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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 3

Marcus caught Reed in the hallway outside the conference room, which told me everything I needed to know about the conversation. Marcus Webb does not ambush people in hallways. He schedules. He prepares. He sends a calendar invite with an agenda attached.

I wasn't there. But Reed told me about it that night, the way he told me things he wanted to neutralize by saying them first — casually, over dinner, like he was reporting the weather.

"Marcus got in my head today," he said, cutting into his steak. "Thinks I'm playing with fire."

"With what?"

He set down his knife. Picked it up again. "Phoebe. He thinks I'm being reckless." A short exhale through his nose. "I told him she's an old friend who needed help. That's it."

"What did he say?"

Reed looked up. His jaw was doing the thing. "Nothing. You know how Marcus gets. Goes quiet and stares at you like you're a bad quarterly report."

I smiled. I speared a piece of asparagus. "He's probably just worried about the optics. With the wedding so close."

"Yeah." Reed reached across the table and touched my hand. "That's all it is."

I turned my hand over and let his fingers close around mine. His thumb moved across my knuckles, slow and automatic, the way it always did. I watched his face relax.

He believed me. He always believed me when I agreed with him.

That was the thing about Reed. He was brilliant in a boardroom and almost completely blind at a dinner table.

***

The text came the next morning.

*Hi Valentina. I know this is strange. I just think we should talk — woman to woman. No agenda. Just coffee? There's a place I like in SoHo. Tuesday at eleven?*

I read it twice. I set my phone face-down on the kitchen counter. I poured my coffee. I picked the phone back up and read it a third time, and this time I noticed the things she had chosen: *woman to woman. No agenda.* The careful warmth of it. The performance of reluctance.

I typed back: *Tuesday works. See you then.*

I did not tell Reed. I did not tell my mother. I put the phone in my bag and went to my desk and opened my notebook to a fresh page and drew a collet setting for a pear-shaped stone until my hand was steady.

***

I arrived at the café at ten fifty-five.

The place was the kind of SoHo spot that looked effortless and cost a fortune — exposed brick, pendant lights, a chalkboard menu in a font that took effort to read. I ordered a black coffee and took the table by the window, where the light came in flat and clear and there was nowhere to hide a face.

She walked in at eleven-oh-three.

I had seen her through rain and glass and forty feet of wet asphalt. Up close, she was smaller than I remembered. The bruise on her cheekbone had faded to a yellow-green shadow that her concealer couldn't quite cover. She was wearing a loose cream blouse that fell soft over the curve of her stomach, and her hair was down, and she looked like a woman who had spent twenty minutes making herself look like she hadn't tried.

She saw me and her face did something that was almost a smile.

I watched her cross the room the way I watched a stone under a loupe — looking for the inclusions, the fractures, the places where the light didn't pass through cleanly.

"Valentina." She sat down. She folded her hands on the table. "Thank you for coming. I wasn't sure you would."

"Why wouldn't I?"

A small, pained look. "I know how this must seem."

"How does it seem?"

She looked down at her water glass. "Like I'm the villain."

I didn't answer. I drank my coffee.

We talked for twenty minutes about nothing that mattered — her pregnancy, her situation, the careful vague language she used for the man she had left. She was good. She was very good. The pauses were calibrated. The eye contact broke at exactly the right moments.

Then she reached across the table, not to touch me, just to gesture, and her eyes dropped to my left hand.

She went still.

It lasted less than two seconds. Then her face arranged itself into something soft and complicated, and she said, "That's a beautiful ring."

"Thank you."

Another pause. Longer. The kind that was meant to be filled.

"The stone," she said, slowly, like the words were costing her something. "It's pink."

"It is."

She looked up at me. Her eyes were very careful. "Reed always loved pink diamonds. He used to talk about them. When we were together." A breath. "He had a specific one in mind, actually. Years ago. I always wondered what happened to it."

The café noise continued around us. Someone's espresso machine hissed. A chair scraped.

I looked at her. I looked at the ring. I set my coffee cup down in its saucer with a small, clean sound.

"Thank you for telling me," I said. My voice was the same temperature it had been all morning.

She blinked. She had expected something else. I could see her recalibrating.

"I just thought you should know," she said. "I'm not trying to—"

"I know." I picked up my bag. I took out my wallet and left a twenty on the table. "Take care of yourself, Phoebe."

I walked out into the November air and stood on the sidewalk for a moment with my hand pressed flat against my sternum, feeling my own heartbeat, counting it the way I counted everything now.

The lie had landed. I knew it had landed. Not because I believed her — but because Reed had given me nothing left to stand on when I tried not to.

***

That evening I pulled my jewelry reference books off the shelf. The Gemological Institute guides. The Christie's auction catalogues. The monograph on colored diamonds I had been annotating since graduate school.

Pink diamonds. Purple diamonds. The difference in their chromatic grading, their nitrogen content, their sourcing geography. Pink from the Argyle mine in Western Australia, mostly, before it closed. Purple from scattered deposits — Russia, Canada, occasionally Siberia — rarer, less documented, less understood by the market.

I read for two hours. I found nothing conclusive about my specific stone. The color in certain lights read pink. In others, in the low lamp of the bedroom, it pulled toward something deeper. Something that sat at the edge of another color entirely.

I needed a certificate. I did not have one.

I closed the books.

I opened my notebook and drew three pendant designs — a drop setting, a bezel, a floating solitaire — working the lines until they were clean. The sketching settled something in my hands that the reading had not.

At eleven-fifteen I heard Reed's key in the door.

I capped my pen. I closed the notebook. I turned off the desk lamp and went to bed, and when he came in and found me there and curved himself around me in the dark, I lay still and let him, and stared at the ceiling, and thought about the color purple.

About how rare it was. About how easy it was to mistake it for something else in the wrong light.

About how a woman who knew stones would never make that mistake.

About how I still didn't know, for certain, which one I was holding.

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