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Betrayal in the Marriage War Novel Cover

Betrayal in the Marriage War

My hands trembled as I raised the paddle again. "Two million dollars," I called out, my voice steadier than I felt. The auction room, with its polished mahogany and crystal chandeliers, suddenly seemed airless. "Two million one hundred thousand," a silky voice countered from the back of the room. I turned, already knowing who I'd see. Giselle Silva sat there, legs crossed elegantly, a mocking smile playing on her perfectly painted lips. She hadn't even bothered to raise her paddle—just called out the bid as if buying a coffee. "The bid is at two million one hundred thousand," the auctioneer, Elena Rodriguez, announced. Her eyes flickered between us, sensing the tension crackling in the air. I swallowed hard.
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Chapter 2

The first sign something was wrong came with my morning coffee. I'd barely taken three sips when the sneezing started—violent, uncontrollable fits that left my eyes streaming and my chest aching. By the time I stumbled to the bathroom mirror, angry red welts had erupted across my neck and arms.

"Allergies acting up?" Giselle's voice drifted from the kitchen doorway, sweet as poisoned honey. She stood there in one of my silk robes—the cream one Reid had given me for our anniversary—sipping tea from my favorite mug.

"I don't have allergies," I managed between sneezes, dabbing at my watering eyes with a tissue.

"Hmm." She tilted her head, studying me with mock concern. "Maybe you're developing them. Stress can do that, you know. Or perhaps..." Her lips curved into that familiar cruel smile. "Perhaps you're just allergic to happiness."

I wanted to snap back, but another fit of sneezing doubled me over. When I finally caught my breath, she was gone, leaving only the lingering scent of her perfume and the sound of her laughter echoing down the hallway.

It wasn't until I was getting dressed that I found the source. My clothes—every single item in my closet—were covered in a fine layer of cat hair. Not just a few strands, but thick clumps of orange and white fur that seemed to coat every fabric. Worse, there was an unmistakable odor clinging to everything, sharp and acrid.

Cat urine. And worse.

"Reid!" I called out, my voice cracking with fury and disbelief.

He appeared in the doorway, already dressed for work, his tie perfectly knotted. "What's wrong now, Tessa?"

"Look at this." I held up a blouse that had cost me three hundred dollars, now reeking and stained. "Someone put cat waste in my closet."

His eyes flickered to something behind me—Giselle, no doubt, watching from the hallway. "Whiskers is still adjusting to the new environment. Accidents happen."

"Accidents?" I spun around to face him fully. "Reid, this is deliberate. Every single piece of clothing I own has been contaminated."

"You're being paranoid." His voice carried that dismissive tone I'd grown to hate. "Giselle would never do something like that. She's pregnant, Tessa. She needs our support, not your accusations."

I stared at him, this man I'd loved for five years, and saw a stranger. "I can't wear any of this. I have nothing clean."

"Then do laundry." He checked his watch. "I'm late for work. Try not to upset Giselle while I'm gone. The doctor says stress is bad for the baby."

He left me standing there in my ruined closet, surrounded by the stench of cat waste and the bitter taste of betrayal.

The winter night Whiskers 'disappeared' was the worst yet. December wind howled against the windows, and snow fell in thick, relentless sheets. I'd just finished a late dinner when Giselle burst into the kitchen, tears streaming down her face.

"Whiskers is gone!" she sobbed, throwing herself into Reid's arms. "He must have slipped out when the delivery man came. Oh God, he'll freeze to death out there!"

Reid held her close, stroking her hair. "We'll find him, sweetheart. Don't worry."

"Tessa has to help look," Giselle said, pulling back to fix me with desperate eyes. "Please, Tessa. I know you don't like me, but Whiskers is innocent. He's all I have left of my grandmother."

I looked out at the storm, then at Reid's expectant face. "It's below freezing. We should wait until morning—"

"No!" Giselle's voice cracked. "He could die out there. Please."

So I went. For three hours, I trudged through knee-deep snow in inadequate boots, calling for a cat that probably couldn't hear me over the wind anyway. My fingers went numb within the first hour. My feet felt like blocks of ice. The thin jacket I'd grabbed wasn't nearly warm enough, but when I'd tried to go back for something heavier, Giselle had begged me not to waste time.

Through the windows, I could see warm light spilling from our bedroom—the bedroom that was no longer mine. Reid and Giselle sat by the fireplace, her head on his shoulder, his hand resting protectively on her stomach.

When I finally stumbled back inside, shivering so violently I could barely speak, I found them in the kitchen. Reid was shirtless, and Giselle knelt behind him, massaging something into his shoulders.

"Any luck?" she asked without looking up, her hands moving in slow, intimate circles across his skin.

"No sign of him," I managed through chattering teeth.

"Oh well." She shrugged, then smiled up at Reid. "Your muscles are so tense, darling. Good thing I have magic fingers."

That's when I heard it—a soft meow from upstairs.

"What was that?" I asked.

Giselle's hands stilled for just a moment. "What was what?"

Another meow, clearer this time, definitely coming from the direction of the master bedroom.

"Whiskers," I said flatly.

Giselle's smile never wavered. "Don't be silly. He's lost outside, remember? You must be hearing things. Hypothermia can cause auditory hallucinations."

But I saw the truth in her eyes—the cold satisfaction, the cruel amusement. She'd known exactly where her cat was the entire time.

That night, relegated to the guest room with its thin walls, I heard everything. Giselle's exaggerated moans echoed through the house like a performance meant for an audience of one. Every gasp, every whispered endearment, every creak of the bed that used to be mine—it all carried clearly through the darkness.

"Oh, Reid," she cried out, her voice pitched just loud enough to ensure I couldn't possibly sleep. "Yes, right there. The baby loves it when you touch me like that."

I pressed my pillow over my ears, but nothing could block out the sounds of my husband making love to another woman in our bed. The same bed where we'd once planned our future, where we'd held each other through difficult times, where I'd dreamed of the children we'd never been able to have.

Now it was theirs. Everything was theirs.

I lay there in the dark, clutching the life-saving medication I'd bankrupted myself to buy, listening to my marriage die one moan at a time.

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