The Price Of His Double Life

The Price Of His Double Life

Xing Bao

5.0
Comment(s)
View
10
Chapters

After seven years, my fiancé Elias and I were a month away from our wedding. I' d just been laid off from my architecture firm, but he promised to take care of me, calling me his queen. He was my rock, my future. Then, a single Instagram post shattered my world: a picture of a man's hand with a bandage exactly like the one Elias had, holding the hand of an influencer bragging about her rich, married "sugar daddy." The more I scrolled, the worse it got. He hadn't just cheated; he had orchestrated my firing, calling it "budget cuts," so his mistress could take my place. He even used the engagement party invitations I helped design for their future. He called me his "plain Jane architect," a boring fiancée he was escaping from. For six months, he had been living a double life, all while planning our wedding and systematically destroying mine. So at our lavish engagement party, when he abandoned me mid-celebration for his mistress's fake emergency, I didn't cry. I took the microphone, canceled the wedding, and played every single screenshot of his betrayal on the ballroom's giant screen for our hundreds of guests to see.

Chapter 1

After seven years, my fiancé Elias and I were a month away from our wedding. I' d just been laid off from my architecture firm, but he promised to take care of me, calling me his queen. He was my rock, my future.

Then, a single Instagram post shattered my world: a picture of a man's hand with a bandage exactly like the one Elias had, holding the hand of an influencer bragging about her rich, married "sugar daddy."

The more I scrolled, the worse it got. He hadn't just cheated; he had orchestrated my firing, calling it "budget cuts," so his mistress could take my place. He even used the engagement party invitations I helped design for their future.

He called me his "plain Jane architect," a boring fiancée he was escaping from. For six months, he had been living a double life, all while planning our wedding and systematically destroying mine.

So at our lavish engagement party, when he abandoned me mid-celebration for his mistress's fake emergency, I didn't cry.

I took the microphone, canceled the wedding, and played every single screenshot of his betrayal on the ballroom's giant screen for our hundreds of guests to see.

Chapter 1

Elise POV:

My world fell apart with a single scroll, a picture of a distinctive hand injury, and a name I knew too well.

I was huddled on my small couch, the one Elias and I had picked out together seven years ago. The architecture firm had laid me off last week. "Budget cuts," they said, but the phrase felt hollow, ringing with a vague dismissiveness I couldn't quite place. I'd been trying to find new openings online, scrolling through endless job boards, the dull glow of my laptop reflecting the dull ache in my chest. My fingers were cold, despite the heating being on. The apartment felt too quiet, too large without the usual buzz of my work.

My thumb paused over a brightly colored Instagram post. The account belonged to Krystal Guzman, or "PeachyKeen" as her handle proclaimed. She was one of those influencers, all glossy lips and perfect angles. I usually scrolled past her, but this post had an unusual caption. It detailed how she' d just received a new designer bag, a "little treat from Daddy" after a very successful "business trip" to Miami. Miami. Elias had just returned from a "business trip" there. My stomach tightened. It was probably nothing. Elias traveled for his tech startup all the time.

Then I saw a comment. Someone had asked, "Girl, what's your secret? How do you live this life?"

Krystal, or PeachyKeen, replied with a string of laughing emojis. "Just found myself a sugar daddy who knows how to treat a girl right. He' s obsessed."

My breath hitched. My chest felt tight. I told myself to keep scrolling. This wasn't my business. This was internet noise. But my fingers wouldn't move.

Another user asked, "Spill! Is he hot? Rich? Tell us everything!"

Krystal's reply came quickly. "He's absolutely loaded, old money, you know? And honestly, he' s totally hot. Super attentive too. Sends flowers to my office, remembers my favorite coffee, even when I forget to mention it for weeks."

A wave of nausea washed over me. Elias always sent flowers to my office. He always remembered my favorite coffee order. He was old money. He was definitely hot. My mind started making connections I didn't want it to make.

"But like, what's the catch?" someone else chimed in. "He must want something specific, right?"

"Oh, he wants everything," PeachyKeen wrote back. "He says I'm his little secret, his escape from his boring life. His words, not mine! He's got a fiancée, apparently, some plain Jane architect he' s been with for ages. Can you believe the nerve? Like I' m not ten times better looking and way more fun."

The words hit me like a physical blow. Plain Jane architect. Seven years. Elias. This couldn't be happening. My vision blurred for a second. My fingers felt like ice. I kept scrolling, my breath catching in my throat.

