
After My Betrayed Wife's Bold Return
Chapter 1
The crystal chandelier cast dancing shadows across the mahogany dining table as I smoothed my navy dress one final time. The political dinner party was in full swing, with Ridge's colleagues and their wives engaged in animated discussions about defense contracts and upcoming elections. I had chosen my seat carefully—or so I thought—selecting what appeared to be an empty chair near the middle of the table.
The moment I settled into the burgundy velvet cushion, the entire room fell silent. Twenty pairs of eyes turned toward me with expressions ranging from shock to barely concealed amusement. My stomach dropped as I realized my mistake. The chair I occupied bore a small silver nameplate I hadn't noticed in the dim lighting: "In memory of beloved Catherine."
Ridge's face transformed from diplomatic charm to cold fury in the span of a heartbeat. His knuckles whitened around his wine glass as he rose slowly from his seat at the head of the table.
"How dare you." His voice was barely above a whisper, yet it carried across the room like a death knell. "How dare you sit in her chair."
I started to rise, my hands trembling. "Ridge, I didn't realize—"
"You didn't realize?" His laugh was sharp and bitter. "Or did you think you could finally take her place? Erase her memory entirely?"
The guests shifted uncomfortably in their seats, some looking away while others watched with the morbid fascination of spectators at an execution. Mrs. Patterson, the Secretary's wife, pressed her napkin to her lips as if to stifle a gasp.
"Please, I'll move—" I began, but Ridge was already striding toward me, his face a mask of controlled rage.
"No." He grabbed my arm with bruising force, his fingers digging into my flesh through the thin fabric of my sleeve. "You've made your statement. Now stand there and think about what you've done."
The sound of tearing fabric filled the silence as he yanked me upward. My sleeve ripped from shoulder to elbow, exposing my pale skin to the room's scrutiny. Several guests averted their eyes, but I caught Mrs. Henderson whispering behind her fan to the woman beside her.
"Stand in the corner," Ridge commanded, his voice carrying the authority he used with subordinates. "Like the child you insist on behaving like."
My cheeks burned with humiliation as I walked to the designated corner, my torn sleeve hanging uselessly at my side. The conversation gradually resumed, but I could feel their stolen glances, their whispered comments about the "poor second wife" who could never measure up to the saint who came before.
For the remaining hour of dinner, I stood motionless, listening to discussions of military strategy and political maneuvering while my feet ached in my heels and my arm throbbed where Ridge had gripped me. When dessert was finally served, I remained in my corner, forgotten by all except the serving staff who occasionally cast pitying looks in my direction.
As the evening concluded and guests began their farewells, I attempted to slip away to my room. The hallway's Persian runner muffled my footsteps, but not quickly enough.
"Look at her, trying to slink away like a beaten dog."
Alaina's voice stopped me cold. I turned to find both twins blocking my path, their identical faces twisted with matching expressions of contempt. At thirteen, they had perfected the art of cruelty with surgical precision.
"Did you really think you could sit in our mother's chair?" Ayleen stepped closer, her voice dripping with disdain. "You're nothing but a cheap replacement. A placeholder until Father finds someone worthy."
"Girls, please—" I started, but Alaina cut me off with a harsh laugh.
"Don't call us girls. We're not your children, and we never will be. Our real mother was beautiful, accomplished, loved. You're just... pathetic."
Their words hit like physical blows, each one carefully chosen to inflict maximum damage. I clutched my torn sleeve, trying to hold the fabric together as tears threatened to spill.
"That's quite enough." Mrs. Matthews's voice carried down the hallway, and for a moment, relief flooded through me. Perhaps she would finally intervene, show some maternal compassion.
But as she approached, her expression remained cold and disapproving. She looked me up and down with obvious distaste, taking in my disheveled appearance and tear-bright eyes.
"Really, Everly," she said with a sigh that spoke of long-suffering patience. "Your clumsiness tonight was inexcusable. To upset the children and embarrass our guests with such a display..." She shook her head sadly. "Perhaps if you showed more consideration for this family's feelings, such incidents could be avoided."
The injustice of her words struck me like a physical blow. I had been the victim, yet somehow I was being blamed for the very abuse I had endured.
"But I didn't mean—"
"Intentions matter little when the damage is done." Mrs. Matthews turned to her granddaughters with a gentle smile that never graced her face when she looked at me. "Come along, dears. It's past your bedtime."
As they walked away, leaving me alone in the hallway with my torn dress and shattered dignity, I finally understood the truth I had been denying for three years. This would never end. No amount of submission, sacrifice, or silence would ever earn me a place in this family. I was not a wife or a stepmother—I was a scapegoat, a convenient target for their collective grief and rage.
The grandfather clock chimed midnight as I stood there, marking not just the end of another day, but the death of my last hope that love could be earned through suffering.
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