
Anniversary Night Betrayal
Chapter 2
The taxi screeched to a halt in front of Le Bernardin. I threw cash at the driver and stumbled out, my anniversary dress suddenly feeling too tight, too desperate. My phone buzzed with Kate's message: "I'm ten minutes away. Wait for me!" But waiting wasn't an option. Not when my husband was inside celebrating with another woman on our anniversary.
The restaurant's golden light spilled onto the sidewalk like honey, mocking the bitterness rising in my throat. I smoothed my dress—the one I'd spent weeks searching for—and pushed through the heavy glass doors.
The maître d' stepped forward. "Do you have a reservation, madame?"
"I'm looking for my husband," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "Ryan Sterling."
Recognition flickered in his eyes. "Ah, Mr. Sterling is hosting a private event tonight. If you'll—"
I moved past him, scanning the room until I found them. And then I froze.
Ryan stood at the center of a glittering crowd, but my eyes registered only him and the woman beside him. Victoria Hayes looked exactly as she had in the photographs Ryan kept in his desk drawer—caramel hair cascading down her back, delicate features arranged in perfect symmetry. She laughed at something he said, tilting her champagne flute. Ryan leaned close, adjusting her grip on the glass with gentle fingers.
"I missed you so much," he whispered, his voice carrying through a momentary lull in conversation.
The words pierced me like shards of ice. Six years of loving him, three years of marriage, and I'd never heard that tone—soft, reverent, almost worshipful.
I cleared my throat, and the crowd parted like the Red Sea. Faces turned toward me—some curious, others uncomfortable. Melissa from marketing mouthed "I'm sorry" from across the room.
Ryan stiffened when he saw me, his expression shifting from surprise to annoyance in the span of a heartbeat.
"Sarah," he said, his voice clipped. "This isn't the time or place."
Not "I forgot our anniversary." Not "I can explain." Just dismissal, as though I were an inconvenient employee interrupting an important meeting.
"It's our anniversary," I said, hating how small my voice sounded.
Victoria's eyes widened with theatrical concern. "Oh, Ryan, you didn't tell me! I would never have asked you to host this if I'd known."
The performance was flawless—the perfect blend of innocence and distress. Ryan's hand moved to her lower back, steadying her as though my words might cause her to collapse.
"Victoria just returned from Paris," he said, as if that explained everything. "We can celebrate tomorrow."
Tomorrow. As if our anniversary were a dental appointment that could be rescheduled.
"I made your favorite meal," I said, feeling pathetic even as the words left my mouth. "Short ribs. I waited for hours."
Something flickered in his eyes—perhaps guilt—but it vanished so quickly I might have imagined it. Victoria pressed herself closer to his side, her hand resting possessively on his chest.
"Sarah," Ryan's voice hardened. "Go home. We'll discuss this later."
The room blurred around me. Faces swam in and out of focus—some pitying, others amused by the spectacle of the forgotten wife in her carefully chosen dress.
"Discuss what?" I asked, my voice cracking. "That you forgot our anniversary for her?"
Ryan's jaw tightened. He stepped forward, gripping my elbow and steering me toward the entrance. His fingers dug into my skin, sure to leave bruises.
"You're embarrassing yourself," he hissed in my ear. "And me. Go home."
He released me with a small push toward the door. I stumbled slightly, catching myself against a nearby table. The couple dining there looked away, pretending not to notice.
I wanted to scream. To throw something. To make him feel a fraction of the humiliation burning through me. Instead, I straightened my spine and met his gaze.
"Happy anniversary, Ryan," I said quietly.
As I turned to leave, I caught Victoria's expression—not the sympathy she displayed for Ryan's benefit, but a small, satisfied smile that chilled me to the bone. In that moment, I realized this wasn't just about Ryan forgetting our anniversary. Something much worse was happening.
And I was already too late to stop it.
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