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My Fiancé Left Me for My Copycat Novel Cover

My Fiancé Left Me for My Copycat

The venue was everything we picked together. Third floor of a Midtown hotel, floor-to-ceiling windows, the Manhattan skyline pressed flat against the glass like a postcard. Two hundred white chairs. Peonies everywhere — my choice. An open bar with a bartender who knew Cole's father by name. The kind of room that made people feel like they were witnessing something inevitable. I stood near the entrance in a navy dress I'd chosen three months ago, and I thought: this is it. This is the beginning of the rest of it. Cole was beside me, one hand at the small of my back, shaking hands and laughing at the right moments. He looked good.
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Chapter 1

The venue was everything we picked together.

Third floor of a Midtown hotel, floor-to-ceiling windows, the Manhattan skyline pressed flat against the glass like a postcard. Two hundred white chairs. Peonies everywhere — my choice. An open bar with a bartender who knew Cole's father by name. The kind of room that made people feel like they were witnessing something inevitable.

I stood near the entrance in a navy dress I'd chosen three months ago, and I thought: this is it. This is the beginning of the rest of it.

Cole was beside me, one hand at the small of my back, shaking hands and laughing at the right moments. He looked good. He always looked good. That was never the problem.

My mother, Margaret, floated between clusters of guests in a cream blazer, her smile wide and practiced. She caught my eye from across the room and gave me a small nod — the kind that meant she approved of everything, the flowers, the dress, the man beside me, the whole assembled picture of our lives. My father stood near the bar with Cole's father, already deep in conversation, already merging.

For one hour, I let myself believe it.

I was talking to Cole's aunt — a warm woman from Connecticut who kept squeezing my hand — when I felt him go still beside me. Not tense. Still. The particular stillness of someone reading something they don't want to be reading.

I didn't look at his phone. I didn't need to. I watched his face instead.

The color left it.

Not gradually. All at once, like a light switching off.

"Cole." I said it quietly.

He didn't answer. He was already typing.

"Cole." Again. His aunt was still talking. I smiled at her and touched his arm. "Hey."

He looked up at me then, and there was something in his eyes I didn't have a name for yet. Something that looked almost like relief — not at seeing me, but at having made a decision.

"I have to go," he said.

Just that. No explanation. No apology. He put his phone in his jacket pocket, set his champagne glass on the nearest table, and walked toward the exit.

I stood there.

Cole's aunt stopped mid-sentence.

Around us, the room kept moving — glasses clinking, someone laughing too loudly near the bar, the string quartet starting a new piece. Two hundred people who had come to celebrate us, and not one of them had seen what just happened.

I excused myself.

The terrace was off the main room through a set of glass doors. I pushed through them and the city noise hit me — traffic, a siren somewhere below, the wind off the Hudson cutting between buildings. I stood at the railing and called him.

Once.

Twice.

By the fifth call I was looking at the skyline without seeing it. By the tenth I had stopped counting. By the fifteenth I understood that he was choosing not to answer, and that understanding settled into my chest like something cold and very heavy.

I called him twenty-two times.

On the twenty-second, he picked up.

I heard noise in the background — a hospital, maybe, or a lobby. Fluorescent and echoey. And then his voice.

Not panicked. Not apologetic.

Irritated.

"Audrey, I can't — this isn't a good time."

Like I was interrupting something. Like I was the inconvenience.

I stood on that terrace with two hundred people on the other side of the glass and I listened to the irritation in his voice, and something in me went very quiet.

Not hurt. Not angry. Quiet.

Because in that single moment — in the flatness of his tone, in the way he said my name like it was a problem to be managed — I heard everything I had been refusing to hear for longer than I wanted to admit.

"Cole," I said. My voice was steady. I was almost surprised by how steady it was. "We're done."

A pause.

"Audrey, come on. I'll explain everything when I—"

"No." I said it the way I would state a fact in a brief. Simple. Final. "We're done. Don't call me back."

I hung up.

I stood there for another minute, looking at the city. The wind was cold. Somewhere below, a cab horn blared twice and went silent.

Then I went back inside.

I thanked every guest. I hugged Cole's mother, who didn't know yet, and I smiled at her with my whole face. I said goodnight to my parents, kissed my father on the cheek, told my mother the flowers had been perfect. I took a cab home alone and sat in the back seat watching the city slide past the window and felt nothing except a strange, clean clarity.

I did not cry that night.

I cried three days later. Three in the morning, alone in my apartment on the Lower East Side, sitting on the bathroom floor with my back against the tub. I cried for exactly as long as I needed to — ugly and thorough and completely private — and then I got up, washed my face, made coffee in the ceramic mug I'd bought at a street market in the West Village, and went to class.

I did not look at his messages before I blocked him.

My parents called that afternoon. Then the next morning. On the third day, my mother's voice on my voicemail said, "Audrey, please. Just come to dinner. Just talk to us."

So I went.

Their Upper East Side apartment smelled like it always did — fresh flowers, my mother's perfume, the particular warmth of a home that had never had to worry about anything. My father sat in his chair by the window. My mother had set the table like it was a normal Sunday.

It was not a normal Sunday.

"He made a mistake," my father said. "One night. One bad decision. That doesn't have to mean—"

"It wasn't one night," I said.

My mother set down her fork. "Audrey."

"It wasn't one bad decision." I kept my voice even. "It was a pattern. I just didn't want to see it."

"You're throwing away everything," my mother said. Her voice was careful, the way it got when she was trying not to show how much something mattered to her. "Everything you built together. Everything our families—"

"Mom." I looked at her. "I know you love me. I know that's why you're saying this. But I need you to hear me." I paused. "I am not going back to him. Not for the families. Not for appearances. Not for any reason. That decision is made."

The table was quiet.

My father looked at his hands.

My mother looked at me for a long moment — really looked, the way she used to when I was small and she was trying to figure out if I was serious. Then something in her face shifted. Not agreement, not yet. But something.

I drove home alone.

The city was loud and indifferent and exactly what I needed. I had a Contracts brief due Thursday and a study group at nine and a whole life that was still entirely mine.

I turned up the music and drove.

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