(Joseph’s POV)
The report arrives at 6:42 a.m.
I know the exact ti because I stare at it for a long while, the digits burning themselves into my mory as if precision might soften what follows. The city outside my window is still half-asleep, lights dim, streets hushed. For a mont—just a mont—I consider closing my laptop and pretending I didn’t see the notification.
But truth doesn’t wait for courage.
I open the file.
The language is clinical. Neutral. Carefully stripped of any emotion that might contaminate the findings. No accusations. No dramatics. Just facts arranged into sentences that end with periods—final, undeniable.
Pregnancy cannot be dically confird.
Submitted docuntation does not align with standard prenatal protocols.
Previously provided materials are invalid.
I read the lines once. Twice. A third ti, slower, as if pace might change aning.
It doesn’t.
There is no sudden wave of relief. No anger. No satisfaction. What hits instead is a quiet, hollow ache that spreads from my chest outward, filling spaces I didn’t know were empty.
This wasn’t a discovery.
It was a conclusion.
I close my eyes and lean back in my chair, fingers pressed against my temples. For weeks, I told myself to prepare for every outco—to hold space for responsibility, to be ready to step forward if a child existed. I believed that readiness would protect from this feeling.
I was wrong.
Being prepared doesn’t make betrayal hurt less.
It only makes it sharper.
I don’t move for a long ti.
Instead, mories surface uninvited, stacking themselves neatly the way they always do when I least want them to. Diane’s laughter at a crowded table. The way she used to reach for my hand in public, claiming space beside with confidence that felt reassuring at the ti. The comfort of being wanted so openly.
I did love her.
Not the way people imagine love should be—fiery, consuming, undeniable. But I loved her in a way that felt safe. Convenient. Appropriate.
She fit.
When my father was still alive, when expectations pressed down from every direction, Diane was a solution that didn’t demand questions I wasn’t ready to answer. She was charming. Ambitious. Accepted easily into the world I was expected to inherit.
And I let that beco love.
I realize now how much of that affection was built on denial. On my refusal to examine the deeper truth that sat quietly beneath everything else—my feelings for Yvette, the one truth I had buried so deeply I convinced myself it didn’t exist.
Diane was certainty without risk.
Yvette was risk without certainty.
So I chose the forr and told myself it was enough.
The realization tastes bitter now, settling heavy in my stomach as I replay monts that once felt genuine and now feel... compromised. Not fake—but conditional. Love that thrived because it was allowed to, because it didn’t threaten the structure of my life.
The report on my desk makes that painfully clear.
This wasn’t just a lie about pregnancy.
It was the final act of a relationship built on avoidance.
I scroll back up to the top of the report, forcing myself to read every word again—not because I doubt it, but because I need to accept it fully. Acceptance is not passive. It requires participation.
Dianne lied.
Not impulsively. Not once.
She planned it. Maintained it. Defended it with silence and delay and calculated obstruction.
The thought lands with sickening weight.
I had given her ti. Space. Procedure. I protected her from public scrutiny even as suspicion grew. I refused to confront her directly because I believed restraint was the fairest path.
And she used that restraint as cover.
The betrayal isn’t just personal—it’s structural. She exploited my ethics, my unwillingness to act without proof. She knew I wouldn’t move recklessly.
That knowledge hurts more than the lie itself.
I stand and walk to the window, staring down at the city as it finally begins to stir. People moving through their routines, unaware that sowhere above them a future has just closed quietly, decisively.
I wonder how long she thought this could last. How many versions of the ending she rehearsed. Whether she ever considered what would happen when the truth arrived—not explosively, not publicly, but with the calm certainty of process.
I don’t feel hatred.
I feel grief.
Grief for the version of myself who believed this was love. Grief for the trust I extended. Grief for the ti lost to sothing that could never have survived honesty.
My phone buzzes once—Brent, checking availability.
I don’t answer imdiately.
Instead, I allow myself one final mont to acknowledge what this costs . To sit with the knowledge that I was lied to not because I was weak, but because I was careful.
That distinction matters.
When I finally reach for the phone, my hands are steady.
This ends today.
Not with rage.
Not with spectacle.
But with truth.
Then the ti for the confrontation have arrived.
The conference room is too bright.
That’s the first thing I notice as I step inside—how unforgiving the light is, how it leaves no corner untouched, no shadow generous enough to hide in. The long table gleams, polished to a mirror finish, reflecting the ceiling lights and the space between us.
Diane is already there.
