
My Fiancé Abandoned Me for Her Calling
Chapter 2
Three weeks passed before I found the courage to confront Jonah directly. Three weeks of watching him check his phone every few minutes, of canceled dinners and interrupted conversations, of waking up alone because he'd slipped out at midnight to take another "emergency" call from Seattle.
I cornered him in our home office on a gray February morning, where he sat hunched over his laptop, presumably helping Lily navigate Seattle's rental market from our Gastown loft.
"We need to talk," I said, closing the door behind me.
Jonah looked up, his blue eyes immediately wary. "About what?"
"About Lily." I sat down across from him, my hands folded in my lap to keep them from shaking. "About how she's systematically dismantling our relationship."
His face hardened. "That's not fair, Ivy. She's struggling."
"Is she?" I pulled out my phone, scrolling to the screenshots I'd been collecting. "Because her Instagram tells a different story. Look at this—posted two hours after her supposed panic attack last Tuesday."
The image showed Lily at Pike Place Market, laughing with friends, her face bright and animated. No trace of the "debilitating episode" that had sent Jonah racing across the border on his seaplane.
Jonah barely glanced at the screen. "Social media isn't real life, Ivy. You know that. She puts on a brave face for her followers."
"And this?" I swiped to another screenshot. "Her therapist, Jessica Evans. I can't find any record of her existing."
"Maybe she values her privacy. Not every professional has a huge online presence."
The dismissal in his voice made my chest tighten. "Jonah, listen to yourself. You're making excuses for someone who's lying to you."
"She's not lying." He stood abruptly, his chair scraping against the hardwood floor. "She saved my life, Ivy. She took a bullet that was meant for me. Do you understand what that means?"
"I understand what it meant seventeen years ago," I said, my voice rising despite my efforts to stay calm. "But what does it mean now? That she gets to control your life forever?"
"It means I owe her." The words came out sharp, final. "It means when she needs me, I'm there. That's not negotiable."
I stared at him, this man I'd loved for seven years, and saw a stranger. "What about what you owe me? What about our wedding, our future, our—"
"This isn't about choosing sides," he interrupted. "I can support both of you."
"No, you can't. Because she won't let you."
He turned away, looking out the window at the Vancouver skyline. "She's genuinely suffering, Ivy. The trauma, the facial nerve damage—it's all real. Her doctors say being close to familiar support systems is crucial for her recovery."
"Then why is she moving to your family's estate instead of getting professional help?"
The question hung in the air between us. Jonah's shoulders tensed, and for a moment, I thought I'd broken through. Then his phone buzzed.
Lily's name flashed on the screen, accompanied by that lilting ringtone I'd grown to hate.
Jonah reached for it automatically, and something inside me snapped.
"Don't," I said.
"I have to—"
"No, you don't." I stood, blocking his path to the phone. "For once in your life, choose me."
We stared at each other as the phone continued to ring. Jonah's face was torn, anguished, and I realized with sinking certainty that this was a test I was going to fail.
The ringing stopped. Then immediately started again.
"She might be hurt," Jonah said quietly.
"She's manipulating you."
"I can't take that risk."
He pushed past me and answered the call. "Lily? What's wrong?"
I left the room, my hands shaking with rage and heartbreak. In the kitchen, I poured myself a glass of wine even though it wasn't yet noon, and tried to process what had just happened. My fiancé had chosen his obligation to another woman over his commitment to me. Again.
Two days later, Maya called with news that made my blood run cold.
"I've been digging into Lily's New York life," she said without preamble. "And it's weird, Ivy. Really weird."
I was at the gallery, putting finishing touches on our upcoming exhibition—a showcase of contemporary Asian artists that represented months of work. "Weird how?"
"Her apartment lease ended six months ago, but she's been posting photos from it as recently as last week. Her supposed job at that boutique photography studio? They've never heard of her. And get this—I found three different LinkedIn profiles for her, all with different career histories."
My grip tightened on the phone. "You're sure?"
"Dead sure. I'm sending you screenshots now. This woman has been living a complete fiction."
My phone buzzed with incoming messages—images of rental records, employment verification forms, social media archives. The evidence was damning and comprehensive. Lily Summers had been planning this return for months, methodically dismantling her New York life while maintaining the illusion of stability.
"There's more," Maya continued. "I reached out to some contacts in the Seattle art scene. Guess who's been asking around about you specifically? About your gallery, your relationship with Jonah, your family background?"
The room seemed to tilt around me. "She's been researching me."
"Like you're a target, not a rival. Ivy, this isn't just jealousy. This is something else."
That evening, I tried once more to share Maya's findings with Jonah. We were supposed to have dinner at home—a rare night without interruptions—but he seemed distracted, checking his phone every few minutes.
"The Cross family has invited Lily to stay at the estate," he said over our barely-touched salmon. "Mom thinks it's the perfect solution. Lily gets the support she needs, and she's close enough for regular therapy appointments."
The Seattle estate. The sprawling Bainbridge Island compound where Jonah had grown up, where every room held memories of his childhood with Lily. Where Eleanor Cross could supervise their reunion like a benevolent matchmaker.
"Jonah," I said carefully, "Maya found some inconsistencies in Lily's background. I think we should—"
"I don't want to hear it." His voice was flat, final. "I know you don't like her, but that doesn't give you the right to investigate her like she's a criminal."
"I'm trying to protect you."
"From what? From helping someone who sacrificed everything for me?"
The familiar guilt-script rolled off his tongue with practiced ease, and I realized that Lily had won this battle before it even began. She'd weaponized his gratitude, turned his sense of honor into a chain that bound him to her will.
And now she was moving into his childhood home, where she could rewrite their shared history and erase me from their future.
My phone buzzed with a text from Maya: "Gallery opening tomorrow night. Whatever she's planning, it's going to be soon."
I looked across the table at Jonah, who was already reaching for his ringing phone, and felt the last threads of our relationship beginning to fray.
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