
Chapter 1 of Rejecting a Cheating Fiancé for True Love
The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed midnight as I paced outside Conrad's study. The door was slightly ajar, warm light spilling into the dark corridor. I hadn't meant to eavesdrop—I'd only come to remind him about tomorrow's dinner with my parents—but his voice, low and intimate in a way I hadn't heard in months, stopped me cold.
"White tulips, darling. Remember how we used to pick them in your grandmother's garden?" Conrad's voice carried a tenderness that made my chest tighten. "I know it's not traditional, but it's what we always dreamed of."
I pressed myself against the wall, my heart hammering. Who was he talking to? And why was he discussing flowers with such reverence?
"The ceremony will be small, just us," he continued, and I could hear the smile in his voice. "Candlelight, like we planned when we were sixteen. Our vows will be private—just between us."
My fingers found the engagement ring on my left hand, twisting it nervously as I inched closer to the door.
"I know, I know," Conrad sighed, and I heard him pacing. "Serenity's wedding will fulfill the family expectations. But ours will be what we always dreamed of."
The floorboard creaked beneath my foot, and I froze. Conrad paused mid-sentence. I held my breath, praying he hadn't heard me.
"Irene?" he said softly into the phone. "Are you still there?"
Irene. Of course it was Irene. His childhood sweetheart who'd returned from studying abroad three months ago, all wide eyes and delicate laughter. The same Irene who'd been "just a friend" whenever I'd questioned their late-night texts and sudden meetings.
"I've got to go," Conrad whispered urgently. "We'll finish planning tomorrow. Remember—this is our secret."
I slipped away before he could discover me, my mind racing with fragments of white tulips and private ceremonies and vows meant for someone else.
* * *
Sleep eluded me. At three in the morning, I gave up and padded to the kitchen for tea. The house was silent except for the hum of the refrigerator and my own ragged breathing.
Conrad's study called to me like a siren song. He'd be asleep now, oblivious to my presence. Perhaps there was something there—something that could explain away what I'd overheard.
I found his desk drawer partially open, as if he'd been in a hurry earlier. Inside lay his leather-bound journal, the one he'd kept since college. I hesitated only briefly before lifting it out.
The first page I turned to made my blood run cold.
"Serenity is reliable and devoted," he'd written in his precise handwriting. "Someone who deserves my commitment. But I can't stop thinking about what life would be like with Irene."
My hands trembled as I flipped through more pages.
"Trapped by duty," he'd scrawled in one entry. "Serenity's family connections are essential for the company's expansion, but my heart belongs elsewhere."
Another entry detailed plans for what he called "honoring my real feelings" through a private ceremony with Irene while maintaining his public commitment to me.
"The white roses Serenity prefers are fine for the official wedding," he'd written. "But our ceremony deserves white tulips—they've always been Irene's favorite."
I sank to the floor, clutching the journal to my chest as tears blurred my vision. Every page revealed another layer of betrayal, each word a knife twisting deeper.
* * *
"Conrad." My voice was steadier than I expected when I confronted him the next morning. He looked up from his coffee, startled to find me standing in the kitchen doorway.
"What's wrong?" he asked, his expression carefully neutral.
"You're planning a private ceremony with Irene." I held up his journal. "With white tulips and candlelight."
His face drained of color. "Where did you get that?"
"Your desk drawer." I opened to a marked page. "You wrote it all down, Conrad. Every detail."
He snatched the journal from my hands. "You had no right—"
"To know you're betraying me?" My voice rose despite my efforts to remain calm. "To know you see me as nothing but an obligation?"
"It's not like that." His denial came too quickly. "The ceremony is just a meaningless childhood tradition."
"And calling her 'darling'? Planning secret vows?" I laughed bitterly. "That's a tradition too?"
His phone buzzed on the counter. Irene's name flashed on the screen. Without hesitation, Conrad picked it up.
"I need to take this," he muttered, already turning away.
I watched in disbelief as he stepped into the hallway, his voice dropping to that same intimate tone I'd heard last night.
When he returned minutes later, his expression was impatient. "This jealousy over nothing is getting old, Serenity."
"Jealousy?" I echoed, incredulous. "You're planning a secret ceremony with another woman, and I'm overreacting?"
Conrad ran a hand through his hair, exasperation evident in every line of his body. "It's a simple friendship. You're reading too much into it."
But as he spoke, his eyes darted to his phone, where Irene's message still lit up the screen. And in that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that whatever we'd had was already gone.
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