
After My Husband Betrayed Me for Whitney
Chapter 1
I stared at the roast chicken growing cold on our dining table, the same way my heart had grown cold watching my husband's eyes light up at the sound of Whitney's ringtone. It was our anniversary dinner—a fact Phillip had apparently forgotten the moment her name flashed across his screen.
"Whitney! Hey!" His voice transformed, infused with an eagerness he never showed for me anymore. The fork he'd been using to pick at my carefully prepared meal clattered against his plate.
I took a slow sip of wine, trying to swallow down the familiar bitterness rising in my throat. Three years of marriage had taught me exactly what would happen next.
"Blue fireworks? For your mountain gathering?" Phillip's eyebrows shot up, but his smile never faltered. "That's fire season, Whit. You know the regulations..."
I set my glass down. "Phillip, you can't possibly—"
He held up his hand to silence me, turning slightly away. The gesture stung more than any words could have.
"I know how much this means to you," he continued, completely ignoring my presence. "I'll figure something out."
When he hung up, he was already standing, napkin tossed carelessly beside his half-eaten food.
"I need to go," he announced, not quite meeting my eyes. "Whitney needs help with permits for her event next weekend."
"It's our anniversary," I said quietly, hating how small my voice sounded.
He paused, guilt flickering briefly across his face before being replaced by irritation. "I know that, Rose. But this is important. I'm the fire chief—people depend on me."
"Including your wife?" The words escaped before I could stop them.
His jaw tightened. "Don't start this again. Your jealousy of Whitney is getting old."
"This isn't about jealousy!" I pushed back my chair, standing to meet his gaze. "It's about fire safety regulations that exist for a reason. Blue fireworks during fire season? On the mountain? Are you insane?"
"I know what I'm doing," he snapped. "I'm the professional here, not you."
The door slammed behind him minutes later, leaving me alone with cooling food and a marriage that was just as cold.
---
Two days later, I found the falsified permits on Phillip's desk. My hands trembled as I read through them—approval for a fireworks display in an area that should have been completely off-limits during the driest part of summer.
"What are you doing in my office?"
I jumped at Phillip's voice, but didn't drop the papers. "You're actually going through with this? Phillip, you've disabled the automated monitoring systems for that entire sector."
He snatched the permits from my hand. "I'm creating a controlled situation. Whitney's gathering is important to her."
"More important than your job? Your oath to protect this community?" I searched his face for any sign of the man I'd married. "Your parents and sister are camping in that area this weekend."
"They'll be miles from the display site," he dismissed, organizing the papers with precise movements. "And I don't appreciate you snooping through my things."
"I wasn't snooping. I was looking for our insurance papers." I took a deep breath, trying one last time. "As your wife, I'm begging you to reconsider this. It's dangerous, it's illegal, and it's—"
"It's not your decision to make." His voice was cold, final. "Whitney has her heart set on blue fireworks for her photography project. I've taken precautions."
"Precautions?" I laughed bitterly. "Like falsifying official documents? Disabling safety systems?"
His face hardened. "This conversation is over, Rose. Not everything is about you and your controlling nature. This is just more of your jealousy talking."
I stepped back as if slapped. "When did you become this person? Someone who would risk everything—people's lives—for a woman who isn't even your wife?"
"Get out of my office," he said quietly, dangerously.
I left, but not before seeing him pick up his phone and dial Whitney's number, a smile already forming on his lips.
---
The night of the gathering arrived with unseasonable heat and dry winds that made my skin crawl with foreboding. I paced our living room, jumping at every sound from my phone. Something felt terribly wrong.
When it finally rang, my heart plummeted at the panic in my neighbor's voice.
"Rose! There's a massive fire on the eastern slope! It's moving fast—they're saying it started near Whitney Berry's event!"
My blood turned to ice. "The campgrounds—are they evacuating the campgrounds?"
"I don't know! It's chaos! Where's Phillip? Shouldn't the fire department be—"
I was already dialing Phillip's number, my hands shaking so badly I missed the first time. When he finally answered, I could hear Whitney's laughter in the background, along with the distinctive click of a camera shutter.
"Phillip! There's a wildfire spreading from the eastern slope! Your parents—they're camping right in its path!"
"Rose?" His voice was annoyed, distracted. "What are you talking about?"
"The fireworks started a fire!" I screamed into the phone. "It's heading toward the campgrounds where your family is staying!"
There was a pause, then his voice turned cold. "Stop it. This is low, even for you. Whitney's display was perfect. I'm helping her get photos for her social media right now."
"Photos?" My voice broke. "While the mountain burns? While your parents could be dying?"
"You're pathetic," he spat. "I'm not falling for this. If you're that desperate to ruin Whitney's night—"
The call cut off as another came through—the emergency alert system, ordering immediate evacuation of the eastern slopes.
As I watched the first plumes of smoke rise against the night sky, turning it an eerie, glowing red, I knew our marriage was burning down along with the forest.
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