
Angela's Plot Unraveled
Chapter 2
The Rosewood Country Club's annual charity gala had always been my sanctuary—a place where the Williams name still carried weight, where I could pretend my world wasn't crumbling. Tonight, however, as I stood in the marble-columned ballroom wearing the emerald dress Ian once said made my eyes sparkle, I felt like prey walking into a carefully laid trap.
Angela had insisted on attending as Ian's guest, her crimson gown a deliberate contrast to my emerald one. She moved through the crowd with predatory grace, her hand possessively resting on Ian's arm as they worked the room. I watched from across the dance floor as she whispered something in his ear, her lips curving into that cold smile I'd grown to despise.
"Mrs. Grant," a voice called behind me. I turned to see Marcus, our gardener, approaching with nervous steps. His weathered hands clutched a champagne flute, and his eyes darted around the room like a cornered animal. "I need to speak with you. It's important."
Before I could respond, Angela's voice cut through the ambient chatter like a blade. "Ladies and gentlemen, if I could have your attention please." The room gradually quieted, all eyes turning toward her as she stood near the orchestra platform. "I'm afraid we have a rather delicate situation to address tonight."
My blood turned to ice. The champagne glass in my hand began to tremble as Angela's gaze found mine across the crowded room. She smiled—that same serene expression she'd worn at our dining table three days ago.
"It has come to my attention," Angela continued, her voice carrying the authority of her forensic training, "that Mrs. Emma Grant has been engaged in an extramarital affair with her gardener, Marcus Rodriguez." Gasps rippled through the crowd. "Furthermore, she is currently pregnant with his child."
The world tilted. Conversations stopped mid-sentence. The orchestra's waltz faded into an oppressive silence broken only by the click of Angela's heels as she approached me through the parting crowd.
"That's not true," I whispered, but my voice was lost in the sea of shocked murmurs and judgmental stares. Marcus had vanished—whether he'd fled or been removed, I couldn't tell.
Angela reached into her purse and withdrew a small bottle of pills. "Emma, darling, we need to take care of this situation immediately. For everyone's sake." Her voice dripped with false concern as she pressed the bottle into my trembling hands. "These will help... resolve the problem."
I stared at the pills, my mind reeling. "I'm not pregnant. I haven't... Marcus and I never—"
"The evidence suggests otherwise," Angela said loudly enough for the surrounding guests to hear. "Photos, witness statements, medical records. Really, Emma, did you think no one would notice?"
Ian appeared at Angela's side, his face a mask of practiced disappointment. "Emma, please don't make this worse than it already is. Just take the pills and we can handle this quietly."
The betrayal in his voice—the way he spoke as though my guilt were already established—shattered something inside me. Around us, the cream of Seattle society watched with the hungry fascination of vultures circling carrion. Mrs. Ashford from the museum board shook her head sadly. Judge Peterson whispered something to his wife behind his hand.
"I won't take them," I said, my voice growing stronger. "Because I'm not pregnant, and I didn't have an affair."
Angela's mask slipped for just a moment, revealing something cold and calculating beneath. "Emma, you're embarrassing yourself. And your family." She gestured toward the crowd. "These people have known you for years. They can see the truth."
The pills rattled in the bottle as my hands shook. I looked around the room—at faces I'd known since childhood, people who'd attended my wedding, who'd celebrated Zayne's birth with me. Now they stared with a mixture of pity and disgust, already convinced of my guilt by Angela's masterful performance.
I felt Nancy's presence before I saw her. She'd somehow made it past the club's staff restrictions and now stood at the edge of the crowd, her eyes blazing with protective fury. The sight of her—loyal, unwavering Nancy—gave me the strength to straighten my spine.
"I won't be taking anything," I said clearly, dropping the bottle. The pills scattered across the marble floor like fallen stars. "Because I know who I am, even if the rest of you have forgotten."
As I walked toward the exit, my heels echoing in the sudden silence, I heard Angela's voice behind me, smooth as silk: "How tragic. Denial is often the first stage of grief."
The morning brought worse news. I sat in my father's old study, staring at the newspaper headline that felt like a physical blow: "Prominent Businessman Julio Williams Arrested on Federal Charges." The accompanying article detailed allegations of embezzlement, tax evasion, and fraud—crimes so elaborate and well-documented that they seemed impossible to fabricate.
But fabricated they were. I knew my father's character better than anyone, knew the meticulous way he'd run his business, the pride he'd taken in his integrity. As I read through the charges, I recognized Angela's methodical touch in every detail.
Nancy entered with my morning coffee, her face grave. "Miss Emma, there's something else you need to see."
She led me to my bedroom, where she'd been dusting that morning. Behind my jewelry box, she'd discovered a small device no bigger than a button—a recording device that had been capturing every private conversation, every phone call, every moment of vulnerability in what I'd thought was my sanctuary.
"There are more," Nancy said quietly. "In your closet, the bathroom, even in the kitchen. She's been watching everything."
As we searched the house together, we found camera after camera, microphone after microphone. Angela had turned my home into a surveillance network, gathering ammunition for her systematic destruction of my life. Each discovery felt like another violation, another layer of the trap she'd been building around me.
By evening, we'd filled a box with the devices. I sat on my bed, staring at the evidence of Angela's calculated cruelty, finally understanding the true scope of what I was facing. This wasn't just about stealing my husband—this was about erasing me entirely.
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