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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 4

I sat across from Luciana in her dining room, watching as she spread financial documents across the table with the precision of a surgeon. The suburban house was quiet—Trevor was at daycare, and the only sound was the gentle hum of the air conditioner and the occasional rustle of paper.

"I've been through everything," Luciana said, her voice tight with controlled fury. "Bank statements, investment accounts, property records. It's all here."

Mya stood behind her, occasionally pointing to something on the screen of her laptop. The three of us had been working for hours, piecing together the financial puzzle of Damien's double life.

"Look at this," Luciana said, sliding a document across to me. "This is a loan application from two years ago. For $150,000."

I studied the paper. "His signature looks different."

"It's not even his signature," Luciana said, her voice breaking slightly. "It's mine. Or rather, his forgery of mine."

My stomach twisted. "He forged your signature?"

"And yours too." She pulled out another document. "This is the lease application for your apartment. He used your signature to secure the lease, but the payments were coming from an account in my name."

I felt sick. "He's been paying for our apartment with your money?"

Luciana nodded grimly. "And that's not all." She pulled out a statement marked with yellow highlighter. "This is Trevor's college fund. He's been withdrawing from it."

The room seemed to tilt. "He stole from his own child?"

"He stole from all of us," Mya interjected, her voice cold with anger. "The question is how much."

Luciana's phone rang. She answered it, her expression shifting as she listened. When she hung up, her eyes were bright with tears—but not of sadness.

"That was my banker," she said. "I've been tracking the transfers. It's over half a million dollars, Cassidy. He's been siphoning money from our accounts to fund his life with you."

I couldn't speak. The betrayal was so vast, so calculated, it was hard to comprehend.

"He used Trevor's future to pay for your present," Luciana continued, her voice rising with rage. "How could he do that to his own son?"

---

That evening, I moved around our kitchen with mechanical precision, chopping vegetables and stirring sauce. The apartment smelled of garlic and tomatoes—a meal Damien loved.

"What's all this?" Damien asked when he walked in, loosening his tie. "It smells amazing."

"Just thought we could use a nice dinner," I said, forcing a smile. "I've been neglecting you since I got back."

He crossed the room and wrapped his arms around my waist, his chin resting on my shoulder. "You've been distant," he murmured. "Everything okay?"

I leaned back against him, fighting the revulsion that surged through me. "Just tired. The London project is still giving me trouble."

His hands moved up to my shoulders, massaging gently. "You work too hard," he said, his breath warm against my neck.

I closed my eyes, summoning the strength to play this role. "I'm fine," I lied. "Just needed to cook something real after all those takeout meals."

Dinner was torture. I watched him eat with gusto, laughing at his stories about work, while my food sat untouched. When he reached for my hand across the table, I had to stop myself from flinching.

"I love you," he said suddenly, his eyes intense. "Sometimes I think I don't tell you enough."

The words that had once made me feel special now felt like poison in my ears. "I love you too," I echoed, the lie bitter on my tongue.

Later, as we lay in bed, I stared at the ceiling, listening to his even breathing beside me. My body ached from tension, my mind racing with plans and possibilities. Sleeping next to a sociopath was taking its toll—dark circles under my eyes, a constant headache, a knot in my stomach that wouldn't dissolve.

---

"I have something for you," Damien said three days later, walking into the living room with a small velvet box in his hand.

I looked up from my laptop, where I'd been coordinating with Mya about next steps. "What's this for?"

"You've seemed so stressed lately," he said, sitting beside me. "I thought this might help."

He opened the box to reveal a diamond bracelet—delicate links studded with stones that caught the light from every angle.

"It's beautiful," I said automatically.

"You're my rock," he said, taking my wrist and fastening the bracelet around it. "The one constant in my life."

I touched the diamonds, thinking of Luciana's discovery—that this bracelet had likely been purchased with money stolen from her accounts.

"I don't know what I did to deserve you," I said, meeting his gaze steadily.

His smile was triumphant, believing he'd successfully smoothed over whatever had troubled me. "Just be happy," he said, kissing my cheek. "That's all I need."

I wore the bracelet all day, letting it remind me of what I was fighting for—not just my own freedom, but justice for Luciana and Trevor too. Each flash of diamond was a promise: Damien would pay for what he'd done.

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