
After My Husband Abandoned Me, I Became a Billionaire
Chapter 2
The hospital discharged me the next morning. Ryan had appeared just in time to sign the paperwork, his hair slightly disheveled and smelling of unfamiliar perfume. He'd mumbled something about an early meeting before falling asleep in the visitor's chair. I didn't bother asking where he'd been all night.
Home felt different now. Our modest Chicago apartment—the one I'd carefully selected to match what a marketing coordinator like me should afford—seemed like a prop in a play I was tired of performing. Three years of hiding my identity, of downplaying my education, of pretending my family's Montgomery name wasn't plastered across half the buildings in Boston's financial district.
All to protect Ryan's fragile ego.
I sat on our bed, staring at Ryan's phone while he showered. The notification light blinked steadily. One new message. His password was still my birthday—a fact that suddenly struck me as ironic rather than romantic.
My finger hovered over the screen. I'd never snooped before. Trust had been the cornerstone of our relationship, or so I'd believed.
The message preview showed just enough: 'Charlotte: Miss you already. Last night was...'
Something cold and hard crystallized in my chest. With trembling hands, I opened his camera and snapped a photo of the message. Then another. And another. The evidence accumulated in my gallery: playful nicknames, meeting arrangements at hotels, inside jokes I wasn't part of.
'Latte with extra sugar, just how my sweet Char likes it.'
'Can't wait to see you in that dress tonight.'
'Had to make up another investor meeting. Getting tired of lying.'
Each message was a knife, but I kept reading, kept documenting. The shower stopped. I quickly locked his phone and placed it exactly where it had been.
Ryan emerged, towel around his waist. "I need to head to the office. Will you be okay alone?"
I nodded, numb. "Sarah's coming by later."
"Good." He seemed relieved to have an excuse to leave. "Don't forget your meds."
After he left, I created a private folder on my phone, password-protected, and transferred all the photos there. Evidence. For what, I wasn't sure yet. But something inside me—perhaps the Montgomery in me that I'd suppressed for so long—knew I would need it.
Dr. Sarah Chen arrived at noon, medical bag in hand, concern etched across her face.
"Your color's better," she said, checking my pulse. "Physically, you're healing well."
I stared out the window. "And the other kind of healing?"
Sarah sat beside me, taking my hand. "Bella, where was Ryan last night?"
"Not here." My voice sounded distant, even to my own ears. "Not with me."
"This isn't the first time, is it?" Her gentle tone carried no judgment, only worry. "The night you were admitted, when you had that anxiety attack—I called him six times."
"He was with her," I whispered. "Charlotte."
Sarah's grip tightened. "You know about her?"
"I'm starting to." I showed her the folder of screenshots. "I think it's been going on since she moved back to Chicago three months ago."
Sarah scrolled through the messages, her expression darkening. "This is emotional abandonment, Bella. During the most traumatic experience of your life, he chose someone else."
"I gave up everything for him," I said, tears finally breaking through. "My name, my background, my inheritance. I transferred universities just to be with him. And he can't even stay with me through one night at the hospital."
"Maybe it's time to stop choosing him and start choosing yourself." Sarah's words hung in the air between us, simple yet revolutionary.
After she left, I found myself opening my laptop. Ryan's accounts were linked to mine—another convenience I'd never questioned. His credit card notifications filled the screen. Dinner charges at restaurants we'd never visited together. Hotel rooms on nights he'd claimed to work late.
And then I saw it: a charge from three weeks ago. A sapphire necklace from Tiffany's, delivered to an address I didn't recognize. I'd admired that exact necklace in the store window during our anniversary weekend, and Ryan had said he couldn't afford such extravagances.
I copied the delivery address and entered it into Google Maps. The screen loaded to reveal a luxury apartment building in River North—Charlotte's building.
The necklace I thought was meant for me had gone to her.
I closed the laptop, a strange calm settling over me. The pain was still there, but something else was emerging through the cracks—a cold, clear purpose. For the first time in years, I felt the weight of my family name, not as a burden to hide, but as armor I might need to reclaim.
Ryan Walsh had no idea who he'd really married. Or who he'd betrayed.
But he would soon find out.
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