Follow
Chapters
Share
Anniversary Night Betrayal Novel Cover

Anniversary Night Betrayal

The aroma of red wine reduction filled our Upper East Side kitchen as I stirred the braised short ribs that had been simmering for hours. Ryan had always said my short ribs were better than any five-star restaurant in Manhattan. I smiled, remembering how he'd proposed over this exact meal three years ago. I hummed my mother's lullaby—the one she used to sing when I was little—as I dipped my finger into the sauce for a taste. Perfect. Just the right balance of savory and sweet, like our marriage. At least, that's what I'd thought until now. "Just one more hour," I whispered to myself, glancing at the clock. Ryan had texted earlier that he'd be home by eight for our anniversary dinner. I reached for the recipe book, jotting down a quick sketch of a dress design in the margin while waiting for the tiramisu to set—a habit I couldn't seem to break despite having pushed my design dreams aside years ago.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The email arrived at 9:04 AM. Subject line: "Design Department Meeting - Urgent."

I stared at my screen, coffee cooling beside me. Something in Ryan's clipped tone, even through text, made my stomach knot. This wasn't a routine meeting.

The design wing was eerily quiet when I arrived. Usually, it buzzed with creative energy—designers exchanging ideas, the gentle hum of music from someone's headphones spilling out. Today, empty desks greeted me. My team had been sent elsewhere.

Victoria stood at my workstation, her caramel hair swept into an elegant chignon. She wore a cream silk blouse that probably cost more than my monthly rent before I married Ryan. Before I became Mrs. Sterling. Before everything fell apart.

"Sarah," Ryan's voice cut through the silence. He stood in the doorway, his posture rigid. "I need you to hand over all project files to Victoria."

I froze. "What?"

"The Westbrook campaign, the Richards portfolio, everything," he continued, his tone businesslike. As if he were speaking to a stranger, not the woman who'd warmed his bed for six years.

"Those are my designs," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "My team's work. We've been developing them for months."

Victoria smiled—that same small, satisfied smile I'd seen at the restaurant. She began removing my mood boards from the wall, replacing them with cursory sketches I'd never seen before.

"Victoria will be taking over as Creative Director," Ryan announced. "Effective immediately."

The room tilted slightly. I gripped the edge of my desk to steady myself. "You can't do this."

Ryan stepped closer, lowering his voice. "Think of their livelihoods, Sarah. The design team. Help Victoria shine, and I'll make sure they keep their jobs."

The threat was unmistakable. My team—people with families, mortgages, dreams—would pay the price if I refused.

"You're betraying me," I whispered, meeting his eyes. "In every possible way."

Something flickered across his face—not guilt, but annoyance. As if my pain were an inconvenience.

"I'll email you the files," I said finally, turning away. I couldn't bear to watch Victoria claim my work, my position, my life.

I fled to the women's lounge on the thirty-second floor. It was always empty this time of morning—a sanctuary of sorts. I locked myself in a stall and pressed my forehead against the cool metal door, willing myself not to break.

Breathing deeply, I emerged minutes later. The woman in the mirror looked like a stranger—pale, hollowed out, with shadows beneath her eyes. When had I become this person? This shell?

I splashed cold water on my face, reapplied my lipstick with shaking hands. The red seemed garish against my pallor, but it was armor of a sort. I needed whatever protection I could find.

From my desk, I retrieved a single folder—not company property, but personal sketches I'd created during lunch breaks and sleepless nights. Dreams I'd deferred for Ryan's sake. I slipped it into my bag, a small act of defiance.

In the privacy of an empty conference room, I pulled out my phone and dialed the number I'd saved weeks ago but hadn't had the courage to call.

"Grace Thompson's office," a crisp voice answered.

"I need to speak with Ms. Thompson," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "About a divorce consultation."

"Your name?"

"Sarah Mitchell." I paused. "Sarah Sterling."

"Ms. Thompson has an opening at two this afternoon. Will that work?"

"Yes," I said. "I need to know my options."

Grace Thompson's Midtown office was all glass and steel, like the woman herself. Sharp, transparent, unyielding. She listened without interruption as I detailed my marriage's collapse, making occasional notes in a leather-bound book.

"He's already moved against you financially," she said finally, sliding a bank statement across her desk. "Joint accounts frozen. Company shares being transferred."

I stared at the numbers. The methodical dismantling of our shared life.

"This arrived by courier an hour ago," Grace continued, producing a thick envelope. "Divorce papers. He's not wasting time."

I opened them with trembling fingers. The terms were brutal: I would relinquish all claim to Sterling Enterprises, to our apartment, to the life we'd built together. In exchange, I'd receive a settlement that seemed generous only if you didn't know how much I'd sacrificed to help build his empire.

"If I sign these..." My voice trailed off.

"You walk away with enough to start over," Grace said. "But not what you deserve."

I thought of my team, their faces when Victoria presented my designs as her own. I thought of Ryan's cold eyes as he'd dismissed me from the restaurant. From his life.