"Wait, so he leaves his fiancée for you?" A user asked, clearly thrilled by the drama.

"Honey, he left her for me mid-date last week when I called him," PeachyKeen boasted. "Said it was a 'company emergency.' He' s so good at playing the part. He dropped everything to rush to my side. That's real devotion, right?"

My throat closed up. Elias had left our anniversary dinner last week. He'd said there was a server meltdown at his startup, a crisis only he could handle. I'd cried because he was working so hard. He' d even grazed his finger cutting fruit that morning, a small cut on his right index finger, which he' d bandaged clumsily before rushing out.

PeachyKeen's next post was a photo. A man's hand, holding hers. His fingers were long, the nails neatly trimmed. And there, on the right index finger, was a small, white bandage, exactly like Elias's. My heart hammered against my ribs, a wild bird trapped in a cage.

I threw my phone onto the couch, the screen flashing on the ceiling. No. This was a nightmare. This was a sick coincidence. Elias loved me. He was my rock, my future. We were getting married next month. He had picked out the venue, the caterers, even helped me design my engagement party dress. He' d told me he was doing it all to make sure our future was perfect, to show his mother, Hermina, that I was worthy.

I forced myself to breathe. Deep breaths. It had to be a mistake.

I picked up my phone again, my fingers trembling. The comments section of PeachyKeen' s post was a chaotic mix of envious praise and disgusted condemnation. But PeachyKeen herself seemed oblivious, or maybe she just didn't care. Her replies grew more arrogant, more specific.

"Honestly, his fiancée is so boring. He told me he even had her fired from her job so I could take her place. She thought it was 'budget cuts'! Can you believe how clueless some people are?"

The words ripped through me, each syllable a jagged shard of glass. Fired. My job. The one I loved, the one I had poured seven years of my life into. The firm that had suddenly, inexplicably, let me go last week, with vague excuses about "restructuring."

"He even gave her a severance package," Krystal continued, "a measly ten grand a month. Like that' s enough to keep her comfortable. He sends me more than that just for a new pair of shoes!"

My mind reeled. Ten thousand a month. Elias had offered me that exact amount, insisting it was so I wouldn't have to worry while I looked for a new job. He'd painted a picture of me finally having time to relax, to pursue my hobbies, to be his kept woman. I had scoffed, telling him I wasn't some trophy wife to be put on a shelf. "I'm an architect, Elias," I'd said, "I build things. I do things." He had just smiled, pulling me close. "I only want to keep you safe, Elise. Just you."

My body went cold. The words felt like a freezing hand gripping my heart.

With shaking fingers, I clicked on PeachyKeen's profile. Her latest posts were a parade of luxury: a trip to the Hamptons, a new sports car, designer clothes. And in almost every picture, a partial glimpse of a man. Sometimes just a hand, sometimes a shoulder, but always familiar. Always Elias.

My stomach churned, empty and aching. I scrolled down, past the lavish dinners, the private jet selfies, the ridiculously expensive gifts.

"My sugar daddy helped me design the invitations for his engagement party!" one post read, accompanied by a photo of an elegant, minimalist invitation. It was identical to ours. Elias had told me he'd spent hours custom-designing them, pouring his heart into every detail. "It's a symbol of our intertwined future, Elise," he'd said, his eyes full of what I thought was love. The irony was a bitter, metallic taste in my mouth.

Another post, from a few days ago: "Seven years with his fiancée, and he still chose to spend their anniversary with me! Best. Daddy. Ever."

My seven-year anniversary. I had prepared a surprise dinner, lit candles, bought him a gift I' d saved for months to afford. He had canceled last minute, claiming an urgent meeting with investors. I had believed him. I had always believed him.

My fingertips were numb. I could barely hold the phone. I scrolled further, all the way to her very first post featuring him, a blurred selfie taken in what looked like the lobby of Elias's tech firm. "Just met the most amazing man today," the caption read, with a date stamp from six months ago.

Six months. Six months of lies. Six months of a double life. Six months since he had started planning to get me fired, replacing me with her, all while planning our wedding.

I stumbled into the bathroom, dropping to my knees, gagging. Nothing came up. My stomach was empty. I gripped the porcelain, my knuckles white, tears streaming down my face, snot running into my mouth. I looked at my reflection in the mirror, my eyes red and swollen, my hair disheveled. I looked like a madwoman.

