
My Fiancé Slept With My Best Friend
Chapter 2
The garage door hadn't even finished humming shut before I heard Julian’s heavy tread back in the hallway. I retreated from the door, my heart a frantic drum against my ribs. I couldn't leave yet. I needed to look him in the eye one last time before I burned his world down.
I snatched a glass from the counter and filled it with lukewarm water. My hands shook so violently the rim clattered against the faucet.
"Clara? I thought you went to bed," Julian said, appearing in the kitchen doorway. He was fully dressed now—crisp white shirt, dark slacks, the picture of executive perfection.
I forced my facial muscles into a mask of wifely concern. I pinched my palms until the pain grounded me, keeping the tears locked behind my eyelids.
"I couldn't sleep," I said, my voice steady despite the bile in my throat. I held out the glass. "Here. You said your throat was sore. Drink this before you head out."
Julian paused, his eyes darting to the glass and then to my face. He looked for a trap. He found only the 'predictable' wife he’d mocked minutes ago.
"Thanks," he muttered, taking the glass.
His other hand gripped his phone like a lifeline. As he tilted his head back to swallow the water, he reached out with a sharp, jerky motion and flipped the device face-down on the marble island.
"Is that the investor?" I asked, nodding toward the dark screen. "The one who needs you at one in the morning?"
Julian wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. "Yeah. Landmark Group. They’re in from London. Time zones are a bitch, Clara. You know how it is."
"I do," I whispered.
I leaned in, pretending to straighten his collar. My fingers brushed the skin just above his top button. There, stark against his pale throat, was a jagged, angry red crescent. A fingernail gouge.
My stomach twisted. That wasn't from tonight. That was a souvenir from the 'office floor' session Chloe had bragged about.
"You have a mark, Julian," I said, my thumb hovering over the scratch.
He flinched back, his eyes widening for a fraction of a second. "What? Oh, must have been the cat. Or I scratched myself in my sleep. It’s nothing."
"The cat," I repeated. "We don't have a cat, Julian."
"I meant at the office! The stray that hangs out by the parking deck," he snapped, his voice sharpening with the defensive edge I knew too well. "Drop it, okay? I’m late."
Before I could respond, a soft yawn drifted from the direction of the guest wing.
Maya Brooks stepped into the kitchen, stretching her arms over her head. Her silk robe hung loose, shimmering under the recessed lighting. She looked glowing, refreshed—not at all like a roommate who had been woken up by late-night pacing.
"Morning, guys," Maya chirped, her eyes crinkling with a warmth that made my skin crawl. "Or is it still night? I can’t keep track anymore."
She walked straight to me and draped an arm over my shoulder, pulling me into a half-hug.
"You look exhausted, sweetie," Maya said, her voice dripping with artificial sympathy. "Julian, are you working her too hard with all these house projects?"
The scent hit me like a physical blow.
It wasn't just perfume. It was a specific, heavy blend of sandalwood and scorched vanilla. It was a custom scent she’d bragged about ordering months ago. *'My signature,'* she had called it.
It was the exact same smell that had been clinging to Julian’s suit jacket when he came home yesterday. The same smell that was currently radiating off his neck as he stood three feet away.
"I'm fine, Maya," I said, peeling her arm off me. My touch was icy. "Just a long night."
"Well, you need beauty sleep," Maya said, moving toward the espresso machine. She shot a quick, indecipherable look at Julian. "Don't worry, I'll keep her company tomorrow while you're at your 'big meeting.'"
Julian cleared his throat, grabbing his phone. "Right. I’m off. Don't wait up."
He didn't kiss me. He didn't even look at me as he strode out toward the garage. The heavy thud of the door felt like a gavel hitting a block.
"He's such a workaholic," Maya sighed, leaning against the counter. She picked up the glass Julian had used and swirled the remaining drops of water. "You're lucky to have a man so dedicated to providing for you, Clara."
"Lucky," I said. The word tasted like ash. "I'm going to go wash up. My head is pounding."
"Do you want an aspirin? I have some in my room," she offered, her smile never wavering.
"No. I just need water. Cold water."
I turned and walked toward the hallway bathroom, my movements stiff. I didn't go to the master suite. I needed to be somewhere neutral. Somewhere Maya wouldn't follow.
I stepped inside the small bathroom and turned the lock. The click sounded like a gunshot in the quiet house.
I leaned over the sink and turned the cold water on full blast. The roar of the faucet filled the small space, masking any sound I might make. I splashed my face, but the heat in my blood wouldn't fade.
My gaze drifted downward.
The small, wicker trash can tucked under the vanity was nearly empty. We had a cleaning service come yesterday. There should have been nothing in there but a few cotton rounds.
But something caught the light.
I knelt on the cold tile, my breath coming in short, jagged gasps. I reached into the bin, pushing aside a crumpled tissue.
At the very bottom lay a small, square foil wrapper.
It had been torn open with a jagged edge—the kind of tear made by teeth in a hurry.
I picked it up with trembling fingers. It was a brand Julian used. But more than that, I saw the indentation on the gold foil. A distinct, deep mark where a canine tooth had pierced the metal.
Julian had a slightly crooked incisor on the left side. He always bit the corner of the packets because he thought it was 'rugged.'
I looked at the sink, the water still rushing down the drain.
They hadn't even gone to a hotel every time. They had done it here. In my house. While I was in the next room, or at the grocery store, or sleeping.
Maya hadn't been in the guest room all night. She had been in my life, picking at the seams of my marriage until it unraveled in her hands.
I gripped the torn wrapper so hard the edges cut into my thumb.
The 'Ice Queen.' The 'mannequin.'
I stood up and caught my reflection in the mirror. My eyes weren't crying anymore. They were flat, dark, and utterly cold.
I reached into my pocket and pulled out my phone. I didn't call a lawyer. I didn't call my mother.
I opened the camera app and took a photo of the wrapper sitting on the edge of the white porcelain sink.
Then, I opened a new message.
I didn't send it to Julian.
I sent it to his father—the man who held the keys to the Vance family trust and the chairmanship Julian coveted above all else.
The caption was simple: *“Julian left something in the guest bathroom. I thought you should see the 'family values' he’s bringing to the firm.”*
I hit send.
Outside the door, I heard Maya’s footsteps approaching.
"Clara? You okay in there? You've been in there a long time."
I looked at the door, then back at the evidence in my hand.
"I'm fine, Maya," I called out, my voice sounding eerily calm. "I'm just deciding what to wear to the funeral."
"The funeral?" Maya’s voice was muffled, confused. "Who died?"
I stared at the lock, my finger hovering over the handle.
"My patience," I whispered.
I tucked the wrapper into my pocket and reached for the door.
I wasn't going to the Grand Hotel to catch them. I was going there to make sure they never had a place to hide again.
As I stepped out, Maya was standing there, her eyes wide with a faux-innocence that made me want to scream.
"You look... different," she said, her gaze flickering to my pocket.
"I feel different," I replied, pushing past her. "By the way, Maya? That perfume? It’s a bit much. It lingers on everything it touches. Especially things that don't belong to you."
I didn't wait for her reaction. I walked straight to the front door.
My phone buzzed in my hand. A reply from Julian’s father.
*“My office. Seven AM. Bring everything.”*
I headed for the car, but as I reached the driveway, I saw a black sedan idling at the curb.
It wasn't Julian’s Uber.
The window rolled down, revealing a face I hadn't seen in three years—Julian’s biggest rival, and the one man Julian feared more than his own father.
"Need a ride, Clara?" he asked, a slow, dangerous smile spreading across his face. "I hear the Grand is lovely this time of night."
You may also like





