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Abandoned by Unfaithful Husband Novel Cover

Abandoned by Unfaithful Husband

The Lincoln Center glittered like a diamond against Manhattan's night sky. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city lights winked at us, as if sharing in the celebration of Aurora Tech's most ambitious product launch to date. I smoothed the lapels of my white tailored suit, the one Alexander had called 'too severe' this morning. Too severe for the wife of a tech mogul, perhaps, but perfect for the co-founder who had poured three years of her life into developing the neural interface technology we were unveiling tonight. I caught my reflection in the polished chrome of a nearby pillar—my dark hair swept into a sleek chignon, pearls at my throat, the heirloom from my grandmother that Alexander always dismissed as 'old-fashioned.' The woman staring back at me looked confident, successful. If only she knew how hollow I felt inside. "Isabella, darling, you should be closer to the stage," Ava Chen, our marketing director, whispered as she passed by with a tray of champagne flutes. "It's your night too." I smiled tightly. "Alexander prefers to take the spotlight. I'm fine right here." The truth was, I'd grown accustomed to the shadows.
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Chapter 1

The Lincoln Center glittered like a diamond against Manhattan's night sky. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city lights winked at us, as if sharing in the celebration of Aurora Tech's most ambitious product launch to date. I smoothed the lapels of my white tailored suit, the one Alexander had called 'too severe' this morning. Too severe for the wife of a tech mogul, perhaps, but perfect for the co-founder who had poured three years of her life into developing the neural interface technology we were unveiling tonight.

I caught my reflection in the polished chrome of a nearby pillar—my dark hair swept into a sleek chignon, pearls at my throat, the heirloom from my grandmother that Alexander always dismissed as 'old-fashioned.' The woman staring back at me looked confident, successful. If only she knew how hollow I felt inside.

"Isabella, darling, you should be closer to the stage," Ava Chen, our marketing director, whispered as she passed by with a tray of champagne flutes. "It's your night too."

I smiled tightly. "Alexander prefers to take the spotlight. I'm fine right here."

The truth was, I'd grown accustomed to the shadows. Ever since Charlotte Hayes had reappeared in our lives six months ago, I'd been steadily retreating into darkness. Alexander never admitted it, but his eyes followed her whenever she entered a room, with the same hungry devotion they'd once reserved for me.

The lights dimmed, and a hush fell over the crowd of investors, tech journalists, and Manhattan elite. My husband strode onto the stage, commanding attention in his perfectly tailored Tom Ford suit, his presence electric. This was the Alexander Quinn that had swept me off my feet four years ago—charismatic, brilliant, unstoppable.

"Good evening, ladies and gentlemen," his voice boomed through the state-of-the-art sound system. "Tonight, Aurora Tech isn't just launching a product. We're revolutionizing human connectivity."

The audience leaned forward in their seats. Alexander had them spellbound, just as he once had me. I watched his hands gesture emphatically as he described our wearable neural interface—how it would transform everything from medical diagnostics to virtual reality experiences. Those same hands that had once traced the curve of my spine with reverence now barely touched me at all.

"This technology represents thousands of hours of innovation," Alexander continued, his voice rising with practiced passion. "A dream that began in the minds of brilliant engineers and will now transform how humanity connects."

Not once did he mention that the initial algorithm had been my creation, born during our honeymoon in Santorini when I'd scribbled the concept on hotel stationery at three in the morning. Not once did he acknowledge that Aurora Tech had been our shared vision, conceived the night he'd proposed to me on the Brooklyn Bridge.

The presentation reached its climax with a demonstration of the sleek headset. The audience erupted in thunderous applause. Alexander raised his hands, basking in adoration, his smile brilliant under the spotlights. This was his element—the worship, the success, the conquest.

That's when it happened.

A small figure darted between security guards and bounded onto the stage. A little boy, no more than six years old, with a mop of dark curls that looked hauntingly familiar. He ran straight for Alexander, yanking at the microphone clipped to my husband's lapel.

"Daddy!" The word echoed through the silent hall, amplified by the very technology we'd come to celebrate.

The room froze. Cameras flashed like lightning. I felt my heart stop, then restart with a painful lurch.

Alexander's face registered shock, then—most devastatingly—recognition. He knelt down, his expression softening in a way it hadn't for me in months.

"Lucas," he said, the name familiar on his tongue.

From the corner of my eye, I spotted Charlotte Hayes stepping forward from the crowd, her crimson dress a slash of blood against the monochrome decor. Her lips curved in triumph as she watched her plan unfold perfectly.

Alexander straightened, still holding the boy's hand. His eyes scanned the crowd, not seeking me, but gauging the reaction of his audience. Always the performer, always calculating.

He sighed theatrically into the microphone, then spoke the words that shattered what remained of my world.

"Yes," he said, his voice echoing through the hall. "This is my son."

Hundreds of eyes turned to me. Hundreds of expressions ranging from shock to pity to morbid fascination. I stood perfectly still, my white suit suddenly feeling like a shroud, as my husband publicly confirmed his betrayal before New York's elite.

In that moment, I realized I had been dying by inches in this marriage. And somehow, I would have to find the strength to live again.

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