
Betrayal at Birthday Party
Chapter 3
The notification chimed on my phone while I was arranging flowers in the kitchen, trying to pretend normalcy still existed in our house. A text from an unknown number. My thumb hovered over the screen before I opened it.
The image loaded slowly, pixel by pixel, revealing Stefan's sleeping face against white hotel pillows. His dark hair was tousled, his expression peaceful in a way I hadn't seen at home in months. Below the photo, a message in elegant script: "Some bonds can never be broken ❤️"
My hands trembled as I stared at the screen. The intimacy of the shot—the angle, the soft lighting, the way his hand rested on the pillow beside him—spoke of someone who had watched him sleep, someone who belonged there.
The front door slammed. Stefan's voice carried from the entryway, cheerful and oblivious. "Cheyenne? I'm home!"
I met him in the hallway, my phone clutched in my white-knuckled grip. He stopped short when he saw my face, his smile faltering.
"What's wrong?"
I held up the phone without a word. His eyes dropped to the screen, and I watched the color drain from his face like water from a broken dam.
"Cheyenne, I can explain—"
"Explain what? Explain why your ex-wife has photos of you sleeping in a hotel room?" My voice cracked despite my efforts to stay calm. "Explain why she's texting me about bonds that can't be broken?"
Stefan ran his hands through his hair, the same gesture I'd seen him make countless times when cornered. "She's unstable, okay? Alma's been harassing me since she found out about—since she came back to town. This is probably from years ago."
"Years ago?" I zoomed in on the photo, pointing to the corner where a hotel notepad was visible. "That's the Marriott downtown. The one that opened last year."
His jaw worked silently, searching for another lie. "She's manipulating you, Cheyenne. Can't you see that? She wants to destroy our marriage."
"She doesn't need to destroy it," I whispered. "You're doing that just fine on your own."
---
The coffee shop buzzed with afternoon energy, but I barely noticed the conversations swirling around us. Nevaeh sat across from me, her dark eyes filled with concern as I stared into my untouched latte.
"Show me," she said quietly.
I slid my phone across the small table. Nevaeh's expression hardened as she studied the photo, her lawyer's instincts kicking in.
"Bastard," she muttered, then looked up at me. "How long has this been going on?"
"I don't know." The words came out broken, barely audible. "The rubber ducks started appearing a few weeks ago. He forgot our anniversary. Changed his phone password. And that perfume—God, Nevaeh, I can smell her on him."
Tears I'd been holding back for days finally spilled over. Nevaeh reached across the table, squeezing my hand with fierce protectiveness.
"Listen to me," she said, her voice low and urgent. "Your instincts are screaming at you for a reason. Trust them."
"But what if I'm wrong? What if I'm just being paranoid like he says?"
"Paranoid women don't usually have photos of their husbands in hotel rooms sent by ex-wives." Nevaeh's tone was sharp enough to cut glass. "Cheyenne, you need proof. Real proof."
I wiped my eyes with a shaking hand. "What are you suggesting?"
"I know someone. A private investigator. Discrete, professional." She pulled out her phone, scrolling through contacts. "Let me make some calls."
"I can't spy on my own husband."
"You're not spying. You're protecting yourself." Nevaeh's eyes blazed with protective fury. "Because right now, he's playing you for a fool, and you deserve better than that."
---
Stefan's behavior shifted into overdrive after our confrontation. He began staying late at the office with increasingly elaborate explanations—client dinners that ran past midnight, emergency meetings on weekends, conferences that materialized out of thin air.
"Peterson's being impossible about the Morrison account," he said one evening, adjusting his tie in our bedroom mirror with obsessive precision. "I might not be home until late."
I watched him from the bed, noting how he'd started using expensive hair gel, how his shirts were suddenly pressed to perfection, how he'd begun wearing cologne again—his own this time, but applied with the care of a man dressing for someone special.
"Which restaurant?" I asked casually.
"What?"
"For the client dinner. Which restaurant?"
He paused, his hand frozen on his collar. "Oh, um, that new place. On Fifth Street."
"The steakhouse or the sushi place?"
"Steakhouse." The answer came too quickly, too rehearsed.
His phone buzzed on the dresser. He lunged for it with suspicious speed, his face lighting up as he read the message before quickly composing himself.
"Work," he said, not meeting my eyes. "Peterson again."
But I'd seen that expression before—the soft smile, the way his shoulders relaxed. That wasn't how anyone looked when their demanding boss texted them.
As he kissed my forehead goodbye, I caught that floral scent again, faint but unmistakable. Alma's perfume, clinging to him like a guilty secret.
The front door closed behind him, and I was alone with the rubber ducks and my crumbling marriage, finally understanding that some bonds truly couldn't be broken—but they weren't the ones I'd thought they were.
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