It all made sense now. Every late-night meeting. Every "urgent business trip." Every time he'd said he was "too stressed" for intimacy. Every time he'd pulled away, claiming he didn't want to "jinx" our future.

He hadn't been protecting our future. He had been building hers.

He had known how much my work meant to me. It wasn't just a job; it was my passion, my identity. And he had deliberately, ruthlessly, destroyed it.

My hands stopped shaking. A cold, hard resolve settled in my chest. I pushed myself up, grabbed my phone, and began taking screenshots. Every single post. Every incriminating photo. Every arrogant caption. Every hateful comment about me. This wasn't just a betrayal. This was a calculated, cruel demolition.

And I wouldn't let him get away with it.

Continue Reading

Other books by Xing Bao

More
From Fake Wife To Billionaire Heiress

From Fake Wife To Billionaire Heiress

Modern

5.0

I spent two years as the perfect, dutiful wife to Foster Baird. I was his unpaid PR consultant and his emotional punching bag, enduring his mother’s snide comments about my orphan background all for the sake of a "marriage" I thought was real. But when I went to the City Clerk’s office to replace a damaged document, the clerk looked at me with genuine pity. "There is no record of a marriage license for you and Foster Baird. Legally? You aren't married." The betrayal went even deeper. I returned to our penthouse to find Foster’s mistress on our sofa, alongside a five-year-old boy who shared Foster’s exact features. Foster hadn't just cheated; he had a secret family that predated our entire relationship. He had even bribed a doctor to lie to me about being infertile just to keep me docile and focused on his business. When the mistress moved into my guest wing the next day, Foster demanded I act as their hostess and serve them dinner. I watched them play happy family in the home I built, realizing I was never a wife—I was just "cheap labor" he intended to discard once his company stock stabilized. He thought I was a barren charity case with nowhere to go. He was wrong. That same afternoon, I received a call from the executor of the Arthur Kensington estate. I wasn't a nobody; I was the long-lost biological daughter and sole heir to a five-billion-dollar fortune. While Foster was busy planning my replacement, I was accessing the Kensington Trust. I didn't scream, and I didn't cry. I simply bought a fifty-million-dollar mansion and hired a team of forensic accountants to dismantle the Baird Group from the inside out. I crushed my old phone under my designer heel and looked at my new security detail. "Let's get to work," I said.

Her Choice, My New Beginning

Her Choice, My New Beginning

Romance

5.0

On our fifth anniversary, I waited alone at "La Lune," the restaurant of our first date, a single white rose and a velvet proposal box in my pocket. But she never showed. No text, no call, just a creeping coldness in my chest. This wasn't like Sophia. Then I saw it on Instagram: a flashy video from a tech expo. My girlfriend, Sophia Chen, laughing, handing a birthday cake to her new assistant, Leo Davis. The caption: "#BestBossEver." She hadn't forgotten; she'd chosen to celebrate him. Anger, hot and sharp, burned through me. She rented an entire expo hall for him, but for me, not even a text. My world stopped. The rose, the ring, everything felt stupid. I walked out, leaving the rose, dropping the ring into a trash can. The feeling of loss was immense, but a hard resolve replaced it. This wasn't a mistake; it was her choice. Now, I would make mine. I remembered all the red flags I'd ignored. Her growing admiration for Leo, the son of a rumored tech mogul. Her late nights, her defensiveness, her distant voice. The jealousy, the arguments, the feeling of being an obstacle to her success, not a partner. Each incident, each public display of her and Leo's "teamwork" while I was relegated to the sidelines, gnawed at me. She never corrected them. She just let the narrative build. "You're obsessed with feelings, Ethan," she once said. "Success isn't about feelings. It's about power. It's about winning. It's a shame you'll never understand that." She chose what she thought was status and power over five years of my love and sacrifice. Overwhelmed, I packed a bag. Just as I zipped it shut, she walked in, cheerful and oblivious. "Ethan? You're still up?" she asked. I delivered my final blow: "Happy anniversary, Sophia." Her face went pale. On her phone, a notification from Leo flashed: "Tonight was amazing. Can't wait for our next 'celebration.' ;) You're the best, Soph." The winking emoji sealed my fate. I made the call. "Dad," I said, my voice steady. "Is the offer still on the table? The one concerning Olivia Hayes? Yes. The arranged marriage. I accept."

