
After My Husband Proposed to His Mistress at Our Gala
After My Husband Proposed to His Mistress at Our Gala Chapter 1
The rooftop was lit like a dream someone else was having.
Three hundred people. Champagne towers. A string quartet playing something soft and forgettable near the east terrace. The Manhattan skyline spread out behind it all like a backdrop someone had ordered specifically for tonight — all glass and light and the kind of beauty that costs more than most people make in a year.
I had worn the navy Valentino. The one Jace said made me look like I belonged anywhere. I remember thinking, when I zipped it up in the car, that it was a good omen.
I was wrong about a lot of things that night.
Jace took the microphone at 9:47 p.m. I know the exact time because I had just checked my phone under the table — a message from Diana about the Riverside contract, something I needed to follow up on Monday. I set the phone face-down and looked up, and there he was. Center of the room. Center of everything, the way he always was. Tall and easy in his tux, that smile already in place — the one that had once made me transfer schools, made me stand up in a crowded hallway and tell a vice principal that Jace Hamilton was worth defending.
I was sixteen then. I should have known better by now.
'I have an announcement,' he said into the mic. His voice was warm. Practiced. 'Something I've been thinking about for a while.'
The room quieted. Three hundred people turning toward him like flowers toward light. That was always the thing about Jace — he knew how to fill a room. He just never learned what to do with the people in it.
I watched him find Natalie Voss near the bar. She was in red. Of course she was in red. He smiled at her, and the smile was different from the one he gave the room — softer, more deliberate. A performance of sincerity.
'I've decided,' he said, 'that I want to marry Natalie.'
The room didn't gasp. It went still. That particular, airless stillness that happens when three hundred people all have the same thought at the same time and none of them want to be the first to say it.
I felt every single one of them look at me.
I sat perfectly still.
This is the part I have thought about since — what happened in that one long moment before I moved. I expected to feel something sharp. Rage, maybe. Or the specific, hollow ache of humiliation. What I felt instead was something quieter. Something that had been building for six years and had finally, in that moment, finished building.
I felt done.
Not broken. Not devastated. Just — done. The way a door feels when it closes all the way and the latch clicks into place.
I set my champagne glass down. I picked up the car keys from my clutch — the Porsche I had given him for his birthday two years ago, the one he drove to every event and every late night I never asked about. I stood up. I started to clap.
Slow, even applause. The kind you give at the end of a board presentation when the numbers are solid and the work is done.
'Congratulations, Jace,' I said. My voice carried. I made sure it did. 'I mean that.'
I set the keys on the table and slid them toward the center. A clean, final gesture. Then I picked up my clutch, smoothed the front of my dress, and walked toward the exit.
I did not look back.
I know he expected me to. I know the whole room expected me to. Six years of staying had written a very specific story about who I was, and everyone in that room had read it. The girl who transferred schools. The girl who stood up for him. The girl who absorbed everything and came back for more.
They were reading the wrong ending.
The drive to Greenwich took forty minutes. I don't remember most of it. I remember the tunnel, and the way the lights blurred, and the fact that I did not cry. I kept waiting for it — the collapse, the wave of it — and it never came. There was just the road and the dark and the quiet hum of the engine and the feeling of something very heavy finally being set down.
My grandfather was still awake when I arrived. Edgar Porter does not sleep early. He was in his study with a glass of scotch and the kind of expression that told me someone had already called him.
'Sit down,' he said.
'I'm not staying long.'
He looked at me over the rim of his glass. 'The Hamilton joint venture is worth three hundred and forty million dollars, Brielle. The groundbreaking is in four months.'
'I know what it's worth.'
'Then you understand what you've done.'
I looked at him — this man who had built an empire and raised me to run it and never once, not in thirty-one years, asked me what I wanted from my own life. 'I understand exactly what I've done,' I said. 'And I'm going to fix it. Give me a week.'
He didn't ask if I was all right. I hadn't expected him to.
I drove back to the city. My Tribeca penthouse was quiet and dark and mine, and I stood in the kitchen for a moment just breathing it in. Then I sat down on the couch, opened my phone, and pulled up the notes app.
The list was long. It always was. Every silence I had swallowed. Every tabloid photo I had pretended not to see. Every time I had chosen to stay and told myself it was love and not just habit. I scrolled through all of it slowly, the way you read something you already know by heart.
At the bottom, I typed: *The gala. He expected me to break. I didn't.*
Then I closed the app, opened my laptop, and started writing.
The proposal took me two hours. It was clean, precise, and entirely without sentiment — a contract marriage offer built on mutual financial interest, shared strategic goals, and a merger of assets that would make both Porter Development and Cruz Capital stronger than either could be alone. I had been thinking about Levi Cruz for longer than I wanted to admit. Not personally. Professionally. The Hudson Yards auction, eighteen months ago — I had won by a margin so thin it still made me a little breathless to think about. He had walked away from that loss without bitterness, which told me more about him than most people reveal in years.
I needed someone sharp. Someone who understood that this was business first and everything else second. Someone who would not mistake the arrangement for something it wasn't.
I hit send at 2:14 a.m. and went to bed.
I slept better than I had in years.
Diana called at seven.
'Tell me everything,' she said, before I even said hello.
So I did. I told her about the mic and the red dress and the keys sliding across the table. I told her about Edgar's study and the three hundred and forty million dollars. I told her about the proposal I had sent to Levi Cruz in the middle of the night.
She was quiet for a moment. Then she said, 'I'm not surprised. About any of it. I've been waiting for you to leave him since the Hamptons thing three years ago.'
'I know you have.'
'Are you okay?'
I thought about it. Really thought about it. 'Yeah,' I said. 'I actually am.'
'Good.' I could hear her already moving, already thinking. That was Diana — she processed emotion in about thirty seconds and then got to work. 'I'll draft the legal framework today. Clean, airtight, nothing that can be used against you later. What's your timeline?'
'Meeting with Cruz by end of week.'
'I'll make it happen.' A pause. 'Brielle.'
'Yeah.'
'You looked incredible walking out of that gala. Someone already posted a video. You're trending.'
I laughed. It surprised me — the realness of it, the way it came up from somewhere uncomplicated. 'Of course I am.'
'The caption is: *unbothered.*' She sounded deeply satisfied. 'It's very accurate.'
I hung up and stood at my window, looking out at the city. Thirty-one floors up, Manhattan spread out below me in the early morning light — gray and gold and relentless, the way it always was.
I had six years of silence behind me and one email in a stranger's inbox and a list on my phone that I wasn't ready to delete yet.
But I was moving. And for the first time in a very long time, I was moving in the right direction.
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