She stands when she sees , hands clasped tightly in front of her, shoulders rigid as if she’s bracing for impact. For a split second, the sight of her pulls sothing loose in my chest. Habit. mory. The echo of what once was.
But it passes.
Brent takes the seat beside , calm and unreadable. Dianne’s counsel sits across, eyes downcast, avoiding mine entirely. That alone tells everything I need to know.
I remain standing.
"Sit down," I say quietly.
She does.
The air feels thick, heavy with everything unsaid. I place the report on the table, sliding it forward just enough that she can see the header. She doesn’t reach for it.
"I received the final verification this morning," I begin. My voice sounds distant even to . Controlled. Flat. "There is no pregnancy."
Her breath catches.
"No—Joseph, wait—"
I raise my hand. Not sharply. Just enough.
"The docuntation you submitted was invalid," I continue. "The tilines do not align. The dical professionals involved have withdrawn cooperation."
Her eyes glisten, tears forming instantly, as if summoned on command. I don’t doubt the emotion—but I also don’t trust it anymore.
"I can explain," she whispers.
"You’ve had weeks to," I reply. "You chose silence."
Her shoulders tremble. "I was scared."
I let out a slow breath through my nose. "So was I."
That seems to land. Her lips part, words faltering.
"I didn’t want to lose you," she says finally, voice breaking. "Everything was falling apart. You were pulling away, and I—I panicked."
I look at her then. Really look.
For the first ti, I don’t see my forr fiancée.
I see a woman cornered by the consequences of her own choices.
Diane stands abruptly, chair scraping loudly against the floor.
"I know I was wrong," she says, tears spilling freely now. "I know I lied. But Joseph, please—you have to understand why."
Her voice cracks, desperation bleeding through the cracks of composure she can no longer hold.
"I loved you," she says. "I still do."
The words hit harder than the report ever could.
Loved.
Not love.
Past tense.
"I did everything I did because I couldn’t let go," she continues, stepping closer to the table. "You were slipping away from . You stopped looking at the sa way. You stopped choosing ."
Her hands curl into fists at her sides. "I just wanted one thing—one thing—to make you stay."
Sothing inside breaks quietly.
"You used my sense of responsibility," I say, my voice low. "You knew I wouldn’t walk away if a child existed. You knew exactly which part of to target."
She shakes her head frantically. "I didn’t an it like that. I wasn’t thinking clearly."
"No," I say. "You were thinking very clearly."
The room falls silent except for her sobs.
"I loved you too," I admit, the words tasting like ash. "In my own way. In the way that felt safe. Familiar. Acceptable."
She looks up at , hope flickering weakly in her eyes.
"But that love," I continue, "was already ending. And instead of letting it end, you tried to trap it."
Her knees buckle, and she collapses back into her chair, face crumpling.
"I was afraid," she whispers. "Afraid of being left behind. Afraid of becoming nothing."
I close my eyes briefly.
"You weren’t nothing," I say. "You beca soone who chose to lie."
I straighten, placing both hands on the table.
"This engagent is over," I say calmly. "Effective imdiately."
Dianne lets out a broken sound, sowhere between a sob and a gasp. "Please—Joseph—don’t do this. We can fix it. I’ll do anything."
I shake my head slowly. "This isn’t sothing that can be fixed."
"Because I lied?" she pleads. "Because I was desperate?"
"Because you took away my right to choose," I answer. "You tried to force a future by manipulating my conscience. That’s not love. That’s control."
Her tears fall freely now, shoulders shaking as the weight of my words settles in.
"I would have taken responsibility if a child existed," I continue. "I told you that. I ant it. But you don’t get to manufacture responsibility and call it devotion."
She looks up at , eyes red, voice hoarse. "I just didn’t want to let you go."
The ache in my chest sharpens.
"I understand that," I say quietly. "But loving soone doesn’t give you the right to lie to them."
I gather the report, sliding it back toward myself. Brent begins outlining the formal steps, his voice steady and impersonal, but I barely hear him. My focus remains on Dianne—on the woman who once fit so neatly into the life I thought I was supposed to live.
"I’ll take full responsibility publicly," I add. "I won’t destroy you. But I will not protect this lie."
She nods weakly, defeated.
As I turn to leave, she speaks again, her voice barely audible.
"Did you ever really love ?"
I stop at the door.
"Yes," I answer honestly. "But not enough to keep lying to myself."
I don’t look back as I walk out.
So betrayals don’t end with shouting or violence.
They end with clarity—and the unbearable silence that follows.
And in that silence, I finally let go.
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