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My Fiancé Abandoned Me for Her Calling Novel Cover

My Fiancé Abandoned Me for Her Calling

Art-curator Ivy’s wedding to shipping heir Jonah is hijacked by his “savior” Lily, who phones him 217 times, fakes PTSD, and uses a non-existent therapist to summon him nightly. Ivy discovers Lily has secretly forwarded every private text between the couple for weeks and cancels the bridal shower with a suicide threat, sending Jonah racing across the sea. With proof that “Dr. Jessica Evans” does not exist, Ivy realizes the trauma is fiction and Lily has already won.
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Chapter 1

The call came on a Tuesday morning while I was reviewing the final details for our upcoming contemporary Asian art exhibition. Jonah's phone buzzed against the marble countertop of our Gastown loft, and I watched his face transform from relaxed contentment to immediate concern.

"Lily?" His voice carried that particular tone I'd grown to recognize—soft, protective, urgent. "Slow down. What's wrong?"

I set down my coffee cup, the ceramic clicking against the saucer louder than it should have been in the sudden quiet of our kitchen. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, Vancouver's morning light filtered through the glass, but something cold settled in my chest as I watched Jonah's shoulders tense.

"You're moving back? When?" He ran his free hand through his dark hair, a gesture I'd once found endearing but now made my stomach clench. "Of course I'll help. Don't even think about that."

Lily Summers. The name that had haunted the periphery of our seven-year relationship like a persistent shadow. Jonah's childhood friend from Bainbridge Island. The girl who'd taken a bullet meant for him during a high school mugging. The girl whose sacrifice had become a sacred debt in the Cross family mythology.

"She's having episodes again," Jonah said after ending the call, his blue eyes meeting mine with that familiar mixture of guilt and determination. "The PTSD is getting worse. Her facial nerve damage is flaring up, and her therapist thinks being closer to familiar support systems will help."

I nodded, forcing my expression to remain neutral. "That's... that's good. If being home helps her heal."

But even as I said the words, something twisted in my gut. Lily had been in New York for years, building what Jonah always described as a "creative career" that seemed to involve a lot of therapy appointments and very little actual work. Her periodic calls to Jonah had been manageable from three thousand miles away—monthly check-ins, birthday messages, the occasional crisis that required a long phone conversation. Now she'd be a seaplane ride away.

"She's looking at places in Seattle," Jonah continued, already reaching for his laptop. "I should help her find something suitable. Maybe something with good natural light for her photography."

The way he said it—"her photography"—with such careful reverence, made my teeth clench. I'd seen Lily's Instagram. Blurry selfies and moody shots of coffee cups didn't exactly constitute a portfolio, but Jonah spoke of her artistic pursuits like she was the next Annie Leibovitz.

"Of course," I managed. "Family is important."

The word "family" hung between us, loaded with seven years of careful navigation around the Lily-shaped landmine in our relationship. She wasn't family, not really, but the Cross clan had adopted her as such after the shooting. Eleanor Cross, Jonah's mother, never missed an opportunity to remind everyone that "dear Lily literally saved our boy's life."

Two days later, we were at Blue Water Cafe for what was supposed to be a romantic dinner. The restaurant hummed with the quiet conversation of Vancouver's elite, the kind of place where tech moguls and old-money families came to see and be seen. Jonah had chosen a corner table overlooking the harbor, and the setting sun painted the water in shades of gold and crimson.

"The Kusama exhibition is getting incredible reviews," I said, twirling my fork through the house-made pasta. "The Times called it 'a transcendent exploration of infinity and obsession.'"

Jonah smiled, reaching across the table to squeeze my hand. "I'm so proud of you, Ivy. You've built something incredible at the gallery."

For a moment, everything felt normal. This was us—successful, accomplished, building a life together that made sense on paper and felt right in my heart. The engagement ring on my finger caught the candlelight, a two-carat emerald cut that had belonged to Jonah's grandmother.

Then his phone rang.

The ringtone was different from his usual one—a soft, lilting melody I didn't recognize. Jonah's face went pale as he glanced at the screen.

"I should take this," he said, already standing. "It's Jessica, Lily's therapist."

My fork paused halfway to my mouth. "Her therapist calls you directly?"

"Only in emergencies." He was already walking toward the restaurant's entrance, phone pressed to his ear.

I sat alone at our table, watching other couples enjoy their meals while my pasta grew cold. The waiter approached twice to ask if everything was all right, and I smiled and nodded, playing the part of the understanding fiancée.

When Jonah returned fifteen minutes later, his face was grim.

"Lily's having a panic attack," he said, already signaling for the check. "A bad one. Jessica says she's asking for me specifically. I need to go."

"Go where? She's in Seattle."

"I can take the seaplane. Be there in forty minutes."

The words hit me like cold water. "Jonah, we haven't finished dinner."

"I know, and I'm sorry, but—" He pulled out his credit card, not meeting my eyes. "You understand, right? After everything she's done for me, for our family. I can't just ignore this."

I stared at him, this man I'd planned to marry in two months, as he abandoned our romantic dinner for a woman who'd somehow managed to insert herself into our relationship from three thousand miles away. The other diners were starting to notice our drama, their curious glances making my cheeks burn.

"Of course," I said quietly. "Go."

He kissed my forehead—a brotherly gesture that felt like a dismissal—and left me sitting alone with two plates of expensive food and a growing certainty that something fundamental had shifted.

I took a taxi home to our empty loft, where I spent the evening researching Dr. Jessica Evans, supposedly Lily's therapist. What I found made my blood run cold. No New York State licensing board had any record of a Dr. Jessica Evans specializing in PTSD treatment. No medical directories, no hospital affiliations, no academic credentials.

Either Lily's therapist was operating completely off the grid, or she didn't exist at all.

My phone buzzed with a text from Jonah: "With Lily now. She's stable. Flying back tomorrow morning. Love you."

But it was the Instagram notification that made my hands shake. Lily had posted a story—a photo of herself curled up in an oversized hoodie I recognized as Jonah's, her face turned toward the camera with practiced vulnerability. The caption read: "The only medicine that works 💙"

I screenshotted it before it could disappear, my finger trembling against the phone screen. In the photo, Lily looked nothing like someone who'd just suffered a debilitating panic attack. She looked satisfied. Triumphant, even.

And I realized with crystalline clarity that this was just the beginning.

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