
My Fiancé Used My Fortune to Woo His Mistress
My Fiancé Used My Fortune to Woo His Mistress Chapter 1
Tuesday started like every other Tuesday.
I was between rounds, still in my scrubs, coffee cooling in my hand, when Evie caught me in the hallway outside the OR. She was one of my better interns — sharp instincts, fast hands, the kind of earnest focus you can't teach. She'd been with me eight weeks and hadn't once embarrassed herself in the field.
She was holding a small envelope. Cream-colored. Hand-addressed.
'Dr. Harris.' She was almost bouncing on her heels. 'I wanted to give you this in person.'
I took it. Inside was a card — actual cardstock, actual handwriting, not a text message with a calendar link. Thanksgiving dinner. Her boyfriend's penthouse in Tribeca. A thank-you for mentoring her through her first rotation.
The address was printed neatly at the bottom.
I didn't look at it long enough to register it. I was already being paged.
'I'll be there,' I said, and I meant it. I tucked the card into my coat pocket and walked back into the OR.
---
Thursday evening. I changed out of my scrubs, pulled on a dark blazer, and grabbed the bottle of Burgundy I'd been saving for something worth opening. I fed Biscuit — my tabby, small and imperious, who watched me from the kitchen counter with the mild judgment he reserved for occasions when I was leaving — and typed the address into my phone.
Tribeca. Of course. Augustine liked Tribeca.
I didn't think about it further. I was tired in the specific way that a twelve-hour surgical day produces — not depleted, just quiet. I was looking forward to a decent meal and thirty minutes of conversation that had nothing to do with post-op complications.
The cab stopped. I got out.
I looked up at the building.
I went still.
The doorman saw me before I saw him. 'Good evening, Dr. Harris.' He held the door like he'd done it a hundred times, because he had. 'Mr. Gordon is expecting guests upstairs.'
Mr. Gordon.
I stood in the lobby and the world did something very strange. It didn't spin. It didn't go loud. It just — sharpened. The way a lens adjusts and suddenly every edge is exact.
I knew this building. I knew the width of the elevator, the particular hush of the hallway on the top floor. I knew the lobby chandelier had a single bulb that ran slightly warm. I knew all of it because I had signed the purchase documents in this lobby three years ago. I had written the check. I had shaken the realtor's hand.
I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist.
The elevator doors opened. I stepped in.
I rode up in silence.
---
The door opened before I knocked.
Augustine was standing there in the grey cashmere sweater I bought him in Milan two winters ago. He was holding a carving knife — for the turkey, presumably — and the color left his face so completely and so fast that I almost found it interesting from a clinical standpoint.
From the kitchen, warm and bright and entirely unaware, Evie's voice: 'Babe, who is it?'
Seven years.
Seven years of Sunday mornings and airport pickups and learning his coffee order and not learning, somehow, what any of it actually cost me. Seven years of thinking we were building something together when I was the only one who brought a single brick.
All of it collapsed in the space between one heartbeat and the next. Quietly. Completely. Like a diagnosis you already knew before the chart confirmed it.
I walked in.
I set the Burgundy on my marble counter — the counter I selected from a showroom on Mercer Street, the one Augustine called 'our kitchen' in his Instagram captions. I turned to face Evie.
She was standing at the stove, still holding a wooden spoon, her smile beginning to falter at the edges. She didn't understand yet. Her eyes moved between us.
'Evie.' My voice was the same voice I use for post-operative briefings. Level. Clear. No performance. 'I own this apartment. I bought it outright three years ago. Augustine is my fiancé. We've been together for seven years.'
Silence.
Her smile didn't disappear all at once. It dissolved, feature by feature, like something melting.
'I'm sorry you found out this way. That part isn't fair to you.'
I slid the engagement ring off my finger. I set it on the counter next to the wine. I didn't look at Augustine. I walked back to the door.
'Penny —' His voice cracked on the second syllable. 'Penelope. Please. Just — wait.'
I didn't wait.
---
He found me in the parking garage.
His footsteps echoed off the concrete. He still had the carving knife in his hand — he hadn't even thought to put it down — and I stood beside my car and watched him cross the distance between us with the particular calm of someone who has already closed the wound.
He talked for a while. I let him.
The affair happened because I was too successful. My career made him feel small. He'd been living in my shadow and the pressure had been impossible and Evie was — he stopped there, at least, before he made it worse. He was sorry. He was so sorry. He'd made a terrible mistake. He loved me. Did I understand? He loved me.
I pressed my thumb to my wrist once.
Then I looked at him.
'You have one week,' I said. 'The penthouse. The Porsche. The fifty million I wired to your startup in three tranches between 2021 and 2023. Every cent. Back in my account, or in front of a judge. Your choice, Augustine.'
He stared at me. His mouth opened.
'One week,' I said again, and got in my car.
I drove home through the city — lit up and indifferent, the way New York always is, the way I had always loved it for — and let myself into my apartment, and Biscuit walked to the edge of the couch and looked at me with his slow amber eyes.
I sat down. I scratched behind his ears.
Outside, the city kept going.
So would I.
My Fiancé Used My Fortune to Woo His Mistress of Contents
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