
My Fiancé Chose His Mistress Over Our Future
Chapter 3
The rain pounded against the windows of Dr. Harrison's office as I sat stiffly on the edge of the leather couch, watching the minute hand tick toward our appointment time. I'd spent weeks convincing Jonah we needed couples therapy, carefully framing it as "pre-wedding alignment" rather than the emergency intervention I knew it was. Seven minutes before our session, the door swung open.
Jonah walked in—with Lily two steps behind him.
My stomach dropped. "What is she doing here?"
Jonah's hand found the small of Lily's back, guiding her to the couch beside me. "Dr. Reeves thought it would be helpful if Lily joined us today."
"Dr. Reeves?" I echoed. "Who's that?"
"My trauma therapist," Lily answered, settling into the cushion between Jonah and me. "He believes that since the trauma affects everyone in our circle, healing should be communal."
Before I could respond, Dr. Harrison entered, her professional smile faltering slightly at the unexpected third party. After introductions, she sat across from us, notepad balanced on her knee.
"So, Ivy, you scheduled this session to discuss wedding preparations?"
"Actually," I began, "I wanted to talk about establishing boundaries—"
"If I may," Lily interrupted, her voice quavering. "Jonah and I discussed this with Dr. Reeves, and he suggested I explain how triggering this wedding has been for me."
Dr. Harrison's eyebrows rose. "Triggering?"
"The shooting happened at a wedding," Lily said, though I knew for a fact it had occurred during a mugging outside a convenience store. "Every time I see wedding preparations, I'm transported back to that moment when I jumped in front of Jonah and felt the bullet tear through me."
I watched in disbelief as Jonah nodded sympathetically, his hand covering hers.
"That sounds incredibly difficult," Dr. Harrison said. "But I'm a bit confused about your role in Ivy and Jonah's relationship counseling."
"Our lives are intertwined," Lily explained, tears welling. "Jonah and I share a trauma bond that can't be severed. I'm not trying to interfere with their marriage, but my survival depends on having access to him when I'm in crisis."
The session spiraled from there. What should have been a conversation about our relationship became an hour-long exploration of Lily's needs, triggers, and the accommodations she required from both of us. When I finally managed to voice my frustration, Dr. Harrison turned to me with a thoughtful expression.
"Ivy, have you considered individual therapy to work on empathy and understanding of complex trauma responses? It might help you process your feelings about this situation."
I felt like I'd been slapped. "My feelings aren't the problem. The problem is that my fiancé prioritizes another woman's needs over our relationship."
"That's unfair," Jonah snapped. "Lily saved my life."
"And you've saved hers a hundred times over," I countered. "When does the debt get paid?"
Lily's soft sob cut through the tension. "I never meant to come between you two. Maybe I should just go back to New York and suffer alone."
Dr. Harrison ended the session with homework: I was to read a book on supporting loved ones with PTSD, while Jonah was assigned the task of scheduling one uninterrupted date night before our next session.
---
One month later, I stood in our bedroom, zipping a weekend bag for our anniversary trip to Tofino. Jonah had surprised me with reservations at the Wickaninnish Inn—a rare gesture that felt like the first ray of sunlight after months of storms.
"The seaplane leaves in two hours," I reminded him, checking my watch.
Jonah was scrolling through his phone, frowning. "Just confirming our dinner reservation."
My phone chimed with a text from Maya: *Packed the champagne in your suitcase. Get some for me too* 😉
I smiled, feeling hopeful for the first time in weeks. Then Jonah's phone buzzed loudly. He stared at the screen, his face draining of color.
"Jonah?"
He turned the phone toward me. A photo from Lily: pills spilled across bathroom tiles, with the caption, "I can't do this anymore."
"I have to go," he said, already dialing.
"It's our anniversary," I whispered, but he was already grabbing his keys, pressing the phone to his ear.
"Call the inn," he said over his shoulder. "See if you can get a refund."
Two hours later, I boarded the seaplane alone, Maya's last-minute ticket clutched in my hand. As we lifted off, I checked Instagram. Lily had posted a photo of my fiancé building a fire in his family's Bainbridge Island living room. The caption read: *Sometimes the only cure is friendship* ❤️
"Delete the app," Maya advised, taking my phone. "This weekend is about us."
As Vancouver disappeared beneath us, I wondered what would be left of my relationship when I returned.
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