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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 5

The barista's name tag said Jess. She was maybe twenty-two, with paint under her fingernails and the particular alertness of someone who noticed things.

I came in at nine-fifteen on a Wednesday, before the morning rush had fully cleared. I ordered a black coffee and waited until the line behind me was gone, and then I leaned on the counter and asked her, quietly, whether the café had security cameras covering the seating area.

She looked at me. Not suspicious. Just careful.

"Yeah," she said. "Two. One over the door, one in the back corner. They cover pretty much everything."

"How long do you keep the footage?"

"Two weeks, usually. Sometimes longer if nothing's happened to overwrite it."

I nodded. I took a card from my wallet — not a business card, just a plain white card with my name and number that I had printed at a copy shop the day before, because I had decided that nothing connected to Reed's world was going to be part of this. I slid it across the counter.

"I was here last Tuesday," I said. "I'd appreciate it if you reached out if anything unusual comes up on the footage from that visit."

She looked at the card. She looked at me. Something in her face settled into a kind of quiet understanding that I recognized — the understanding of a woman who has learned to read a situation without being told the details.

"Okay," she said.

I left a forty on the counter for a four-dollar coffee and walked out into the November air.

I did not explain. I did not need to. Some things communicate themselves.

***

The calendar reminder came through at two-seventeen on Thursday afternoon.

Reed used a shared calendar for our personal life — dinners, appointments, the small domestic architecture of two people building a life together. He had set it up in the first year, proud of the system, the way he was proud of systems. I had always found it touching. The CEO who color-coded his love life.

The reminder was for Saturday dinner. The restaurant on Mercer. Seven PM.

The same dinner he had told me, four days ago, was cancelled. Marcus needed him. Numbers on the Hartley deal. He'd make it up to me.

I opened the calendar entry.

The status had been changed from *cancelled* to *rescheduled.* The time was the same. The location was the same.

The attendee list had one name on it.

Not mine.

I looked at it for a long moment. The afternoon light came through the study window and lay itself across the desk in a long flat rectangle, and I sat in it and looked at the name on the screen and felt something in my chest go very, very quiet.

I took a screenshot. I opened my notebook to the documentation pages. I added the date, the time, the entry. I wrote the attendee's name in my neat, small hand and underlined it once.

Then I went back to the calendar reminder and typed a single word into the response field.

*Noted.*

I hit send.

I capped my pen. I closed the notebook. I went to the kitchen and poured a glass of water and drank it standing at the sink, looking out at the city, and thought about the particular kind of carelessness that comes from believing you are not being watched.

Reed was meticulous in his professional life. Punctual to the point of rigidity. He sent calendar invites with agendas attached. He did not make logistical errors.

Except that he had, today, because he was managing too many things at once, and one of them was me, and he had stopped being careful about which world he was in when he made his edits.

I rinsed my glass. I set it in the rack.

I went back to my desk and opened my design notebook to a fresh page and began to draw.

***

The text came Friday morning.

*Hi — I think you left a scarf at the café the other day? Cream colored, silk? I have it at home. I could drop it by, or we could meet? I feel terrible about it.*

I read it once. I set the phone down. I picked it up and read it again.

I did not own a cream silk scarf. I had not owned one in years. The last one I'd had was navy, a birthday gift from my mother, and I had left it on a train to Boston in 2021.

I typed back: *That's so kind of you. Tuesday at eleven? Same place?*

Her response came in under a minute. *Perfect. See you then.*

I put the phone in my bag and went to get dressed.

***

Tuesday. Ten fifty-eight.

I sat in my car outside the café and opened the voice memo app on my phone. I pressed record. I checked the levels. I put the phone in my coat pocket, screen down, and got out of the car.

The café was quieter than the last time. Mid-morning lull. Jess was behind the counter. She saw me come in and gave me a look that was not quite a nod — just a small, contained acknowledgment, the kind that meant she had something to tell me and was waiting for the right moment.

I ordered my coffee. I took the same table by the window. I set my phone face-down on the table between the two chairs, the way you set down a book you intend to return to.

She walked in at eleven-oh-four.

Same loose blouse. Hair down again. The bruise on her cheekbone had faded further — barely visible now, just a shadow at the edge of her foundation. She was carrying a small paper bag, folded at the top, the kind you get from a boutique.

She sat down. She set the bag on the table between us.

"I'm so glad you could make it," she said. "I felt so bad about the scarf."

"Don't," I said. "It's fine."

She pushed the bag toward me. I did not open it. I left it sitting there between us, and I watched her register that I wasn't going to open it, and I watched her recalibrate.

"How are you?" she asked.

"Good," I said. "You?"

A small, practiced exhale. "Tired. The pregnancy is—" She stopped. Pressed a hand to her stomach. "It's a lot. Doing it alone."

I drank my coffee.

"Reed has been so kind," she said, after a moment. Her voice was soft. Careful. "I want you to know that. He talks about you constantly. He loves you very much."

"I know he does."

She looked at me. Something flickered behind her eyes — she had expected that to land differently.

"I just want you to understand," she said, "that I'm not trying to cause problems. I never wanted any of this."

"What did you want?" I asked.

The question sat between us. She hadn't prepared for a direct one.

"I just needed help," she said. "I had nowhere else to go."

"And Reed was the obvious choice."

A pause. "We have history."

"You do," I agreed.

She looked down at her water glass. Her fingers moved around the base of it, slow and deliberate. "I know how it looks. I know you must think—"

"I don't think anything," I said. "I'm just listening."

And I was. I was listening to every word, every pause, every careful calibration of her voice. The phone between us was listening too, its small red light invisible against the dark of the table, recording the particular sound of a woman who had mistaken my stillness for an opening.

She talked for another ten minutes. She was good. She was very, very good.

When she finished, I picked up my bag. I left the paper bag on the table — the scarf that wasn't mine, the prop she had brought to justify the meeting.

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

I walked out.

In my coat pocket, the phone was still recording.

I let it run for another thirty seconds after I hit the sidewalk — the ambient sound of the street, the door closing behind me, the clean November air — and then I stopped it and saved the file to the folder I had labeled, with my mother's precision, *Documentation.*

I stood on the sidewalk for a moment with my hand pressed flat against my sternum.

Steady. Slower than expected.

I had everything I needed now. Almost everything.

I just needed the footage.

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