
After My Groom Chose His Pregnant Mistress Over Me
Chapter 2
The clinking of glasses pulled me from my paralysis. Someone was tapping a fork against crystal—the signal for toasts. My heart kicked against my ribs. This was it. The moment I'd been rehearsing in my head for weeks.
I smoothed my dress and stepped toward the makeshift stage where Tristan stood, microphone in hand. He was grinning, but it was all teeth, no warmth. The kind of smile a shark makes before it bites.
"Ladies and gentlemen," he began, his voice booming through the cheap speakers with a confidence I'd never heard before. "Thank you all for coming to celebrate this... special occasion."
I climbed the two steps to the platform, my heel wobbling on the uneven wood. I reached for his free hand, but he pulled it away, tucking it into his pocket.
"I have an announcement to make," Tristan continued, his eyes scanning the crowd but never landing on me. "I've done a lot of thinking lately. About my future. About what I deserve."
The room went quiet. I felt the weight of fifty pairs of eyes.
"And I've realized," he said, turning to face me for the first time, "that I can't marry a woman with zero ambition and no future."
The words hit me like a fist to the sternum. I couldn't breathe. Couldn't process. The fairy lights I'd strung up myself suddenly felt like they were mocking me, twinkling cheerfully over my execution.
"Helena," Tristan called out, his voice warm now, dripping with affection I'd never heard directed at me. "Come up here, baby."
The crowd parted. From the back of the room, a woman emerged. She wore a dress the color of champagne, tight across her middle where a small, unmistakable bump pressed against the fabric. Her blonde hair cascaded in perfect waves, and her lips were painted the kind of red that left stains.
Helena Warren. I recognized her from the photos Tristan kept in a shoebox under our bed—the ones he thought I didn't know about.
She glided up to the stage, her hand already reaching for Tristan's. He took it, pulling her close, his palm settling possessively on her stomach.
"This is my real family," Tristan announced, his chest puffed out like a rooster. "My true equal. Someone who understands what it means to be successful."
I stood there, frozen, my brain trying to catch up with my eyes. This wasn't happening. This couldn't be happening.
"Tristan," I whispered, reaching for his arm. "What are you—"
The slap came so fast I didn't see it. I only felt it—the crack of his palm against my cheek, the explosion of heat, the ringing in my ears. The room tilted. I stumbled backward, my heel catching on the edge of the platform.
The sound echoed through the hall. Silence followed, thick and suffocating.
"Don't touch me with your poverty," Tristan sneered, his lip curling in disgust. "I'm a millionaire now. I don't need some struggling artist dragging me down."
The room erupted. Laughter, sharp and cruel, bounced off the walls. Tristan's cousin whistled. Someone shouted, "About time, man!"
Rebecca Fox, Tristan's mother, stood up from her table, her face flushed with wine and vindication. "I always said she was a leech!" she crowed, pointing at me with a manicured finger. "Clinging to my boy, holding him back from his potential!"
I tasted copper. My hand went to my mouth, and when I pulled it away, my fingers were red. My lip was bleeding.
Helena descended from the stage, her heels clicking with purpose. She pulled a napkin from a nearby table and held it out to me, her head tilted in a parody of concern.
"Oh, sweetie," she cooed, her voice syrupy and false. "You can stay and watch what a real woman looks like. Maybe you'll learn something."
Her eyes weren't kind. They were triumphant.
I looked down at my hand. The cheap engagement ring glinted under the lights, suddenly unbearable. I twisted it off my finger and let it drop. It hit the floor with a tiny, pathetic clink, rolling under a table.
No one noticed. They were already turning back to Tristan and Helena, raising their glasses, cheering.
I walked toward the exit. My heel snapped halfway across the room, the crack loud enough to draw a fresh wave of laughter. I kicked off both shoes, leaving them where they fell.
The rain hit me the moment I pushed through the doors. Cold, relentless, soaking through my dress in seconds. Behind me, the party roared back to life. Music started playing. Someone popped a bottle of champagne.
I stood on the sidewalk, barefoot, bleeding, drenched. The envelope in my clutch felt like it weighed a thousand pounds.
I pulled out my phone. My hands were shaking so hard I almost dropped it.
I scrolled to *Dad* and pressed call.
He answered on the first ring.
"Norah?"
"You were right," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "I need your help."
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