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Betrayal at Ceremony Novel Cover

Betrayal at Ceremony

The notification chime on my phone cut through the quiet hum of my photography studio like a knife. I was editing wedding photos—ironically enough—when the sound made me glance up from my computer screen. The afternoon light streaming through the tall windows cast everything in a golden glow, the kind of light that usually made me feel peaceful and inspired. I picked up my phone absently, expecting maybe a text from Jensen about dinner plans or when he'd be back from his business trip to Chicago. He'd been gone for three days, and I missed him terribly. We'd been married for three years, and I still got that flutter in my stomach when I thought about him coming home. But it wasn't Jensen's name on my screen. It was an unknown number. The message was simple: "Thought you should know." Attached were three photos. My hands started trembling before my mind could fully process what I was seeing.
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Chapter 2

Three days had passed since Jensen hung up on me, three days of radio silence that felt like a lifetime. I'd barely slept, barely eaten, my mind spinning with questions that multiplied like cancer cells. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw those photos—Jensen's peaceful face next to another woman's dark hair, the intimacy that should have been mine alone.

I couldn't live with the not knowing anymore.

That's how I found myself sitting across from Marcus Chen, a private investigator Elena had recommended. His office was small and cluttered, files stacked on every surface, but his eyes were sharp and kind when I handed him the crumpled marriage certificate and showed him the photos on my phone.

"I need to know who he really is," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "I need to know everything."

Marcus nodded, making notes on a yellow legal pad. "Give me forty-eight hours."

Those forty-eight hours crawled by like forty-eight years. I tried to work, tried to edit photos, but my hands shook every time I touched my camera. The studio felt different now, contaminated by the memory of receiving those photos. Even the golden afternoon light that usually brought me peace now seemed harsh and unforgiving.

When Marcus called, I was sitting on my studio floor, surrounded by photo albums I'd been too afraid to open.

"You're going to want to sit down for this," he said without preamble.

"I already am."

"Quinn, your husband—Jensen Matthews—that's not even his real name. His full name is Jensen Alexander Matthews-Blackwood. He's the heir to the Matthews textile fortune. We're talking generational wealth here—his family's worth about two hundred million."

The album in my lap slipped to the floor, wedding photos scattering across the hardwood. "That's impossible. He's an artist. He works at the community center, he can barely afford rent—"

"He has a master's degree from Harvard Business School, not the community college art program he told you about. And Quinn..." Marcus's voice gentled. "He's been legally married to Natalia Lawrence for six years. They have a five-year-old son named Michael."

The world tilted sideways. Six years. Their son was five. Which meant...

"He was already married when he met me," I whispered.

"I'm sorry. There's more."

I pressed my free hand against my mouth, fighting the urge to vomit. "More?"

"They're planning a wedding ceremony in two weeks. Public announcement went out yesterday—they're calling it a 'renewal of vows to celebrate their reunion after Jensen's period of personal growth and self-discovery.'"

The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering against the floor beside the scattered wedding photos. Personal growth. Self-discovery. Was that what I'd been to him? A three-year experiment in slumming it with the poor, naive photographer?

I don't know how long I sat there, staring at a photo of Jensen and me on our fake wedding day. I looked so happy, so radiant. So stupid. He was smiling too, but now I could see what I'd missed then—the calculation behind his eyes, the performance of it all.

The sound of the studio door opening made me look up. Elena stood in the doorway, her face crumpling when she saw me surrounded by the wreckage of my marriage.

"Oh, honey," she breathed, rushing to kneel beside me. "I got your voicemail. What did the investigator find?"

I told her everything, my voice flat and emotionless. Elena's face grew darker with each revelation, her hands clenching into fists.

"That bastard," she spat when I finished. "That absolute piece of garbage. How could he do this to you? How could he live this lie for three years?"

"Because I made it easy for him." I picked up a photo of Jensen and me at the beach last summer, both of us laughing at something he'd said. "I believed everything he told me. I never questioned anything."

"This is not your fault, Quinn. Don't you dare blame yourself for trusting someone you loved."

I looked around at the scattered photos, three years of fake memories staring back at me. "He's having a wedding, Elena. A real wedding, with his real wife, while I'm sitting here like an idiot mourning a marriage that never existed."

Elena was quiet for a long moment, studying my face. Then something shifted in her expression, a hardness I'd rarely seen from my gentle best friend.

"You know what? No." She stood up abruptly, pacing to the window. "No, you're not going to sit here and let him win. You're not going to let him discard you like you never mattered."

"What am I supposed to do? Show up at his real wedding and object?" I laughed bitterly. "I'd look insane."

Elena turned back to me, her eyes blazing. "Maybe that's exactly what you should do."

I stared at her. "Elena—"

"Think about it, Quinn. He's planning this elaborate celebration of his 'reunion' with his wife. He's going to stand up there and play the reformed man who's found his way back to his true love. Meanwhile, you're supposed to just disappear quietly, pretend the last three years never happened?"

My heart started beating faster. "You're talking about crashing their wedding."

"I'm talking about telling the truth." Elena knelt beside me again, gripping my hands. "You have evidence, Quinn. Photos, documents, witnesses. People should know what kind of man he really is."

The idea was terrifying and exhilarating at the same time. For three years, I'd been the understanding girlfriend, the supportive wife, always putting Jensen's needs before my own. I'd convinced my parents to approve our marriage, defended him when they expressed doubts, sacrificed my own dreams to support his supposed artistic career.

And all of it had been a lie.

"Two weeks," I said slowly.

Elena nodded. "Two weeks to decide what kind of ending this story gets."

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