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My Fiancé Promised His Mistress Two More Months Novel Cover

My Fiancé Promised His Mistress Two More Months

The subway was a furnace. I stood in the car with a canvas tote cutting into my shoulder — fresh pasta, a bottle of Barolo, the good kind of olive oil — and told myself the sweat on the back of my neck was just the July heat. Ninety-four degrees outside. The kind of day that turns Manhattan into a slow-cooked argument. Jericho's birthday. I'd been planning it for three weeks. The pasta was from that little shop on Arthur Avenue he mentioned once, offhand, six months ago. I wrote it down. I always wrote things down. The wine I'd researched for two hours on a Tuesday night after he fell asleep, cross-referencing vintage years with a food pairing guide I bookmarked on my phone.
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Chapter 1

The subway was a furnace.

I stood in the car with a canvas tote cutting into my shoulder — fresh pasta, a bottle of Barolo, the good kind of olive oil — and told myself the sweat on the back of my neck was just the July heat. Ninety-four degrees outside. The kind of day that turns Manhattan into a slow-cooked argument.

Jericho's birthday. I'd been planning it for three weeks.

The pasta was from that little shop on Arthur Avenue he mentioned once, offhand, six months ago. I wrote it down. I always wrote things down. The wine I'd researched for two hours on a Tuesday night after he fell asleep, cross-referencing vintage years with a food pairing guide I bookmarked on my phone. The gift — a first-edition copy of a biography he'd mentioned wanting in passing — had taken me four months of checking eBay alerts to find at a price I could actually afford without touching my savings.

I wasn't embarrassed by any of that. I just didn't tell him.

The elevator in his building opened directly into the penthouse foyer, which meant I heard the party before the doors finished sliding apart. Music. Voices layered over each other. The bright, percussive sound of a social event already well underway.

I stepped out and stopped.

The apartment — our apartment, the one I'd spent four months furnishing, sourcing vintage pieces and arguing with contractors over tile samples — was full of people I didn't recognize. Someone had pushed the living room furniture to the walls. There were catering trays on the kitchen island I'd picked out. The rooftop doors were thrown open, and through them I could see a crowd gathered under string lights that were not mine.

Azalea Sanchez was standing at the kitchen island, laughing at something a man in a linen blazer had just said. She had a glass of champagne in one hand and the easy, proprietary posture of someone who had never once questioned whether she belonged somewhere.

I knew who she was. Jericho's oldest friend. His whole life, he'd said. They'd grown up together, gone to the same schools, moved in the same circles for thirty years. I'd met her four times. Each time, I'd come away feeling like I'd failed a test I hadn't known I was taking.

She looked up and saw me.

'Lennox.' Her smile arrived instantly, warm and wide. 'Oh, you made it. Come in, come in — let me take that.'

She reached for the tote before I could answer. I held on to it.

'I'm fine,' I said. 'Where's Jericho?'

'Rooftop, I think.' She tilted her head toward the open doors. 'He'll be so glad you're here.'

The way she said it made it sound like a consolation prize.

I found him near the railing, talking to two men I recognized vaguely from charity events — friends of his father's, or maybe business contacts, the kind of people whose names I could never quite retain because they never quite looked at me long enough to make it worth the effort. When Jericho saw me, something moved across his face. Not surprise. Something more like recalibration.

'Hey.' He crossed toward me and kissed my cheek. 'You came.'

'It's your birthday,' I said.

'Right.' He glanced at the tote. 'You brought stuff?'

'I was going to cook dinner.'

A beat. The two men behind him had already turned back to their conversation.

'I didn't know about the party,' I said.

'It was last minute. Azalea just — you know how she is.' He gave me a small, apologetic shrug. The kind that asks you to absorb something without making it a thing. 'I was going to text you.'

I waited for him to say something else. To put his hand on my back, to bring me into the circle of people behind him, to do any of the small things that would have meant I was here with him instead of just near him.

He didn't.

Azalea appeared at my elbow like she'd been waiting for exactly this moment.

'Come meet some people,' she said, and her hand was already at my arm, steering me toward a cluster of guests near the far railing before I'd agreed to anything. 'Everyone —' her voice lifted, bright and carrying — 'this is Jericho's little plus-one.'

Polite laughter. A few smiles that didn't reach anyone's eyes. Someone said 'hi' and turned back to their drink.

I smiled. I kept my face pleasant and my spine straight and I stood there while the conversation moved around me like water around a stone, and I thought: he heard that. He was ten feet away and he heard every word of it.

He said nothing.

I stayed for two hours. I set the tote bag on the kitchen counter — the pasta would keep, the wine wouldn't go to waste — and I moved through the party with the composed, unhurried manner I'd spent years perfecting. I laughed at the right moments. I asked questions. I was, by any external measure, fine.

But I was also watching.

Azalea's hand on Jericho's arm, resting there with the unconscious ease of long habit. The way his friends' eyes moved past me in conversation, landing on the person behind me, the person beside me, anywhere but on me. The way the apartment I had built — the gallery wall I'd spent a weekend hanging, the linen curtains I'd hemmed myself, the kitchen I'd stocked with things I knew he liked — felt, tonight, like a stage set for someone else's life.

I left before the party ended. I found Jericho near the bar and told him I had an early morning. He nodded and kissed my cheek again and said he'd be home late.

I took the elevator down alone.

He didn't follow me to the door.

---

The next morning I did laundry.

It was a habit I'd kept from my Seattle years, when the laundromat on my block opened at seven and the early machines were always free. I liked the routine of it. The sorting, the folding. The way it made a Sunday feel organized.

I pulled the first load from the dryer and shook out a pillowcase and then stopped.

The fabric in my hands was not mine.

Black silk. Delicate, with a small embroidered monogram at the hip — A.S. — and a construction so precise it could only be custom. I turned it over. La Perla. The kind of thing that didn't end up in someone else's laundry by accident, because the kind of person who owned it didn't do their own laundry.

I stood there for a moment. Just stood there, holding it.

Then I set it on the counter and went through the rest of the load. A matching bra. A slip. All of it the same — monogrammed, expensive, and sized for a woman who was not me.

Jericho was in the kitchen when I walked in. He was making coffee, still in the t-shirt he'd slept in, and he looked up with the easy, unhurried expression of a man who had not yet been asked anything difficult today.

I set the lingerie on the counter between us.

He looked at it. Something moved behind his eyes — fast, almost imperceptible — and then his face settled into an expression I would later understand was not surprise but preparation.

'Azalea's,' he said. His voice was calm. Explanatory. 'She had too much to drink last night. I told her to crash in the guest room.' He reached for his coffee mug. 'She must have tossed her things in the wash before she left. You know how she is.'

You know how she is.

The second time he'd said that in twelve hours.

I looked at him. He met my eyes with the steady, slightly concerned expression of a man waiting for a misunderstanding to resolve itself. The explanation was smooth. Plausible. Constructed with just enough detail to make doubt feel unreasonable.

I picked up the lingerie and folded it neatly and set it aside.

'Okay,' I said.

He relaxed. Barely — a millimeter of tension leaving his shoulders — but I saw it.

I turned back to the laundry.

I didn't say anything else. I didn't need to. I had already started keeping a different kind of list.

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