
Scarred by His Deceit
Chapter 3
I heard the door open before I saw them. Preston's familiar footsteps, followed by the delicate click of heels that could only belong to Sienna. My fingers instinctively traced the scar on my shoulder as I set down my coffee mug, preparing myself for whatever was coming.
"Evie," Preston's voice carried that forced casualness he used when he knew he was in the wrong. "Sienna and I need to talk to you."
I turned slowly from the kitchen counter. Sienna stood behind him, her eyes already glistening with perfectly timed tears. She wore a simple white dress that made her look fragile, vulnerable—a performance I was starting to recognize.
"This is ridiculous," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "There's nothing to talk about."
Preston stepped forward, his hand moving to rest on Sienna's shoulder in a gesture that was far too intimate for "just friends." "Sienna feels terrible about what happened. She wants to make things right."
Sienna's lower lip trembled on cue. "I never meant to cause problems between you two," she whispered, her voice breaking at just the right moment. "The house... the bag... I had no idea it would hurt you so much."
My scar burned under my touch. I could feel the familiar ache spreading across my shoulder, the kind that always flared when I was under stress.
"You knew exactly what you were doing," I said quietly.
Sienna's eyes widened with practiced innocence. "How can you say that? I've been Preston's friend since we were children. I would never intentionally—"
"Enough." Preston cut in, his tone sharp. "This isn't helping." He turned to me, his expression hardening. "Evie, you need to apologize to Sienna."
I stared at him, disbelief washing over me. "Apologize?"
"Yes, apologize." Preston's voice rose slightly. "For making her feel unwelcome. For acting like she's the enemy."
Sienna's tears flowed more freely now, but I noticed how her eyes remained calculating despite her weeping. She moved closer to Preston, her hand resting on his arm.
"I just want everyone to be happy," she whispered.
I felt something snap inside me. "I think you should both leave."
Preston's face flushed with anger. "You're being unreasonable."
"And you're being blind," I replied, pointing to the door. "Or maybe just dishonest."
After they left, I sat motionless on the couch, my scar throbbing in time with my heartbeat. The apartment felt hollow, emptied of something I couldn't quite name.
---
Three days later, I was cleaning Preston's desk, trying to organize the chaos he left behind. He'd been staying at Marcus's place since our argument, claiming he needed "space to think."
The bottom drawer stuck slightly as I pulled it open. Inside lay a manila envelope labeled "Statements" in Preston's handwriting.
I hesitated only briefly before opening it.
Credit card statements. Dozens of them, dating back six months.
My hands trembled as I spread them across the desk. Each page revealed a new betrayal.
"Audrey's Jewelry, $4,500."
"Neiman Marcus, $2,300."
"Spa Retreat, $1,200."
All for Sienna. All while Preston and I were supposedly saving for our wedding.
I flipped through page after page, each one a fresh wound. Designer clothes. Fine dining. A weekend getaway to Napa Valley.
"We need to watch our budget," Preston had told me last month when I suggested we take a weekend trip to visit my parents. "Weddings are expensive."
My fingers traced the numbers on the page, each digit a reminder of his lies. Three thousand dollars for a weekend spa retreat for Sienna's birthday. The same weekend he'd claimed he had to work.
The same weekend he'd missed my doctor's appointment.
I sat back, my scar aching with a pain that had nothing to do with the weather. The extent of his deception was staggering. Not just the house—not just the handbag—but months of gifts, dinners, experiences that he'd denied me while claiming we needed to save.
My phone buzzed with a text from William: "Just checking on you. Everything okay?"
I stared at his message, then back at the statements spread before me. The pattern was so clear now—every expensive gift for Sienna coincided perfectly with his absences from my medical appointments, my birthday, our anniversaries.
As I gathered the statements into a neat pile, I felt something shift inside me. The pain was still there, but beneath it was something new—a quiet, burning determination.
I wasn't just tired of being hurt.
I was done being lied to.
And as I slipped the statements into my bag, I wondered if Preston had any idea what was coming next.
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