"I'll sign the nondisclosure," I said, reaching for her pen. "And I need to book a flight."

"To where?" Grace asked, surprise flickering across her face.

I thought of the business card tucked in my personal sketchbook. Eleanor Vance, my former design school mentor. Her last email: *London always has room for real talent, Sarah. When you're ready to reclaim yours, call me.*

"London," I said, signing my name with surprising steadiness. "I'm going to London."

As I walked out of Grace's office, my phone buzzed with a text from Ryan: *We need to talk about Victoria staying at the apartment.*

My fingers hovered over the screen. There was so much I wanted to say, to scream. Instead, I turned off my phone and stepped into the sunlight, feeling for the first time in years that I was walking toward something, not just away.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After He Loved Her, I Learned I Was Second Choice Novel Cover
8.3
The restaurant had one Michelin star and no sign on the door. That was the kind of place Damian liked. You had to know it existed before you could find it. I wore a black dress, simple, fitted at the waist. The sapphire pendant sat against my collarbone the way it always did. Damian had given it to me for our third anniversary. He called it a one-of-a-kind piece. I touched it in the elevator on the way up, a habit I had developed over two years of wearing it every single day. Damian was already at the table when I arrived. He stood when he saw me, but his eyes moved past me almost immediately to the entrance.
Divorce & A 20-Year Freeze Novel Cover
8.5
The candles flickered between us, casting dancing shadows across the gleaming mahogany table. Ryan had insisted on dinner at home tonight—a rarity these days. I should have known something was wrong when he ordered from Le Bernardin instead of suggesting we go there in person. Ryan Mitchell never missed an opportunity to be seen at Manhattan's finest establishments. He hadn't touched his Dover sole. Instead, he watched me with those calculating eyes that had once made me feel chosen but now made me feel appraised. Like merchandise. "Sarah," he said, breaking the silence that had stretched between us like a chasm. "We need to talk." I set down my fork with deliberate care, noting how steady my hand was despite the sudden hollowness in my chest. "I'm listening." Ryan reached into his suit jacket—Tom Ford, charcoal gray, his power color for important business deals.
Fifty Shades Of Filthy Desires  Novel Cover
8.5
Warning! 18 and above, contains explicit sexual content to invade your lustful desires. This is unfiltered, it is forbidden, it's stories that will keep you up at night. ****************** "Ever had sex before?" he asks as he begins to take off his pants. There's a huge bulge in his boxer already. "Ye..yes," I stutter. He closes the distance between us and grabs my right boob in his palm. "Good, cause i'm going to fuck your little cunt till you beg me to stop." I clench my thighs to ease the ache building up down there. "Bend over, princess." ************************* This collection of erotica contains BDSM, REVERSE HAREM, SEXUAL TERMS YOU DIDN'T KNOW EVEN EXISTED. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED This is a collection of every lustful desires you've ever had. Grab a wine and a pleasure toy, YOU WILL NEED IT!
His wife was never meant to survive  Novel Cover
7.5
Arthur Lucas is a billionaire who survives by control, not love. When a scandal threatens to destroy his empire, he needs a wife fast. Someone clean, respectable, and silent. Kiah Taylor needs money to save her brother from prison. Their contract marriage is supposed to be simple. But the scandal isn't about Arthur. It's about Kiah. The moment she becomes his wife, enemies close in. Secrets surface. Lives are threatened. Love becomes dangerous. And survival is no longer guaranteed.
My Husband Betrayed Me With My Sister Novel Cover
8.2
The clock on my laptop read 2:17 AM as I hit send on the final press release. The screen's blue light cast shadows across my face, highlighting the dark circles I'd grown accustomed to. Another PR crisis averted. Another night saved. I leaned back in my chair, rubbing my tired eyes. The Malibu mansion around me was silent except for the distant sound of waves crashing against the cliffs below. Ryder was still out—another "industry event" that would likely end with him drunk in some VIP section. My phone buzzed with a notification from Miranda Hayes, Ryder's publicist and my former boss. "Excellent work, Elena. You just saved his ass again.
My Mate Returned with a Luna and Child Novel Cover
8.5
Five years. That’s exactly how long it takes to turn a grieving heart into a block of ice, and I had become an expert sculptor. As the lead Event Coordinator for the Regional Alpha Council, I didn't have the luxury of emotions. I had a schedule, a clipboard, and a ballroom in downtown Los Angeles that needed to look like the Moon Goddess herself had decorated it. "The hydrangeas are wilting on table six," I barked into my headset, striding across the polished marble floor of the hotel lobby. My heels clicked a sharp, staccato rhythm that made the junior staff scatter like frightened rabbits. "Replace them. Now. And tell the valet team that if they scratch another Alpha's SUV, they’re paying for it in blood." I checked my watch. The Moon Goddess Gala was the premier event of the season, a place where alliances were forged and broken over champagne.