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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 3

The restaurant was one of those SoHo places that looked effortless and wasn't — exposed brick, low pendant lights, a menu that changed weekly and a wait list that didn't. Layne had gotten us a table by knowing the hostess from a yoga class, which was exactly the kind of social infrastructure she maintained without ever appearing to try.

We were halfway through the door when I saw them.

Corner table. Good light. The kind of seat you request when you want to be seen.

Cole had his hand on the back of Charleigh's chair, and he was kissing her the way people kiss when they've stopped caring who's watching. Slow. Comfortable. Like the rest of the room had already been accounted for and dismissed.

I stopped walking.

Layne stopped a half-second later. I heard her breath change.

"Audrey—"

"I see it."

"We can go. We can literally just—"

"Layne."

But she was already moving. I had never seen her cross a room that fast. Her voice came out loud and sharp and completely uninterested in the other diners.

"Are you serious right now? Are you actually—" She stopped at the edge of their table, and Cole pulled back from Charleigh and looked up, and the expression on his face moved through surprise and then something that looked almost like guilt before it settled into the familiar performance of ease.

"Layne—"

"Don't." Her voice cracked on the word. "Don't say my name like we're fine. Don't you dare."

Charleigh looked at me. Her face was soft. Composed. The expression of someone who had prepared for this.

That was the thing that did it.

Not Cole. Not the kiss. Not the corner table or the good light or any of it.

It was that face — that practiced, patient, I-feel-so-sorry-for-you face — and the absolute certainty behind it that I would stand here and absorb it.

There was a wine bottle on the table beside me. Someone's unfinished Burgundy, half-full, the cork set loosely back in the neck.

I picked it up and threw it.

Not at them. Not exactly. At the space between us — at the table, at the performance, at the whole careful architecture of what they'd built on the rubble of what I'd lost. It hit the edge of their table and shattered, and the restaurant went completely silent.

Wine spread across the white tablecloth like something opened.

Layne had gone still. Cole was on his feet. Charleigh had her hands pressed flat to the table, and for one unguarded second her face showed something real — not fear, not hurt, but cold, calculating assessment. Then the softness came back.

I was breathing hard. I hadn't realized it until just then.

"Audrey."

The voice came from behind me. Low. Unhurried. The kind of voice that didn't need to be loud to fill a room.

I turned.

Myles Elliott was standing just inside the restaurant door, still in his coat, a leather portfolio under one arm. He looked at me first — one full second, taking in everything — and then he looked at the room with the particular calm of someone who has walked into worse situations and handled them without raising his pulse.

He moved past me to the manager, who had appeared from somewhere near the back. I watched him speak — quiet, direct, no performance in it. He took out his card without being asked. The manager nodded twice and stepped away.

Then Myles turned to Cole.

He didn't say anything for a moment. He just looked at him, the way you look at something you've already fully assessed and found unremarkable.

"I think you're done here," he said.

Cole's jaw tightened. "This doesn't involve you."

"It does now." Still quiet. Still completely level. "Take your check and go."

Something moved across Cole's face — the particular frustration of a man who knows he has no ground to stand on but hasn't yet decided to admit it. He looked at me once. I didn't give him anything to work with.

He picked up his jacket and left. Charleigh followed, her heels precise on the tile, her face reassembled into something dignified. She didn't look at me on the way out.

Layne exhaled. "Okay," she said, to no one in particular. "Okay."

Myles put his hand on the small of my back and walked me out.

It was a light touch. Steady. Not possessive — just present, the way a hand on your back can mean *I've got you* without making it a declaration. We came through the door onto the sidewalk and the city noise came back all at once — a bus, someone's music from an open window, the particular smell of SoHo on a cold afternoon.

I stopped walking and turned to look at him.

Really look at him. Not the way you look at your best friend's older brother at a family dinner, peripheral and familiar. The way you look at someone when you're finally paying attention.

He was watching me with an expression I couldn't immediately name. Not concern, exactly. Not pity. Something more careful than either.

"You okay?" he said.

"I threw a wine bottle."

"You did."

"In a restaurant."

"A nice one." The corner of his mouth moved. "I've handled worse."

Layne appeared beside us, pulling her coat closed. "I want it on record that I was about to do something much worse before Audrey beat me to it."

Neither of us answered her. I was still looking at Myles.

"Thank you," I said.

He shook his head slightly, like the thanks wasn't necessary. "I have a proposition for you," he said. "If you're interested."

I waited.

"There's an internship opening at the firm. Contract dispute work, mostly — a case that's been running for eight months and needs someone who can read a brief without missing what's actually in it." He said it plainly, no softening in it. "Real work. Real expectations. I'm not offering it because of Layne, and I'm not offering it because of today. I'm offering it because I've read your Legal Methods submissions and you're better than most of my first-years."

Layne made a sound beside me that she converted, unconvincingly, into a cough.

"On those terms," I said.

"On those terms."

"Then yes."

He nodded once, like that was settled. He handed me a card — the firm's name embossed in clean serif type, his direct line handwritten underneath in ink that was still slightly fresh. "Monday. Eight o'clock. Don't be late."

He said goodbye to Layne, gave me one more of those careful, unreadable looks, and walked back into the restaurant.

Layne waited exactly three seconds.

"Okay," she said. "I need you to know that I have been waiting for that to happen for approximately four years."

"Don't."

"I'm just saying—"

"Layne."

She held up both hands. But she was smiling, and she didn't bother to hide it.

I looked down at the card in my hand. The ink on his number was clean and precise, each digit exactly spaced. I turned it over once, then slid it into my coat pocket.

The city moved around us — indifferent, loud, entirely itself.

I thought about Monday. About real work and real expectations and a case that had been running for eight months. About the way he'd said *you're better than most of my first-years* without making it a compliment, just a fact he was reporting.

I thought about the look on his face when he walked through that door.

I didn't examine any of it too closely. Not yet.

But I kept my hand in my coat pocket, fingers resting against the edge of the card, all the way home.

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