
After Discovering His Betrayal, I Married His Rival
Chapter 3
The Metropolitan Museum of Art glowed with ethereal light, marble columns bathed in amber from ornate chandeliers. New York's elite mingled beneath priceless art, their laughter and whispered conversations echoing through the grand hall. I stood alone by a Renaissance painting, clutching my champagne flute like a shield.
"Isabella." Eleanor Vance's voice was low as she appeared beside me, her navy dress a stark contrast to my ivory gown. "The documents you requested will be ready tomorrow. Are you certain about this course of action?"
I nodded, my eyes tracking Alexander across the room. He stood with Gabriel and Sebastian, the three of them surrounding Victoria like planets orbiting their sun. "More certain every day."
Eleanor followed my gaze. "They have no idea what's coming, do they?"
"They've underestimated me my entire life," I whispered, taking a careful sip of champagne. "One last time won't hurt."
She squeezed my arm gently before disappearing into the crowd, leaving me to my thoughts and observations. I'd become quite good at watching them—noting the subtle touches, the private smiles, the secret language they shared. All the signs I'd been too blind to see before.
Victoria caught my eye across the room and smiled, that practiced curve of painted lips that never reached her eyes. She whispered something to Alexander, who glanced my way before nodding. They began moving toward me, Victoria's red gown flowing behind her like spilled blood.
"Isabella, darling," she called, her voice carrying over the string quartet. "You look absolutely..." Her eyes raked over my couture gown, "...quaint."
Alexander's hand rested at the small of Victoria's back, a casual intimacy that sent a knife through my chest. "The gala committee outdid themselves this year," he said, his eyes never quite meeting mine.
"Yes," I replied, forcing warmth into my voice. "The theme of 'Enduring Love Through Art' seems particularly ironic tonight."
Victoria's smile tightened. "Speaking of irony," she said, reaching for my arm with exaggerated affection, "I've been meaning to show you the new Monet exhibit—"
Her movement was so practiced, so deliberate. The red wine from her glass splashed across my ivory bodice, spreading like a crimson stain across my heart. Gasps erupted from nearby guests.
"Oh!" Victoria's hand flew to her mouth, eyes wide with feigned horror. "Isabella, I'm so clumsy! Your beautiful dress!"
I stood frozen, warmth spreading across my chest as the wine soaked through to my skin. But it wasn't the ruined dress that burned—it was the instantaneous reaction of the three men I'd grown up with, the three men who were supposed to care for me.
Alexander reached for Victoria's elbow, steadying her though she hadn't stumbled. "Are you alright?"
Gabriel quickly offered his handkerchief—to Victoria, not me.
Sebastian stepped between her and the curious onlookers, shielding her from imaginary judgment.
Not one of them looked at me.
I stood alone, wine dripping down my ruined gown, cheeks burning with humiliation and rage. The tableau before me was so perfect, so revealing—Victoria at the center, protected and cherished, while I remained on the outside, as I always had been.
"Isabella," Alexander finally said, glancing at my dress as an afterthought. "Perhaps you should go clean up."
I met his eyes then, really looked at him, and for the first time saw nothing of the man I thought I'd loved. Had he always been this hollow, or had I simply filled in the empty spaces with my own hopes?
"Yes," I said, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me. "I believe I will."
As I turned to leave, dignity wrapped around me tighter than any designer gown, I caught sight of a man watching from across the room. He wasn't part of our social circle—I would have remembered him. Dark hair, serious eyes, an intelligent face. He alone in the crowd seemed to see what had just happened for what it truly was.
Our eyes met briefly before I looked away, making my way through the parting crowd toward the restrooms. Behind me, I could hear Victoria's theatrical apologies and the brothers' reassurances.
The truth had never been clearer, written in red wine across white silk: I was, and had always been, completely alone in a house full of people who claimed to love me.
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