
My Fiancé Chose His Mistress Over Our Future
Chapter 1
Seven days before my wedding, I sat cross-legged on our Gastown loft's hardwood floor, surrounded by seating charts and tiny name cards. Outside, Vancouver's rain tapped against floor-to-ceiling windows, turning the harbor lights into watercolor smudges.
"Your mother wants the Chens at table six, but that puts them next to your father's shipping rivals," I said, looking up at Jonah. He paced by the windows, phone pressed to his ear, nodding absently.
"I know, Mom. We've got it handled," he murmured, not to me.
I'd spent three hours rearranging two hundred guests for our Fairmont Pacific Rim reception—balancing his mother's social politics against my parents' face-saving concerns. The seating chart felt like a metaphor for our relationship: carefully negotiated territory between his Seattle shipping empire and my immigrant family's hard-won place in Vancouver's art world.
Jonah's phone buzzed again. He glanced at the screen, his expression shifting instantly.
"Lily?" I asked, though I already knew.
He nodded, answering immediately. "Hey, what's wrong?"
I watched his face transform—brow furrowed, jaw tightening. I could hear sobbing through the speaker.
"Slow down, Lil. Deep breaths," he soothed, turning away from me.
I gathered the name cards, arranging them in perfect stacks while listening to half a conversation. Words filtered through: "trigeminal neuralgia," "episode," "saw the announcement."
The Seattle Magazine announcement. Our engagement photo, shot on his family's sailboat, my jade pendant catching the sunset. The one his mother had insisted on running with the headline: "Cross Heir Finds His Queen."
"She saw our announcement," I said flatly when he hung up.
"It triggered a flare-up. Her doctor says stress exacerbates the nerve pain." Jonah ran his hand through his sandy hair, already looking past me. "I need to go."
"We have cake tasting in an hour."
"Can you handle it? I'll take the seaplane to Bainbridge. Her parents are in Phoenix, and she's alone."
I stared at him. "She's in New York."
"She flew home yesterday. Didn't tell anyone." He was already grabbing his jacket. "I'll be back tomorrow. Choose whatever cake you like."
"The baker prepared six options specifically for us to try together," I said, hating how my voice sounded—small, pleading.
Jonah knelt beside me, kissing my forehead. "You have impeccable taste. I trust you."
But not enough to choose me. Not today. Not most days.
The door closed behind him, and I sat alone among paper representations of guests who would witness our vows in one week. I texted Maya.
*Cake tasting solo again. Lily emergency.*
Maya's response was immediate: *On my way. Don't you dare pick vanilla to please his boring family.*
Three hours later, I stood in the bridal boutique for my final fitting, staring at my phone. Maya arrived as the seamstress pinned the last delicate folds of my qipao-inspired wedding dress.
"He's not back yet?" Maya asked, her dark eyes narrowing.
I handed her my phone, open to Lily's Instagram story: Jonah's childhood bedroom on Bainbridge Island, stuffed animals arranged on a window seat, Seattle's lights twinkling across the sound. Caption: *Where healing happens*.
The next story showed a pill bottle, a glass of water, and a familiar Stanford hoodie I'd slept in countless times. *Someone remembered my comfort kit*.
"That's your fiancé's hoodie," Maya said, voice dangerously quiet.
"The one I packed for our Tofino weekend." I turned back to the mirror, watching the seamstress adjust the crystal beading that cost more than my first car. "The bullet she took for him hit her trigeminal nerve. It causes facial pain so severe some doctors call it the suicide disease."
"And some manipulative bitches call it 'my ticket to unlimited attention,'" Maya muttered.
I met my reflection's eyes—the doubt I saw there made me look away.
"Seven more days," I whispered, more to myself than to Maya. "Then we'll be married, and have to find her comfort somewhere else."
But as I stood there draped in silk and expectations, Lily's Instagram notification chimed again: a selfie of her resting against Jonah's shoulder, his face cut off but his Stanford hoodie clearly visible. The caption made my stomach clench:
*Some debts can never be repaid, but he keeps trying*❤️
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