Betrayed By Love, Reborn in Vengeance

Betrayed By Love, Reborn in Vengeance

Billionaires

5.0

The warehouse air bit deep, the night before my engagement party. I was Noah Miller, a tech prodigy, about to marry Emily Stone. Now, I lay broken on a frozen concrete floor, limbs shattered, a final blow to my head fading the world to red and black. Men sent by my own fiancée did this. Left for dead, I survived on frozen concrete, only to find myself in a hospital with my mother, Susan Miller, CEO of Miller Corp, vowing revenge. But her words turned arctic as I overheard her: "He and his father were getting too ambitious. They were a threat to Alex' s position." Alex, my adopted brother. The son she truly cherished. They plotted to install Alex as my replacement, to marry Emily and take over the company. My mother casually dismissed my critical injuries, stating my ability to have children was "irrelevant" since I wouldn' t inherit anyway. She chose to let me be crippled. The family I thought I had was a snake pit. The devastating truth hit me - my own mother orchestrated this, all for Alex, and for his biological father, Robert Davis, the man who swapped us at birth. She knew the truth, yet embraced the lie, denying me the love and privilege that should have been mine. My life was a lie. My future, gone. What was the point of surviving? My very existence became a testament to their cruelty. But somewhere deep inside, a flicker of outrage ignited. A hidden phone, a forgotten contact-Leo, a ghost from my street past. He picked up. "I need your help," I rasped. This wasn't about hope. It was a cold, hard promise of revenge.

Beyond Her Cruelest Lie

Beyond Her Cruelest Lie

Modern

5.0

The "Dreamland Adventures" carousel flashed, a stark contrast to the bruised purple sky. It was my twins' fifth birthday, a day meant for joy, but dread tightened in my stomach with every distant thunder roll. Sophia, my neurodivergent daughter, pointed at the Ferris wheel, her voice pure happiness: "Daddy, look! Can we go on that one next? Please?" Leo, always more sensitive, clutched my hand. "It' s getting loud, Daddy." My wife, Olivia, a busy CEO, had insisted on this flashy park, then vanished. This was her grand gesture, now she was nowhere. My tenth call finally connected. "What, Ethan?" Olivia' s voice was sharp, impatient, a loud cocktail party behind her. Mark Jenkins, her ex, laughed nearby. I pleaded, "Olivia, where are you? The storm is getting worse, the park is shutting down rides. The kids are scared." "Don' t be so dramatic. It' s just a little rain." Her lie, so blatant, left me breathless. "I can' t just leave, Ethan. Mark is having an emergency. His father is ill. I need to be here for him." I held Sophia' s hopeful gaze. Olivia' s dismissive sigh echoed: "Sophia will be fine. You' re there, aren' t you? That' s your job. Just take them on one more ride to shut them up and then go home." My heart screamed no, but her words pushed me into a corner. "Okay, sweetie," I said, my voice tight. "One last ride." "This is the best birthday ever!" Sophia shouted as the Cosmic Rocket lurched upward. It was the last thing I ever heard her say. The ride groaned, a metallic screech ripped the air, and her car detached. It just… fell. My world ended. Hours later, on the wet pavement, I received a notification. Olivia' s social media: a picture of her and Mark, champagne glasses raised. "To new beginnings and rekindling old flames! Best night ever." She was celebrating. While our daughter lay dead and our son was broken, she was celebrating. A black, icy rage washed over me. It wasn't an accident. It was the direct result of her choice. Sophia is dead. "Ethan, this is not the time for your melodrama. I told you I' m dealing with something serious. Stop trying to get my attention." Her phone call followed, syrupy and annoyed: "Honestly, Ethan, you need to grow up. I have a real crisis on my hands. Just handle the kids. I' ll send you some money. Buy them something nice." Then, muffled, "Sorry, honey. Just Ethan being needy again." Needy. For telling her our child was gone. My father-in-law, Richard Hayes, arrived, crumpled and old. "My little Sophia." I showed him Olivia' s texts. He heard the voice note. His face shifted from grief to disbelief, then to a deep, terrible fury. "That… woman. She is no daughter of mine." He looked at me, eyes clearing. "I' m so sorry, Ethan. I' m sorry I ever let you marry her. I was a fool." The doctor' s words echoed: "He' s not speaking, Mr. Davis. Selective mutism." Olivia hadn' t just abandoned them. She had destroyed them both. In that sterile hallway, my decision was made. Not about grief, but justice. "I want a divorce. She will never see Leo again." Richard nodded. "Whatever it takes. I' m with you."

You'll also like

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book