
1 A week before our wedding, I was designing e-vites on Mike’s laptop. My hand slipped as I typed “For now and for all our years to come,” accidentally opening his browser. [What if you’re about to marry someone but having second thoughts?] My fingers froze. Mike was on the sofa, frowning at his game. The AI chatbot replied: [Is this anxiety, dissatisfaction, or…] Mike typed again: [It’s neither. What if I met someone new and can’t stop thinking about her?] The AI concluded: [A true connection is rare. Don’t let it go.] I looked at him and asked steadily, “Are we rushing this? Are you sure you’re ready?” He put his phone down, voice tender: “How could you think that, Kate? I’ve waited ten years for this. It was always you.” His eyes returned to the screen. I looked down—a new message popped up: “Ugh, she asked if I was ready. I lied. What now?” … I sat in the study, the water in my cup trembling, sending ripples across its surface. We met when we were eight. Sixteen years of a storybook childhood friendship, followed by a ten-year marathon of love. I never, ever thought Mike would be the one to waver. I closed the laptop and walked over to him, casually taking his phone from his hands to browse through it. From food delivery orders to travel apps, from his social media follows to his direct messages—there was nothing. My face was his chat wallpaper. My photo was his profile banner. There were no restricted posts, no hidden friend lists. It was too clean. So clean it felt sterile. “What’s this? Hunting for a cheater?” He laughed, wrapping his arm around my waist and resting his head on my shoulder. “Find anything? Or did you just find the same loyal dog who’s been stuck to your side all these years?” I stared at his bright, open expression, a smile that was all charm and innocence. I wanted to smile back, but my lips wouldn’t move. “What if you meet someone else someday? Someone who makes your heart race more than I do?” He flinched, and a shadow fell over his eyes. “I don’t like jokes like that, Kate.” His voice was low, serious. “From the day I understood what love was, I knew I would only ever love you. Even if I met someone who seemed perfect, I would never, ever allow myself to do anything to betray you.” Looking at his earnest face, I felt a flicker of doubt in my own suspicion. He was the one who had pulled me from the deepest, darkest abyss of my life. He was the one who stayed by my side through it all. He had seen me at my most broken, my most unlovable, and he had still chosen me. Maybe everyone feels a flash of panic before their wedding. Maybe I was being too hard on him. He stood up and pressed a soft kiss to my forehead. “I’m going to take a shower,” he said, his smile returning, carefree. “You can keep searching. Let me know if you find anything.” He disappeared into the bathroom. I looked at the picture of us on his phone’s lock screen and felt my tense shoulders relax. I was about to put the phone down when a delayed payment notification popped up. It was a receipt for a returned portable charger, probably a glitch in the app sending it again. The charge was $12, for a rental period from 1 PM to 5 PM today. He was supposed to be in a company meeting at that time. The rental location was The Grandview Hotel. My breath caught in my throat. I dialed the hotel’s front desk. “Hello, I was a guest who checked in this afternoon around 1 PM. I seem to have misplaced a pair of diamond earrings. Could you please help me look for them?” I added, “I don’t remember the room number, but the guest name is Mike Archer. His ID number is…” After a moment of typing, the receptionist replied politely, “I’m sorry, ma’am, but I don’t see a guest by the name of Mike Archer who checked in at 1 PM today.” My heart, which had been hammering against my ribs, slowly began to settle. Maybe he was just passing by and needed to borrow a charger. He was always forgetting to charge his phone. But the receptionist’s next words made me freeze. “However, I do have a record of a Mr. Mike Archer with matching identification. He just didn’t check in this afternoon.” The frantic clatter of a keyboard echoed through the phone, and my own pulse raced to match it. Then, silence. “Here it is. He checked in six months ago. He booked a suite for an extended period. Room 328.” The phone slipped from my grasp and clattered onto the floor. The voice on the other end continued, tinny and distant. “Would you like me to have someone go up and check the room for you? Hello? Ma’am, are you still there?” I fumbled to pick up the phone, my voice trembling. “No, that’s alright. I found them.” The sound of the shower stopped. Mike leaned against the doorframe, his hair still damp, steam swirling around him. In the hazy light, his smile was audacious, almost reckless. “So? Did you find the other woman?” I forced down the wave of nausea and managed a weak smile. “Nothing. You’re clean.” He took the phone from my hand, and for a split second, I saw a flicker of smug triumph in his eyes. I knew that look. It was the same expression he wore when a business rival tried and failed to catch him in a mistake. I didn’t sleep a wink, staring into the darkness until dawn broke. The next morning, after making breakfast, Mike left for work, whistling, a spring in his step. I opened an app on my phone I’d never used before and watched as a small red dot began to move away from our apartment. It was a GPS tracker for the cat’s collar, but our little rascal, Mittens, refused to wear it, so I’d tossed it in the trunk of his car months ago. He never knew. The car stopped. I stared at the name on the map, a chilling coldness seeping into my bones. The Grandview Hotel. On the wall, our engagement photo mocked me, his loving, adoring gaze now feeling like a dagger piercing my heart. After a long moment, I dialed the number of a private investigator. “Jack, I need you to tail someone for me, 24/7. I want to know his every move and every woman he sees.” I sent him the hotel address and all the information. Then, I just sat at the table, alone, for a very long time. Until Jack’s first message came through. I had run through countless possibilities in my head. But I never, ever expected it to be her. Tessa. Mike’s most hated intern, the one who was “parachuted in.” “I can’t stand girls like Tessa,” he had complained to me six months ago. “These little princesses