit his marriage felt like obligation had ignited something dangerous in my chest.

Something that felt dangerously like hope.

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