
Rejected by Fiancé's Lies
Chapter 1
The doorbell rang at precisely seven o'clock. I'd been pacing our living room for the past hour, smoothing down my navy dress and checking my reflection in every reflective surface. Damon was finally home after three months in the Colorado Rockies. Three months of video calls where his face would freeze and pixelate, of text messages that took hours to respond, of me planning our wedding alone.
I flung open the door, my heart leaping at the sight of him. "Damon!"
He stood there in his worn hiking boots and a faded jacket, his dark hair longer than when he'd left. His smile was tired but genuine—until it faltered slightly at whatever expression crossed my face.
"Nia." He stepped forward, his arms encircling me in a familiar embrace that smelled of pine and mountain air. "God, I missed you."
I buried my face in his chest, breathing him in. "I missed you too. So much."
That's when I noticed her.
A woman stood behind him, her auburn hair catching the porch light. She was petite with delicate features and wide green eyes that seemed to take up half her face. She clutched a small suitcase, her knuckles white against the fabric.
"Oh!" I pulled back, suddenly aware of how clingy I must have looked. "You didn't mention you were bringing someone."
Damon's hand found the small of my back, guiding me aside. "Nia, this is Celeste O'Brien. She was instrumental in my research up in the Rockies. Celeste, this is my fiancée, Nia Carpenter."
"Nice to meet you," I said automatically, extending my hand.
Celeste's grip was cool and brief. "Likewise. Damon's told me so much about you."
Something in her tone made me glance at Damon, but his expression revealed nothing unusual.
---
The welcome dinner was at Marcus's downtown loft. Our friends had gathered to celebrate Damon's return, champagne flowing freely as they peppered him with questions about his expedition.
"The data we collected could revolutionize treatment protocols," Damon explained, his voice animated as he described their findings. "Celeste's insights were invaluable."
I watched as his hand brushed against hers when reaching for his wine glass. It was subtle—so subtle that no one else would notice. But I knew Damon's every gesture, every habit.
"Celeste has an incredible mind," Marcus agreed, his eyes warming as he looked at her. "She and Damon make quite the team."
Throughout the evening, I found myself studying them. The way Damon leaned in when Celeste spoke, how she touched his arm when emphasizing a point, their shared glances that seemed laden with meaning.
"Everything okay?" Raphael appeared at my side, offering a fresh glass of champagne.
"Just wedding nerves," I lied, accepting the drink with a grateful smile.
Raphael's eyes were kind but perceptive. "You sure about that?"
Before I could answer, Damon's laugh rang out—a low, intimate sound I rarely heard anymore. He was bent close to Celeste, whispering something that made her blush.
---
The night before our wedding dawned clear and cool. I'd spent the day in a whirlwind of final preparations—confirming flowers, reviewing seating charts, steaming my dress one last time.
"Damon?" I called out, padding barefoot through our house. The silence that answered me was unusual. He'd been distant all day, claiming he needed to organize his research notes.
I followed the soft strains of music to his private studio—the converted sunroom where he kept his most prized possessions and worked on his personal projects.
The door was slightly ajar. Warm candlelight spilled out into the hallway, along with the melodic piano notes of Debussy—our song from college.
I pushed the door open wider.
The sight before me froze my blood.
Damon knelt beside the leather massage table where Celeste lay, her bare back arched slightly as his tattoo needle traced intricate patterns across her skin. Her thighs were exposed, bearing fresh ink that glistened under the candlelight.
"Beautiful," Damon murmured, his voice husky with concentration. "Perfect placement."
Celeste's soft gasp made my stomach clench. "Again?" she whispered.
"Just here," Damon replied, his gloved finger tracing a path along her spine. "This design means everything."
I must have made some sound because they both turned, their expressions shifting from surprise to something unreadable.
"Nia," Damon said, setting down his needle with deliberate calm. "You shouldn't be here."
"Clearly," I replied, my voice surprisingly steady despite the earthquake happening inside me.
Celeste reached for a silk robe, her movements unhurried. Too unhurried.
"What is this?" I demanded.
Damon's jaw tightened. "It's research documentation. The tattoos represent important data points from our expedition."
"Don't lie to me," I said, stepping closer. The designs on Celeste's skin were beautiful but clearly personal—intricate vines and flowers that formed patterns I recognized from Damon's private sketchbooks.
"They're important to me," he insisted, but his eyes wouldn't meet mine.
"Then explain them," I challenged. "Explain what they mean."
Damon's face hardened. "You wouldn't understand."
"Try me," I said, my voice rising despite my best efforts.
For a moment, something flashed in his eyes—guilt, perhaps, or fear. Then his expression shuttered closed.
"I need to finish this work," he said coldly. "We can discuss your insecurities another time."
With that, he turned back to Celeste, dismissing me entirely.
I stood there, alone in the doorway of what should have been our wedding eve, watching as he bent once more to his task—to her skin—leaving me behind in every way that mattered.
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