
After My Husband Protected His Mistress, I Lost Everything
Chapter 2
The crystal glasses clinked as I arranged them on the dining table, each one positioned with precision. My hands trembled slightly—not from exhaustion after rehearsal, but from the dread pooling in my stomach. Carter had insisted we host a welcome dinner for Hank and Lia, and I couldn't refuse without facing his cold fury.
"Make sure everything is perfect," Carter had ordered earlier. "Hank deserves our best."
I smoothed the tablecloth for the third time, wondering if anything could ever be good enough for the man who had poisoned my marriage from the start.
The doorbell rang, and Carter's posture immediately straightened. The transformation was jarring—from the distant, cold husband I'd grown accustomed to, to an attentive host brimming with respect.
"Hank! Come in!" Carter's voice carried a warmth I hadn't heard in months.
Hank Johnson entered with Lia trailing behind him, both dressed impeccably. Hank's eyes swept over me with barely concealed hunger that made my skin crawl.
"Isabel," he said, his voice low enough that only I could hear. "You look lovely tonight. Though not as lovely as you looked at sixteen."
My breath caught in my throat. The room seemed to tilt as memories flooded back—his hands on me, his threats, Lia's lies spreading through our hometown like wildfire.
"Is something wrong?" Carter asked, noticing my pale face.
Before I could respond, Hank clapped him on the shoulder. "Just reminiscing about old times. Isn't that right, Isabel?"
I forced a smile, but my fingers were numb as I reached for the wine glass. It slipped from my grasp, shattering on the hardwood floor.
"I'm so sorry," I whispered, dropping to my knees to clean the mess.
Carter's face hardened. "For God's sake, Isabel. Can't you do anything right?"
"It was an accident," I murmured, but Carter was already turning away.
"Sorry about my wife's neurotic behavior," he told Hank, pulling out his chair. "She's been on edge lately."
"I understand," Hank replied, his eyes following me as I cleaned up the broken glass. "Some women just can't handle pressure."
---
The whispers started as a trickle, then became a flood.
"Did you hear about Isabel?"
"I heard she slept with half the male dancers in New York."
"I heard Carter's only with her out of pity."
I stood frozen in the hallway of the ballet company, overhearing two corps de ballet members gossiping. Their words sliced through me like knives.
It wasn't just the company. At the military base where Carter was stationed, the rumors were even worse. I'd seen the way the other officers' wives looked at me—with pity or disdain.
"She's unfaithful to him, you know," I overheard one woman telling another at the commissary. "Always has been."
That evening, Carter came home with a thunderous expression. "We need to talk."
My heart sank as he paced the living room, his military precision evident even in his anger.
"I've been hearing things," he said finally. "About your past. About what you've been doing while I'm away."
"What have you heard?" I asked, though I already knew.
"Your history speaks for itself," he spat. "Hank warned me about you years ago. I chose not to believe it."
"Chose not to believe what?" I challenged, my voice rising. "That I'm some kind of—"
"Don't," he cut me off. "I don't want to hear your lies. Your father was a good man. It's a shame you didn't inherit his integrity."
The words struck like a physical blow. My father—the man who had died saving Carter. The man Carter had been brainwashed into believing wasn't his savior.
---
The pain was excruciating as I pushed through the final pirouette. Each pointe on my right foot sent shards of glass cutting deeper into my flesh.
I had discovered the sabotage just before the performance—crushed glass carefully placed inside my pointe shoes. There had been no time to find replacements.
"You can do this," I whispered to myself as I completed the variation.
The audience applauded as I held my final pose, blood seeping through the pink satin of my shoes.
Backstage, I collapsed onto a bench, carefully removing the ruined shoes. Blood pooled on the floor as I examined my mangled feet.
"Isabel!" Elena gasped, rushing toward me. "What happened?"
"Sabotage," I said quietly, showing her the glass embedded in my skin.
Later that night, I showed Carter my injuries, hoping for once he might believe me.
"These cuts are precise," I explained. "Someone put glass in my shoes."
His expression darkened as he studied my foot. "Or you did it to yourself."
"What?" I recoiled in shock.
"Attention-seeking behavior," he said clinically. "Hank mentioned you might try something like this."
"That's absurd!"
"Isn't it?" His eyes were cold. "You've been acting erratic since Lia joined the company. Now you're self-harming to get sympathy?"
I stared at him in disbelief, watching as he walked away, leaving me alone with my pain and the terrible realization that there was no one I could trust.
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