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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 3

I couldn't confront Damien. Not yet. Not without a plan.

My hands trembled as I gripped the steering wheel, watching the suburban house where my fiancé had been living his secret life. The house where his real family waited for him.

"I need to think," I whispered to myself, pulling away from the curb. "I need evidence."

I spent the night pacing our apartment—our fake apartment—making lists and discarding them. By morning, I had a strategy.

---

The next day, I drove back to the suburbs. This time, I knew Damien would be at work. I'd checked his calendar on his laptop when he was in the shower—a habit I'd developed since discovering the perfume.

I parked down the street from the house, waiting. At 10:17 AM, the garage door opened. A silver SUV backed out—Luciana's car. I recognized her from the photos, her dark hair pulled back in a ponytail as she navigated the quiet suburban streets.

I followed at a distance, my heart hammering against my ribs. She turned into a grocery store parking lot. Perfect.

I waited until she went inside, then positioned my car behind hers. Taking a deep breath, I eased my foot onto the gas pedal. The bump was gentle—just enough to cause a small dent, not enough to injure anyone.

"Sorry," I whispered, though no one could hear me.

I got out of my car as Luciana emerged from the store, her arms laden with grocery bags.

"Oh no," she said, spotting the damage. "Did you hit my car?"

"I'm so sorry," I said, the lie coming easily. "I wasn't paying attention."

She set her bags down, examining the dent. "It's not too bad."

We exchanged insurance information and phone numbers. She was prettier up close—warm brown eyes, a small mole near her left eyebrow. I wondered if Damien had ever told her it was beautiful.

---

That evening, I sat on the edge of our bed—my bed now—staring at the phone number I'd carefully written down.

"Stop stalling," Mya said over the phone. "Just call her."

I dialed before I could change my mind.

"Hello?" Luciana's voice was cautious.

"Hi, this is Cassidy Evans. We met earlier today. About the car accident."

"Yes, I remember. Did you need something else?"

I took a deep breath. "I don't care about the bumper, Luciana. I need to talk to you about Damien."

Silence stretched between us. Then: "What about him?"

"Are you alone?" I asked.

"Yes."

"I'm not who you think I am," I said carefully. "I'm not his mistress. I'm... I was living with him. For three years."

The silence returned, heavier this time.

"That's not possible," she finally said, her voice tight. "He would never—"

"I didn't know about you," I interrupted. "About Trevor. About any of it."

"Then why are you calling me?" Her voice rose slightly.

"Because we need to talk. Face to face."

Another pause. "Where?"

---

The diner sat just off the highway, halfway between our two worlds. I arrived early, choosing a booth in the back where we wouldn't be disturbed.

Luciana walked in ten minutes later, her eyes scanning the room until they found me. Up close, I could see the resemblance between her and the woman I'd glimpsed at the house—but there was something different in her expression now. A hardness that hadn't been there before.

"Three years," she said without preamble as she slid into the booth. "You said three years."

I nodded, pulling out my phone. "I have photos. Texts. Calendar entries."

She did the same. We spread them across the table between us like cards in a twisted game of solitaire.

"He told me you were a business associate," she said, pointing to a text. "A difficult client."

"He told me he was working late," I replied, showing her a screenshot of his calendar.

We compared dates, gifts, stories. The Valentine's Day weekend he'd told me he was at a conference in Chicago—he'd actually been with her at a bed and breakfast in the Catskills. The birthday gift he'd given me—a silver bracelet—was identical to one he'd given her three months earlier.

"He uses the same lines on both of us," I said, my voice hollow. "Do you remember what he said when you first met?"

Luciana's eyes filled with tears. "He said I was the most beautiful woman in the room."

"He said the same to me."

Something shifted in her expression—the hostility giving way to something else. Understanding. Shared pain.

"What do we do now?" she asked.

I looked at the evidence spread between us—the fragments of Damien's carefully constructed lies.

"We destroy him," I said.

Luciana nodded slowly, then firmly. "Together."

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