who think they can just waltz in and coast by because their family has connections.” For the past six months, he had portrayed their relationship as pure animosity, a constant war of wills, made worse by the fact that she had been assigned to his team. He despised her. At least, that’s the show he put on for me. I grabbed my car keys and sped to the location Jack sent. “Tessa Thorne, 22, fresh out of college,” Jack briefed me over the phone, his voice grim. “Her dad’s a major shareholder in a partner company, mom’s a doctor. A classic rich girl. Bubbly personality, gets along with everyone. The people at your boyfriend’s company love her.” He paused, and I could hear the pity in his voice. “Including your boyfriend.” “He even pulled strings to get her the lead on a multi-million dollar project, stepping back to act as her support.” My hand, resting on the binoculars, tightened. I leaned forward, focusing the lens on the window of the hotel room across the street. Tessa was sitting by the window. Mike came up behind her, wrapping his arms around her, his eyes filled with a tenderness so profound it made my stomach churn. The next second, the wind lifted the sheer curtain. And Mike leaned down and kissed her. It wasn't a gentle kiss. It was hungry, fierce, like a teenager’s first taste of passion. Despair washed over me, drowning my reason. My hand fumbled in my purse, searching for my pill bottle. I shook out a few tablets and swallowed them dry. I could hear my own voice, strained and shaking despite my best efforts. “The camera, Jack! Do you have the camera!?” “Get every single second of it!” They stayed in that room all day. I followed them when they left the hotel. I watched them shop at a luxury mall. I sat in the same restaurant as they shared a romantic dinner. Mike gave her everything—material gifts, emotional validation, a perfect day. They ended the night with a late-night movie. I sat in the row directly behind them, hidden under a hat and a mask, a voyeur lurking in the shadows. Tessa nibbled on his earlobe, her voice a playful whisper. “Spending the whole day with me… aren’t you afraid that psycho will find out and have another one of her episodes?” She giggled. “What if I took a picture of us like this and sent it to her? Do you think she’d lose her mind and try to kill us?” Mike turned and gave her a hard, silencing kiss, taking her phone. “Don’t be ridiculous. I won’t let her hurt you.” He softened his tone. “But she’s… unstable. When she snaps, she’s not herself. Just be good and don’t provoke her.” He kissed her again, his voice a husky murmur. “Let’s go to the car after this, okay? I can’t wait…” Tessa leaned into his shoulder with a soft laugh, then slowly slid down, resting her head between his thighs. A moment later, Mike’s body tensed. He gripped the armrest, a sharp hiss escaping his lips. The movie blared on, the sound of explosions and dialogue covering their sordid exchange, but it couldn’t drown out the sound of my heart shattering into a million pieces. It was so loud, so clear. Ten years ago, he was the boy who dug me out from under a pile of rubble with his bare hands, who held me tight and promised he would love and protect me for the rest of his life. Now, that same boy was getting a blowjob from another woman while calling me a psycho. He knew. He knew my deepest wound was betrayal. He had been there for the most shameful moments of my past, had seen the ugliest of my scars. And now, he was choosing to destroy me in the exact same way. After a few minutes, Tessa sat up, her face flushed and her eyes hazy with desire. Mike couldn’t wait any longer. He pulled her into his arms and practically dragged her out of the theater. I started to get up, but Jack grabbed my arm, his face etched with concern. “Kate, don’t go down the same road your mother did. Sometimes, knowing too much just gets you hurt. Why tear yourself to pieces over this?” he pleaded. “Let me handle the rest. You go home.” My father’s affair. My mother, accused of being the mistress, beaten in the street until she lost an eye and was left with a permanent limp. She had died holding onto that hatred, never understanding why. I pulled my arm free, my body trembling uncontrollably. “It’s okay, Jack. I’m not my mother.” My voice was cold, distant. “She couldn’t bear the betrayal because she loved him. For me… the betrayal is the reason I will choose not to love.” “The deeper the pain cuts now, the less mercy I’ll show later.” In the parking garage, Mike’s back rose and fell as he moved over Tessa in the backseat of his car. Through the foggy window, I saw her say something. Mike paused, fumbling for his phone with his right hand. A second later, my phone rang. I took a deep, shuddering breath and answered. “Hey, Kate. Are you asleep yet?” Across the lot, the shadows in the car began to move again. A faint, breathy moan reached me through the phone. “No. I’m looking at our e-vites. When are you coming home?” There was a beat of silence on his end, then he spoke quickly. “I have to work late tonight. I won’t be back.” His breathing was heavy, each gasp a knife twisting in my heart, the pain so sharp it made my limbs go numb. I fought back a sob. “Mike… you promised you’d help me with the wedding favors. The wedding is so soon.” My voice cracked. “And the seating chart, and the final meeting with the planners, and…” I clamped my hand over my mouth, turning away, refusing to let him hear me break. He didn't answer for a long time, but the rhythm in the car never stopped. My eyes blurred as Tessa suddenly bit down on his shoulder. I heard his sharp intake of breath, a pained grunt. “Ngh… Behave, don’t do that,” he growled into the phone, clearly not talking to me. Then he quickly covered, “Sorry, that was the assistant’s puppy. It just bit me. You should get some sleep. And don’t forget to take your medication.” The line went dead. Across the way, after a final, violent surge, the movement stopped. I raised a hand to my face and felt the wet tracks of tears on my cheeks. I turned to Jack, my expression numb. “Did you get their faces on camera?” Jack held up his camera, his eyes filled with a complicated mix of pity and respect. I gave a weak, absentminded nod. “Good. As long as you got their faces. It is for a wedding, after all. You need to see the happy couple.”
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