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My Fiancé Gave My Masterpiece to His Mistress Novel Cover

My Fiancé Gave My Masterpiece to His Mistress

The candle on the table had burned down to a stub. I watched the wax pool around the wick, slow and thick, and thought about how I'd spent forty minutes on my makeup. The restaurant was one of those West Village places with exposed brick and low lighting, the kind where couples leaned across small tables and whispered. I'd picked it for our anniversary. Seven years. I'd even worn the earrings Paxton gave me on our first Christmas together — small gold hoops that I kept in a velvet pouch in my dresser drawer. My phone sat next to my water glass. No missed calls. No texts. I picked it up and called him again.
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Chapter 5

I found her on a Thursday night.

I'd been scrolling through Capri's comments for twenty minutes — not because I enjoyed it, but because I'd learned that the truth, when it exists, leaves traces. Most of the comments were the usual: heart emojis, crying faces, strings of words like *so brave* and *you inspire me* and *this is what healing looks like.* I scrolled past all of it.

Then I found it. Buried under four hundred replies, posted by an account with no profile picture and a username that was just a string of numbers.

*Ask her what she did to her dormmate.*

That was all. No follow-up. No explanation. The account had no other posts, no followers, nothing. Someone had made it for that one sentence and then gone quiet.

I stared at it for a long moment. Then I started working backward.

It took me three days. I went through mutual connections, old university directories, a Facebook group for students from Capri's previous school that was still technically active. I found a name. Millie Young. Illustrator. Quiet online presence — a few posts of her work, nothing personal. A bio that said only *making things slowly.*

I sent her a direct message on a Sunday evening. I kept it short. I told her my name. I told her I was looking into Capri Mendez and that I had reason to believe she wasn't the only person Capri had hurt. I asked if she'd be willing to meet for coffee. No pressure. She could say no.

She didn't respond for four days. I didn't push.

On Thursday morning, a message appeared: *There's a place near campus. Tuesday at ten. I can't promise I'll say anything useful.*

I wrote back: *That's okay. I'll be there.*

---

She was already at the table when I arrived. Small, with careful eyes and both hands wrapped around a mug she wasn't drinking from. She looked up when I walked in, and I watched her take me in — measuring, deciding. I recognized the look. I'd been wearing it myself for weeks.

I sat down across from her and ordered a coffee I didn't need. We made small talk for about ninety seconds before it ran out.

'I'll go first,' I said.

I told her everything. The anniversary dinner. The studio. The empty frame. The confirmation page on Paxton's laptop, the submission image, my brushwork wearing someone else's name. The phone call where he told me I wasn't doing anything with it anyway. I told her about the engagement party, about Capri on the railing, about the way she'd gripped the rail with both hands while she sobbed. I told her about the TikTok, the red-string bracelet, the two hundred thousand views.

Millie listened without interrupting. Her eyes moved to the door twice in the first five minutes, then stopped. She was still holding the mug.

When I finished, the coffee shop was quiet around us. Someone's espresso machine hissed in the background.

Millie looked down at the table. Something moved across her face — not surprise. Something older than surprise.

'She picked me because I was easy,' she said. Her voice was barely above a whisper. 'I was new. I didn't know anyone. She was friendly at first. Really friendly.' She paused. 'That's how it starts.'

She unlocked her phone. Her hands were steady. She opened a folder and turned the screen toward me.

The folder was labeled *just in case.*

I looked through it slowly. Screenshots of private messages — Capri's name at the top, the words underneath precise and ugly, comments about Millie's weight, her clothes, her work. *You know no one actually likes your drawings, right? They're just being nice.* Bank statements with transfers highlighted in yellow — amounts that added up, over eighteen months, to just over four thousand dollars. A crowdfunding campaign page I didn't recognize at first, until I read the story it told: a young woman struggling with illness, unable to afford treatment, asking for help. The photo was Millie's. The account belonged to Capri. The campaign had raised eleven thousand dollars.

And at the back of the folder: medical records. A psychiatrist's assessment from two years ago. The diagnosis Capri had been performing for the internet — the one that anchored every tearful caption, every bandaged wrist, every *painting through the pain* — was not there. The records showed something else entirely: a patient who had presented with symptoms, been evaluated, and been found not to meet the clinical criteria. A patient who had then sought a second opinion, and a third, until she found a provider willing to give her the documentation she wanted.

I looked up from the phone.

Millie was watching me. Her jaw was set. Her eyes were bright in a way that wasn't quite tears.

'I kept all of it,' she said. 'I didn't know why. I just couldn't delete it. It felt like — if I deleted it, it would be like it never happened.'

'It happened,' I said.

She nodded once, quickly, like she was afraid to let the words land too fully.

'You're not alone anymore,' I said.

Something shifted in her face then. Not relief exactly. Something quieter. Like a door that had been held shut for a long time, finally allowed to rest against its frame.

She didn't cry. Neither did I.

---

We met six more times over the next two weeks.

We worked at my mother's kitchen table, mostly in the evenings, with the folder open between us and a legal pad filling up on the side. We organized everything chronologically. We cross-referenced the bank statements against the crowdfunding records and found the gaps where the money had moved. We identified two names from Capri's previous schools — women who had posted vague, careful things online over the years, the kind of posts that stop just short of saying what they mean. I reached out to both of them. One didn't respond. The other wrote back in three sentences: *I've been waiting for someone to ask. Tell me what you need.*

I called an attorney friend on a Wednesday afternoon and asked about intellectual property documentation — what constituted proof of original authorship, what a signature and a date could establish, what a court would need to see. She asked me what I was building. I told her. There was a pause on the line.

'Send me everything,' she said.

Millie stopped flinching every time her phone buzzed. I noticed it one evening when a notification came through and she just glanced at it and set the phone back down, easy and unhurried, like it was nothing.

Maybe it was nothing. Or maybe it was the beginning of something.

The finals were in one week. The canvas in the guest room was finished.

I stood in front of it that night for a long time, looking at what I'd made. The deep bruised blue. The burning orange at the center. The hidden composition that only revealed itself when you turned the canvas upside down — the raw, visceral thing underneath the surface, the one I'd titled *Stolen Light.*

I thought about Millie's folder. The words *just in case* in plain text on a plain background.

She'd kept it because she couldn't let it disappear. Because some part of her had always known that the truth, when it finally needed to be used, would need to be whole.

I understood that now in a way I hadn't before.

I turned off the light and went to bed.

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