
After He Brought His Mistress Home, I Became a CEO's Protégée
Chapter 1
The morning light streamed through our penthouse windows as I traced my fingers over the sleek Cartier box. Inside nestled the watch I'd spent weeks selecting for Alexander—platinum with subtle diamond hour markers, elegant yet masculine. Five years of marriage deserved something special.
"He'll love this," I whispered to myself, trying to ignore the knot in my stomach that had become my constant companion these past months.
I slipped the box into my purse and headed to Dean & DeLuca, mentally checking off ingredients for tonight's dinner. Black truffle risotto, Alexander's favorite Chilean sea bass, and that chocolate soufflé he'd raved about during our honeymoon in Paris. The memory made me smile—his eyes lighting up with each bite, his hand reaching for mine across the table.
When had he last looked at me that way?
"Mrs. Hayes!" The butcher greeted me warmly. "Special occasion today?"
"Our fifth anniversary," I replied, ignoring how hollow the words felt. Five years that had started like a fairy tale and somehow morphed into... whatever this cold distance between us was now.
Back at our Upper East Side penthouse, I spent hours preparing. Each slice of the knife, each stir of the spoon was an act of hope—a desperate attempt to recapture what we'd lost. By six, the table gleamed with our wedding china, crystal flutes catching the glow of hand-dipped tapers. I'd arranged white roses—my wedding bouquet flower—in the center.
I slipped into the black Valentino dress I'd bought for tonight, its silhouette hugging my body in a way that once would have made Alexander's eyes darken with desire. The woman in the mirror looked beautiful but uncertain, her eyes betraying a fragility I hated seeing there.
"This will work," I told my reflection, smoothing nervous hands down the dress. "Tonight will be different."
Seven o'clock came and went. Then eight. I sat alone at our perfectly set table, watching the candles slowly melt, their wax tears mirroring my own mounting despair. My phone remained silent—no text, no call.
The click of the front door lock at 9:17 sent my heart racing. I stood quickly, smoothing my dress, forcing a smile.
"Alexander, I—"
The words died in my throat. He wasn't alone. Isabella Rodriguez's sleek figure appeared behind him, her red-soled stilettos clicking against our marble floor, her hand possessively resting on my husband's arm.
"What's all this?" Alexander's eyes swept over the romantic tableau with detached amusement. His tie was loosened, the faint trace of red lipstick visible on his collar.
"It's our anniversary," I said, my voice smaller than I intended. "I made your favorites."
Isabella's laugh was like breaking glass. "Oh, how sweet. She's playing house."
Alexander didn't correct her. Didn't defend me. Instead, he sighed as if I'd created an inconvenience. "Sarah, this pathetic charade is unnecessary. We both know what this marriage has become."
I reached for the Cartier box on the table, holding it out like a shield. "I got you something."
Isabella stepped forward, her perfectly manicured hand reaching out. "Let me see what the desperate housewife selected." Before I could stop her, she knocked the box from my hands. It hit the floor with a sickening crack, the watch sliding across polished marble.
Alexander laughed—actually laughed—as Isabella ground her heel against the watch face, shattering it.
Something inside me broke along with it. Five years of diminishing myself, of making excuses for his late nights and weekend "business trips," of pretending not to notice the lingering scent of another woman's perfume.
I stormed to his study, hands shaking as I yanked open the drawer where we kept important documents. The framed marriage certificate—the one I'd had professionally calligraphed after our wedding—felt heavy in my hands.
When I returned to the dining room, Alexander and Isabella were helping themselves to the champagne I'd chilled.
"What are you doing?" Alexander asked, annoyed but unconcerned.
I held his gaze as I walked to the fireplace and tossed our marriage certificate into the flames. It curled and blackened, five years of promises reduced to ash.
"This marriage is over," I said, my voice steadier than I'd expected. "And so am I."
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