
My Fiancé’s Pregnant Mistress Tried to Ruin Me
My Fiancé’s Pregnant Mistress Tried to Ruin Me Chapter 1
Three days before the wedding, I saw her for the first time.
I was crossing the lobby of Alvarez Enterprises with a garment bag over my arm, on my way up to surprise Reed with lunch, when the elevator opened and a woman stepped out. She was small. Pregnant. The bruise on her cheekbone had been powdered over, badly. Her eyes searched the lobby like a child looking for a parent in a crowd.
She didn't see me. She walked straight past me, out into the noise of Madison Avenue, and the security guard at the desk exhaled like he'd been holding his breath.
"Who was that?" I asked, light, casual.
He hesitated. "Old friend of Mr. Alvarez. He sent her on her way."
I smiled. I thanked him. I rode the elevator up.
Reed was at his desk when I walked in. He looked up, and for half a second, before his face arranged itself into the expression I knew, I saw something else underneath. Something raw. Then he stood, kissed my forehead, and said, "You're early."
"I brought lunch."
"You're an angel."
He pulled out my chair. He poured my water. He asked about my morning. And his hands were shaking. Not much. Just a faint tremor at the rim of the glass, the kind of thing you wouldn't notice unless you'd spent three years memorizing the shape of his fingers.
I ate my salad. I laughed at the right places. I pressed my palm flat against my sternum under the table and breathed.
That night, in our penthouse on the thirty-second floor, he held me on the couch and told me about a deal in Singapore. His jaw was locked. He was talking around something. I could hear the shape of it in the spaces between his words, the way you can hear a door closing in another room.
I didn't ask. I already knew the answer wouldn't be true.
Two nights later, he kissed the top of my head and said, "I have a late board meeting tonight, baby. Don't wait up."
A late board meeting tonight, baby.
Reed doesn't talk like that. Reed says, "Board's running late. Order something good." He doesn't construct sentences. He doesn't put the time and the address and the reason all in one neat line.
"Okay," I said. I smiled. I kissed his mouth. I tasted his cologne and the faint mint of his toothpaste and something underneath that I couldn't name.
He left at six. I left at six-oh-four.
The rain started as I crossed the bridge. By the time I picked him up on the FDR, it was coming down hard enough to smear the brake lights into long red ribbons. He didn't drive toward midtown. He drove toward Brooklyn Heights, into a quiet street where the brownstones leaned together like people sharing a secret, and he pulled over under a sycamore tree.
I parked half a block back. I killed the engine. I watched.
She came out from a stoop with a hood pulled up over her hair. She climbed into the passenger seat of his SUV. He didn't pull away. He didn't turn on the dome light. Through two rain-streaked windshields and forty feet of wet asphalt, I watched my fiancé pull a pregnant woman across the console and into his chest, and hold her there, the way a man holds something he is afraid will be taken from him.
His hand cupped the back of her head.
My hand was on the steering wheel. I noticed, very carefully, that I was not crying. I noticed the rain on the roof. I noticed the way my breath fogged a small oval on the windshield, and how the oval grew and shrank with the rhythm of my lungs, in and out, perfectly even.
Something inside me moved. Not a break. Not a snap. A click. The quiet, definite click of a deadbolt sliding home.
I took out my phone. I opened the thread with the wedding planner.
*Cancel everything. All vendors. Effective immediately. Eat the deposits. Do not contact Reed.*
I watched the three dots appear. Disappear. Appear again.
*Understood, Ms. Hayes.*
I put the car in drive.
My mother's brownstone in Park Slope still has the original 1890s stoop, six steps of bluestone worn smooth in the middle by a hundred and thirty years of feet. I climbed them slowly. The porch light came on before I knocked.
Camryn opened the door in her reading glasses, a yellow legal pad in one hand. She looked at me. She looked at the rain in my hair. She looked at my left hand, where the ring was still on, because I had not yet decided what to do with it.
She didn't say anything. She stepped aside.
I walked past her into the warm yellow hallway, and she closed the door behind me, and that was the only sound either of us made for a long time.
I slept in my old bedroom. I did not fall apart. My mother had taught me, in a thousand small ways across a thousand small years, that falling apart was a privilege you spent on people who had earned it.
In the morning, I drove back toward Manhattan and stopped at a coffee shop on Seventh Avenue. The barista handed me a flat white and I sat in my car with the engine running and opened my email.
*Mademoiselle Hayes,* it began, *c'est avec grand plaisir...*
I read it twice. Then a third time, slower, like a person tasting something they have been hungry for without knowing.
The Maison Beaumont atelier. Sylvie Beaumont herself had signed it. The apprenticeship I had applied to six months ago, in secret, the way other women buy lottery tickets. *We would be honored to welcome you in our autumn cohort.*
I pressed my hand flat against my sternum.
The thing that bloomed there was not joy. Joy is loud. This was quieter, and older, and it felt like a window opening in a room I hadn't realized was sealed.
I tucked the letter into my design notebook, between a sketch of a ring I had drawn for myself last spring and a blank page I had been saving for something I couldn't yet picture. I started the car.
I was back in the penthouse before Reed woke up.
He stirred when I slid in beside him. His arm came around my waist before his eyes opened, the way it always did. Reed has not slept through a night without me in three years. The migraines, the insomnia, the prescriptions that didn't work. *You're my human sedative,* he said once, laughing. I had thought it was the most romantic thing anyone had ever said to me.
Now I lay in the dark with his weight against my hip and listened to his breathing slow, deepen, soften into the quiet rhythm of a man finally at rest. His face pressed into my shoulder. The migraine in his temple smoothed out under my collarbone like a hand smoothing a sheet.
I stared at the ceiling.
Needed, I thought. Not loved. Needed.
My mother could have drawn the distinction in a deposition. *Your Honor, a man who needs you cannot survive without you. A man who loves you would rather die than betray you. Please note, for the record, which one the defendant is.*
Reed's arm was heavy. My ring caught the light from the window.
I counted the hours until I could move again.
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