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My Fiancé’s Pregnant Mistress Tried to Ruin Me Novel Cover

My Fiancé’s Pregnant Mistress Tried to Ruin Me

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.
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Chapter 2

I learned, in those days, that leaving a man is a kind of arithmetic.

You do not subtract everything at once. You take the books first, because books look like borrowing. The hardcover Cartier monograph from the shelf in the study. The two volumes on Art Nouveau enameling I had been annotating since college. The slim French dictionary with my handwriting all down the margins. I slid them into a tote bag while Reed was in a Tuesday morning meeting and walked them out past the doorman, who smiled at me the way he had smiled at me for three years.

"Have a good day, Ms. Hayes."

"You too, Eddie."

My voice did not shake. Nothing in me shook. I had become a very steady hand pouring something out of a very full cup, one careful inch at a time.

The sketches went next. I did not take the notebook itself, because the notebook lived in my bag and went where I went. I took the loose pages. The studies of a tourmaline cuff I had been refining for a year. The cross-section of a setting I had drawn the night Reed proposed, at two in the morning, while he slept with his face mashed into my hip. I slid each page into a portfolio and zipped it shut, and the sound of the zipper was the cleanest sound I had heard in a week.

Then the purple glass vase from the windowsill in the kitchen.

Reed had brought it back from a trip to Murano the second month we were dating. He had not known yet that purple was my color. He told me later he had picked it because it caught the light in a way that reminded him of me, which was the kind of sentence that, at twenty-six, had made me believe in things. I wrapped it in a dish towel, set it in a paper bag, and carried it down to my car like a small body.

In the elevator I caught my own reflection in the polished steel. My face was calm. My eyes were calm. I looked like a woman on her way to a brunch she was looking forward to.

Reed came home that night and kissed my forehead in the doorway.

"Hi, baby."

"Hi."

He did not look at the windowsill. He did not look at the bookshelf. He set his keys in the bowl and asked what I wanted for dinner, and his hand slid down the small of my back the way it had always slid down the small of my back, and my skin moved under it the way skin moves under a fly. I held still. I smiled. I said, "Thai."

In bed, he pulled me into him. His face found my shoulder. The migraine eased out of his temple and into my collarbone, and his breathing slowed, and he was asleep inside four minutes.

Four minutes. I had timed it now. I was keeping a record, the way you keep a record of a fever.

***

My mother's kitchen smelled like bergamot and old wood. The afternoon light through the bay window laid itself across the table in long honey rectangles, and in the middle of one of them sat a yellow legal pad and a fountain pen with the cap off.

Camryn poured. She set the cup in front of me. She sat down across the table and folded her hands.

"Are you sure?"

That was all. Two words and a question mark and the small clean steam rising off the tea between us.

I did not answer. I picked up the cup. I held it close enough to feel the heat against my mouth, and I did not drink, and I did not look away from her, and after a long moment her face did something small and final around the eyes.

She nodded once.

She opened her laptop.

She did not say I told you so. She had said it once, six months ago, in the quietest voice she possessed, sitting on the edge of my old bed with her hand on my knee. *Sweetheart. He has not put that woman down. He has only set her in a different room.* I had told her she was wrong. She had let me tell her that. She had kissed the top of my head and gone downstairs and never said it again.

Now she opened a new document and her fingers began to move.

"The penthouse is in his name," she said, not looking up. "That simplifies things. The Aspen place is jointly titled. I'll have it pulled."

"Don't fight him on it."

"I wasn't going to fight him. I was going to surrender it before he asked." Her eyes flicked up over the rim of her glasses. "You don't take anything you didn't bring. We are not negotiating with him, Valentina. We are leaving."

"We," I said.

"Yes."

I drank my tea then. It scalded the roof of my mouth, and I welcomed it, because pain that announced itself was the easiest kind to manage.

***

The next evening, Reed booked us a table at the place on Mercer where he had taken me on our second date.

I put on the dress he liked, the dark green one with the low back, because I had decided that nothing about the way I existed in front of him was going to change until I was already gone. I lined my eyes. I clasped the bracelet he had given me on my last birthday around my wrist. I came out of the bedroom and he looked up from his phone and his face did the thing it always did, the slow soft loosening at the mouth, and he said, "Jesus, Val," and I smiled at him the way I had been smiling at him for three years.

The phone in his hand chimed.

He glanced down. His thumb moved. The chime was small, polite, the kind of sound a phone makes when someone you have saved as a contact is asking for you.

"Damn it." He pressed the heel of his hand to his eye. "Marcus. Numbers came back wrong on the Hartley deal. He needs me on a call."

"Now?"

"Forty minutes. Maybe an hour." He was already loosening his tie. "I'll make it up to you. Tomorrow. Anywhere you want."

"Of course," I said. "Take the call."

He set the phone face-down on the kitchen counter and went into the study to find his laptop.

The phone lit up while he was gone.

I did not pick it up. I did not need to. The notification sat there in the dim of the marble, and the contact name on the screen was a single letter, in the cool gray font Reed used for the people he did not want to label.

*M.*

Marcus was in his phone as Marcus. I had seen it a hundred times. *Marcus Webb. CFO.* Reed did not abbreviate his friends. Reed did not abbreviate anyone he was not hiding.

I opened the camera on my own phone. I took the photograph. I closed the camera.

I picked up my wine glass and set it down again, very carefully, in the exact ring of moisture it had left on the marble. I excused myself to the bathroom. I locked the door behind me. I turned the cold tap on full and stood with my hands flat on either side of the basin and watched the water run, and counted, in my head, the way my mother had taught me to count when I was a child afraid of the dark.

One. Two. Three.

At sixty I turned the tap off. I dried my hands. I checked my lipstick in the mirror, and the woman in the mirror checked hers back, and neither of us said a single word.

When I came back out, he was at the counter with his laptop open, a furrow between his brows, the phone face-down again beside his elbow.

"Sorry, baby," he said, without looking up.

"Don't be," I said. "Take all the time you need."

I meant it the way I meant everything now. Precisely. And not at all the way he heard it.

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