
My Fiancé Locked Me Away for His Mistress’s Tears
My Fiancé Locked Me Away for His Mistress’s Tears Chapter 1
The rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows of the Jensen estate, casting long, distorted shadows across the imported marble floors. I had come home early, the damp chill of the evening clinging to my trench coat, desperate for the warmth of the man I was going to marry. Instead, as I approached the heavy mahogany doors of the music room, the silence of the house felt suffocating, broken only by a low, frantic murmur.
I pushed the door open just a fraction. The air left my lungs in a single, jagged exhale.
Edison Jensen, the ruthless CEO who bent entire boardrooms to his will, a man whose pride was the very marrow of his bones, was on his knees.
He wasn't picking something up. He was kneeling on the Persian rug before the piano bench. Sitting on that bench was Flora Warren, his former piano teacher—a woman woven of soft cashmere and practiced fragility. Edison gripped her pale hands, his broad shoulders hunched, his dark head bowed in absolute submission.
"Please, Flora," Edison murmured, his usually commanding voice cracking with a desperate, pathetic devotion I had never heard in the five years we had been together. "Tell me how to fix this. Tell me what you need."
My chest tightened until my ribs threatened to snap. I stood paralyzed in the doorway, the darkness of the hall swallowing me whole. I had given Edison my trust, my absolute loyalty, and a first night of intimacy he had drunkenly forgotten and I had been too proud to ever claim. Yet here he was, prostrating himself before a woman whose entire existence in our lives was a carefully constructed lie. I didn't scream. I didn't burst into the room. I simply turned around, the woman who had loved him fracturing into a thousand silent, irreparable pieces.
The next morning, the sunlight slicing through the glass atrium of the Hernandez Enterprises lobby offered no warmth. I stood by the security banks, my posture rigid, when my phone vibrated.
"Ms. Hernandez?" Dr. Evans's voice was thin, trembling over the line.
"How is he?" I asked, my fingers tightening around the leather of my handbag. Charlie, my golden retriever of fifteen years, had been admitted for severe respiratory distress. He was my shadow, the only constant in a life dictated by high-society expectations.
"I am so deeply sorry," the vet stammered. "Charlie passed away in the night."
The marble floor seemed to tilt beneath my heels. "I paid for round-the-clock monitoring. You promised me someone would be in the room with him."
"We tried, ma'am. But Mr. Jensen called the clinic at midnight. He... he dismissed the night staff. He said the commotion and the phone updates were an unnecessary disruption. He said Ms. Warren was having a severe anxiety episode and needed absolute quiet."
A cold, absolute zero settled into my veins. Edison hadn't just neglected my dog. He had actively condemned him to die alone on a sterile steel table, suffocating in the dark, all to ensure Flora Warren's fabricated tears weren't interrupted.
I didn't cry. The grief was too massive, too violent for tears. I turned on my heel and walked out of the building.
When I pushed through the grand double doors of the Jensen estate an hour later, the silence of the foyer felt like a battleground. Edison stood near the sweeping staircase, adjusting the cuffs of his bespoke suit. Flora hovered just behind his shoulder, wrapped in a pale shawl, her eyes wide and entirely devoid of genuine innocence.
"You left early last night," Edison said, his tone clipped, not bothering to look up. "Flora was highly distressed. I expect you to apologize for your coldness."
I closed the distance between us, my heels clicking like gunshots against the stone. "Charlie is dead."
Edison finally looked at me, a flicker of irritation crossing his sharp, handsome features. "It's a dog, Quinn. He was fifteen. Flora was having a panic attack, and your incessant worrying over an animal was making it worse."
He dismissed a decade and a half of love with a wave of his hand. He dismissed *me*.
Flora stepped forward, letting out a soft, breathy sigh. "Quinn, I'm so sorry. If I had known my little episode would cause you such grief over your pet—"
I didn't let her finish. I raised my hand and drove it across her face with every ounce of shattered love and violent grief in my body.
The sharp *crack* echoed through the cavernous foyer. Flora shrieked, stumbling back, clutching her rapidly reddening cheek.
"Quinn!" Edison roared. He lunged forward, roughly shoving me back by the shoulder to shield Flora behind his massive frame. His eyes, the same eyes I had once searched for warmth, were glacial with contempt. "Are you out of your mind?"
My palm stung beautifully. I stood my ground, smoothing the cuff of my sleeve with trembling, ice-cold fingers. "The engagement is over, Edison. I am done with you."
Edison's jaw clenched, a muscle feathering dangerously at his temple. He stepped into my space, casting a long, suffocating shadow over me. "No," he said, his voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "You don't get to lay a hand on her and just walk away. The engagement stands, Quinn. You will stay, and you will learn exactly what it costs to cross me."
My Fiancé Locked Me Away for His Mistress’s Tears of Contents
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