
After His Love Betrayal
Chapter 2
The Grand Ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton glittered with chandeliers and the diamonds of New York's elite. Three hundred guests in evening wear sipped champagne, their whispers creating a constant hum beneath the string quartet's melody. I stood at the entrance, my arm linked through Rory's, feeling the weight of every stare.
"Ready?" Rory murmured, his breath warm against my ear.
I smoothed the front of my emerald gown—a deliberate choice, the color of money and envy. "Absolutely."
We stepped into the light, and the room fell silent. I felt Cillian's presence before I saw him, a prickling awareness at the back of my neck. He stood near the bar, Daniella at his side, her hand resting protectively over her swollen belly.
"Ladies and gentlemen," the event coordinator announced, "please welcome Mr. Rory Williams and his fiancée, Miss Mira Bryant."
The gasps were audible. Our engagement had been announced in the Times just yesterday—a whirlwind romance of barely two weeks. The perfect scandal to eclipse Cillian's disgrace.
Rory squeezed my hand as we moved through the crowd. "You look magnificent," he whispered. "Everyone's watching."
"Everyone except the one who matters," I replied, my eyes fixed on Cillian.
He approached as we reached the center of the room, his face a mask of controlled anger. "Congratulations," he said, his voice tight. "I wasn't aware you'd moved on so... quickly."
I met his gaze without flinching. "You made your choice, Cillian. I'm making mine. The difference is I'm choosing someone who actually wants to be chosen."
Something dangerous flickered in his eyes—a flash of the man I'd once loved, before duty and deception hollowed him out. His jaw tightened, but before he could respond, Daniella appeared at his elbow.
"Cillian," she murmured, her voice soft with practiced vulnerability. "The noise is making my head hurt."
Her hand rested on her belly, a gesture so calculated it made my stomach turn. I watched Cillian's attention immediately shift to her, his protective instincts overriding whatever he'd been about to say to me.
---
"This is everything I've gathered," Rory said, spreading photographs across his penthouse's glass coffee table. "My sister died two years ago in a bombing at the Marquis Hotel in Miami."
I studied the images—surveillance photos, newspaper clippings, maps with red markers. "Cartel retaliation?"
He nodded, his usual playboy charm gone. "They thought she was meeting with a DEA informant. She wasn't—she was just in the wrong place at the wrong time."
"And Daniella?" I asked, picking up a photo of her entering a warehouse in Queens.
"Her father is Hector Reyes, second-in-command of the South American cartel that ordered the bombing." Rory's voice was cold. "She's not some innocent victim. She's a player."
I sank onto his leather sofa, processing this revelation. "So when Cillian brought her to our home..."
"He either knows and is protecting her, or he's been completely played." Rory sat beside me, his eyes intense. "Either way, we need to know which."
For the first time since Cillian's return, I felt something other than pain—purpose.
"Teach me," I said. "Teach me how to find out."
Over the next weeks, Rory became my tutor in the art of surveillance. We spent evenings in his penthouse, analyzing security footage from the Bryant estate, tracking Daniella's movements when she thought no one was watching.
"Here," Rory pointed at a screen. "See how she checks her phone when she thinks she's alone? That's not a frightened woman—that's an operative reporting in."
He taught me to read micro-expressions, to notice the tells people couldn't hide. Most importantly, he treated me as an equal, asking my opinion rather than dictating strategy.
"If we're going to expose her," he said one night, "we need irrefutable evidence."
---
"Did you see his face when the Hendersons asked about his 'financial difficulties'?" I laughed, sipping my champagne at the charity auction. "He looked like he wanted the floor to swallow him whole."
Rory's smile was sharp. "Creditors calling at all hours will do that to a man."
We'd been methodical in our approach—leaking selected information to key society contacts about Cillian's supposed debts to dangerous people. Each whisper was carefully placed, each rumor designed to erode what remained of his standing.
At the Bryant Industries dinner last week, Rory had been masterful. "It's always concerning," he'd remarked to my father's potential business partners, "when someone's judgment is compromised by... outside pressures."
The implication was clear: Cillian Scott was damaged goods, not to be trusted with serious matters.
Tonight's auction was our masterpiece. We'd arranged for Cillian to be seated at a table far from the action, while Rory and I held court among the elite. Every time Cillian tried to join a conversation about business or politics, someone would mention his "situation" or change the subject.
"Have you seen the latest reports on money laundering through art auctions?" Rory asked loudly enough for nearby tables to hear. "The FBI is all over it."
Cillian's knuckles whitened around his water glass.
As we prepared to leave, I caught sight of him in the hallway, cornered by two men in dark suits. Their faces were grim, their body language threatening.
"Debt collectors," Rory murmured in my ear. "We made sure they knew where to find him."
I should have felt triumph. Instead, I felt a strange hollowness as I watched Cillian straighten his shoulders and face his accusers with the same dignity he'd always shown.
What was I becoming in my quest for revenge?
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