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My Fiancé's Countdown Mistress Novel Cover

My Fiancé's Countdown Mistress

I peeled off my latex gloves with a satisfying snap and tossed them into the biohazard bin. Thirty-six hours on my feet, four cardiac arrests, one multi-car pileup, and a toddler who'd swallowed his mother's wedding ring. Just another marathon shift at San Francisco General. "You're still standing. Impressive," Dr. Ramirez said, passing me in the hallway. I managed a tired smile. "Barely." But exhaustion couldn't touch the flutter of excitement in my chest. I pulled out my phone and texted Marcus: *Still on for City Hall at 2? Can't wait to make this official!
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Chapter 2

I stood frozen behind the column, my fingers digging into the cool marble as Marcus's single word shattered my world.

"Okay."

Just like that. Five years together, a month before our wedding, and he'd agreed to a countdown romance with his ex. My medical training kicked in—detach, observe, diagnose. My pulse pounded in my ears as Victoria's perfume lingered in the air long after she'd sauntered away, leaving Marcus staring after her.

I waited until he'd left before emerging from my hiding place. My legs carried me mechanically to the parking garage. I sat in my car, hands gripping the steering wheel, but couldn't bring myself to start the engine. The marriage license appointment came and went.

Three hours later, my phone buzzed with his text: *Got held up in an emergency meeting. Can we reschedule City Hall for tomorrow?*

I stared at the message, my thumb hovering over the screen. The first lie. How many more would follow?

*Sure*, I replied. *Hope everything's okay.*

That night, I prepared dinner as usual—roasted salmon with asparagus, his favorite. I watched him across our kitchen island, searching for signs of the betrayal I'd witnessed. He looked the same—his dark hair slightly disheveled, the scar above his eyebrow from the accident that brought us together. But something had shifted beneath the surface, like tectonic plates before an earthquake.

"How was your day?" I asked, my voice surprisingly steady.

"Crazy busy. The investors are getting nervous about the launch." He took a sip of wine, not quite meeting my eyes.

I nodded, letting the lie settle between us like a third presence at our table.

We were washing dishes when his phone rang. He glanced at the screen, and something flickered across his face—excitement poorly disguised as annoyance.

"I need to take this," he said, stepping onto our balcony and sliding the door closed.

I couldn't hear his words through the glass, but I saw his expression soften, saw the smile he usually reserved for me. Just before he ended the call, the balcony door cracked open, and a woman's voice drifted through.

"Can't wait."

Two simple words that confirmed everything.

When he came back inside, I was drying the same plate I'd been holding when he left.

"Who was that?" I asked, placing the plate carefully in the cabinet.

"Just Dave from development," he said, reaching for his wine glass. "Server issues."

I nodded again, adding another lie to the growing collection.

The week that followed was an exercise in restraint. I watched him craft excuses with increasing confidence—late meetings, business dinners, a sudden trip to Los Angeles that couldn't be postponed. Each lie was a small betrayal, each one easier than the last.

On Friday, I made reservations at Acquerello, the restaurant where we'd celebrated our first anniversary. I spent my lunch break shopping for a new dress, something that made me feel beautiful and confident. Something to remind him of what he was risking.

At 6:30, I was applying lipstick when my phone chimed.

*I'm so sorry, Nat. Urgent pitch meeting just came up. Can't get out of it. Don't wait up.*

I stared at my reflection, at the woman in the emerald dress that matched her engagement ring. The woman who was being systematically erased from her own life.

I spent the evening alone in our apartment, surrounded by framed photos of our happiness—Marcus and me hiking in Yosemite, laughing on the Golden Gate Bridge, dancing at his company's holiday party. Had any of it been real? Or was I always just a placeholder, keeping his bed warm until Victoria returned?

At 2 AM, my phone vibrated on the nightstand. Marcus still wasn't home. I reached for it, expecting another excuse.

Instead, it was a text from an unknown number. No words, just an image.

Marcus and Victoria, heads bent close together over wine glasses at a candlelit table I recognized from the exclusive Auberge du Soleil in Napa Valley. His hand covered hers on the table. Her other hand was raised slightly, as if caught mid-gesture—a vintage ruby ring glinting on her finger. The same ring I'd once found in Marcus's drawer, which he'd explained away as a family heirloom he'd forgotten to return.

Their faces were illuminated by candlelight, caught in a moment of shared laughter—intimate, exclusive, cruel.

I zoomed in on the timestamp in the corner of the photo: 7:43 PM. During his "urgent pitch meeting."

The phone slipped from my fingers as the truth crashed over me in waves. The countdown had begun.

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