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Betrayal at Birthday Party Novel Cover

Betrayal at Birthday Party

I balanced the grocery bags in my arms, fumbling for the keys to our suburban home. The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across our neatly trimmed lawn as I finally managed to unlock the door, shouldering it open with a practiced nudge. "Stefan?" I called out, expecting my husband's usual greeting. Only silence answered me. I made my way to the kitchen, the weight of the bags digging into my forearms. As I rounded the corner, I froze. There, lined up along our granite countertop, was a row of bright yellow rubber ducks. Not one or two, but at least a dozen, their plastic beaks all pointing in the same direction like some bizarre military formation. I set the groceries down slowly, blinking to make sure I wasn't hallucinating. The ducks remained, their cheerful yellow bodies incongruous against our sleek, modern kitchen.
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Chapter 2

The restaurant reservation confirmation email glowed on my laptop screen as I double-checked the time. Seven o'clock at Bella Vista—the intimate Italian place I'd been wanting to try for months. Our seventh wedding anniversary deserved somewhere special, somewhere that acknowledged the milestone we'd reached together.

I smoothed my navy dress, the one Stefan had complimented last Christmas, and touched the pearl earrings he'd given me for our fifth anniversary. The rubber ducks scattered throughout our house seemed to watch me from their various perches as I moved through the rooms, their plastic eyes reflecting the warm lamplight.

"Ready?" I called up the stairs, checking my watch. Six-thirty. We'd need to leave soon to make our reservation.

Silence.

"Stefan?" I climbed the stairs, my heels clicking against the hardwood. I found him in his office, still in his work clothes, staring at his computer screen with the intensity of someone who'd forgotten the world existed.

"Honey, we need to go. Our reservation—"

He looked up, blinking as if emerging from a trance. "Reservation?"

My stomach dropped. "Bella Vista. Seven o'clock. Our anniversary dinner?"

The color drained from his face. He glanced at his computer screen, then at his watch, then back at me with the expression of a man who'd just realized he'd forgotten to pick up his child from school.

"Oh God, Cheyenne. I—" He stood abruptly, his chair rolling backward. "I completely forgot. Work has been so crazy, and I—"

"You forgot our anniversary." The words came out flat, emotionless, because feeling them would hurt too much.

"No! No, I didn't forget. I just—" He ran his hands through his hair, making it stand at odd angles. "I have something for you. A gift. I was going to surprise you."

Hope flickered in my chest despite everything. Maybe he'd planned something special. Maybe the stress of work had just made him lose track of time.

Stefan rushed to his desk, pulling open drawers with frantic energy. Papers scattered. A stapler clattered to the floor. Finally, he emerged with something clutched in his fist.

"Here." He held out his hand, palm up.

A ballpoint pen. Blue plastic, the kind you'd find in a box of fifty at any office supply store. The kind that came free with bank deposits.

"I wanted to get you something practical," he said quickly, his words tumbling over each other. "Something you could use every day. For your photography notes and—"

"A pen." I stared at the cheap plastic tube, its surface already showing fingerprints. "For our seventh anniversary, you got me a pen."

"It's a good pen. Really good quality." His voice cracked slightly. "And I thought—I thought we could still go to dinner. Maybe tomorrow night? I can call and—"

"Don't." I closed my eyes, trying to steady myself. Seven years of marriage, and this was what I meant to him. A last-minute pen grabbed from his desk drawer. "Just don't."

---

The next morning, I waited until Stefan's shower started before reaching for his phone on the nightstand. The familiar weight felt foreign in my hands as I swiped up, expecting the usual home screen to appear.

Password required.

I frowned, trying our anniversary date. Invalid. Our wedding date. Invalid. My birthday, his birthday, even our address. Nothing worked.

The shower shut off. I quickly placed the phone back exactly where I'd found it, my heart hammering against my ribs. When had he changed his password? And why?

Stefan emerged from the bathroom, a towel wrapped around his waist, steam following him like a guilty conscience.

"Your phone's locked," I said, trying to keep my voice casual. "I wanted to check the weather."

He stiffened, his hand pausing as he reached for his clothes. "What do you mean?"

"The password. It's not our anniversary anymore."

"Oh." He turned away, pulling on his shirt with unnecessary focus. "I had to change it for work security. Company policy."

"What's the new one?"

"It's complicated. Work stuff. You know how IT gets about security protocols."

I watched him dress, noting how he avoided my eyes, how his movements had become sharp and defensive. "I just wanted to check the weather, Stefan."

"Use your own phone."

The coldness in his voice hit me like a slap. "Excuse me?"

He finally looked at me, his jaw set. "You're being paranoid, Cheyenne. First you're upset about the ducks, now you're going through my phone. When did you stop trusting me?"

"When did you give me a reason not to?"

The question hung between us like a challenge. Stefan's face flushed, and for a moment, I thought he might actually answer honestly. Instead, he grabbed his briefcase and headed for the door.

"I'm late for work."

I listened to his footsteps on the stairs, the slam of the front door, the roar of his car engine fading into the distance. Around me, the rubber ducks seemed to multiply in the morning light, their painted smiles mocking the ruins of my marriage.

---

Dr. Patel's office smelled like antiseptic and artificial lavender, the familiar scent oddly comforting as I checked in for my annual physical. The waiting room buzzed with quiet conversations and the rustle of magazine pages.

I'd almost finished the crossword puzzle when I heard the laugh—melodic, confident, carrying just a hint of smugness that made my skin crawl. I looked up to see a woman with honey-blonde hair swept into an elegant chignon, her hand resting on a small but noticeable bump beneath her flowing dress.

Alma Richardson. Stefan's ex-wife.

Our eyes met across the waiting room, and her smile widened. She rose gracefully, moving toward me with the predatory elegance of a cat who'd cornered a mouse.

"Cheyenne Palmer," she said, my maiden name rolling off her tongue like a deliberate insult. "What a lovely surprise."

"Alma." I stood, matching her height in my heels. "I didn't know you were back in town."

"Oh, I've been back for a while now." Her hand moved to her stomach in a gesture so deliberate it might as well have been a neon sign. "Life has a funny way of bringing us back to where we belong, doesn't it?"

My gaze dropped to her bump before I could stop myself. "Congratulations."

"Thank you." Her smile turned razor-sharp. "It's amazing how some things just feel right, you know? Like they were always meant to happen. Second chances and all that."

The words hit their mark with surgical precision. I felt heat rise in my cheeks but kept my voice steady. "I'm sure you'll be very happy."

"Oh, I will be." She leaned closer, her floral perfume—the same scent I'd detected on Stefan—washing over me. "True love always finds its way back, don't you think? No matter how many obstacles try to stand in its way."

Before I could respond, a nurse called my name. I gathered my purse with trembling hands, feeling Alma's eyes burning into my back as I walked away.

In the examination room, I sat on the paper-covered table, my mind reeling. The floral scent on Stefan's shirt. The changed passwords. The forgotten anniversary.

And now Alma, pregnant and smug, talking about second chances and true love finding its way back.

The pieces of the puzzle were falling into place, forming a picture I'd been too afraid to see.

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