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My Fiancé Hid His Marriage for Three Years Novel Cover

My Fiancé Hid His Marriage for Three Years

The key slid into the lock with a familiar click. After three months in London, the sound of my own door opening felt foreign, like returning to a dream I'd once had rather than a life I'd actually lived. "Cassidy!" Damien's voice carried across the apartment before I could even set my suitcase down. He appeared in the doorway, his tall frame silhouetted against the warm light of our dining room. "You're finally here." I dropped my bags and let him pull me into an embrace. His familiar cologne enveloped me—sandalwood and something spicy that had always reminded me of autumn in Central Park. For a moment, everything felt right again. "I missed you," he murmured against my hair. "Three months was too long." "It was only three months," I reminded him, though my voice lacked conviction. Three months had felt like an eternity.
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Chapter 2

I stared at my phone, the screen displaying my company's contact information. My finger hovered over the call button. After a moment's hesitation, I pressed it.

"Johnson & Associates, how may I direct your call?" The receptionist's voice was cheerful, professionally so.

"This is Cassidy Evans," I said, forcing my voice to remain steady. "I need to call in sick today."

"Oh, Cassidy! Are you alright? You just returned from London."

"I know. Just... not feeling well." The lie came easily, too easily. "Something I ate, I think."

After hanging up, I sat on the edge of our bed—our bed, though now I wondered how much of it had truly been mine. Damien had already left for work, kissing me goodbye with practiced tenderness. The memory of his lips on my forehead now made my skin crawl.

I changed quickly into jeans and a dark sweater, clothes that wouldn't draw attention. My hands trembled slightly as I gathered my things—phone, charger, wallet. I paused at the bedroom door, looking back at the space we'd shared for three years. Everything looked normal, yet nothing felt real anymore.

---

I parked my car down the street from our apartment building, positioning myself where I could see the entrance but remain inconspicuous. The morning sun cast long shadows across the street as I waited, my heart pounding against my ribs like a trapped bird.

Twenty minutes passed. Then thirty. I was about to give up when I saw him.

Damien emerged from the building, checking his watch before heading toward the street. But instead of hailing a taxi as he usually did for his commute to Wall Street, he walked purposefully toward a dark sedan parked around the corner. A rental car.

I started my engine, keeping my distance as he pulled into traffic. My hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white. Where was he going? Who was he meeting?

The city fell away as we crossed into Queens, then continued onto the Long Island Expressway. I followed, three cars back, my mind racing with possibilities, each more devastating than the last.

Forty minutes later, Damien signaled his exit. I followed cautiously as he navigated through quiet suburban streets lined with neatly manicured lawns and children's bicycles on front porches.

"He couldn't have," I whispered to myself, though the evidence was becoming impossible to ignore.

Damien turned into a driveway—a modest but beautiful home with a small garden and a swing set in the backyard. My breath caught in my throat as I parked across the street, sinking low in my seat.

The front door opened before Damien could knock. A woman appeared—petite, dark-haired, beautiful. She was holding a small boy, maybe three years old.

"Trevor," I heard myself whisper, remembering the receipt.

Damien took the child from her arms, lifting him high into the air. The boy squealed with delight. "Daddy!"

The woman—his wife, I realized with sickening clarity—reached up to straighten Damien's tie. He leaned down and kissed her, his hand resting on her waist with the easy intimacy of long practice.

I fumbled for my phone, hands shaking so badly I nearly dropped it. I took photos through the windshield, documenting what I was seeing. Evidence. Though for what, I wasn't yet sure.

Damien set the boy down and ruffled his hair. The child ran toward the backyard, and Damien followed, his movements relaxed and familiar. This wasn't a man visiting strangers—this was a father returning home.

I couldn't watch anymore. I started the car and drove away, pulling over at the first opportunity. I barely made it to the curb before bile rose in my throat. I stumbled out of the car and vomited on the side of the road, my entire body shaking.

---

"Cassidy." Mya's voice was steady as she ushered me into her office. "You look like hell."

"I feel worse," I managed, sinking into a chair.

Mya didn't press for details immediately. Instead, she made tea and waited until I was ready. That was one of the countless reasons I loved her—she never pushed, but she was always there.

"I saw him," I finally said, pulling out my phone. "With them."

Mya took the phone, scrolling through the photos I'd taken. Her expression remained neutral, but I could see the muscle in her jaw tighten.

"You need to know everything," I said. "Can you...?"

"I'm already on it." Mya moved to her computer, fingers flying across the keyboard. "Give me an hour."

It took less than that. Mya returned with a folder thick with papers.

"Marriage certificate," she said, laying out the first document. "Damien King and Luciana Lopez. Five years ago."

I stared at the paper, at the official seal, at their signatures side by side.

"Birth certificate," Mya continued, placing another document beside it. "Trevor King. Three years old."

The room seemed to tilt sideways. Three years. While I had been building a life with Damien, he had already been a father.

"There's more," Mya said quietly, spreading out bank statements and account records. "Multiple accounts you don't know about. Funds being moved around. Cassidy, this isn't just... he's been living two completely separate lives."

I reached for the edge of the desk to steady myself. The perfect love story I'd believed in for three years had never existed at all.

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