
Betrayal in the Penthouse
Chapter 1
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime, revealing the marble foyer of our penthouse. I stepped out, balancing a bag of groceries in one arm and a bouquet of lilies in the other—Marcus's favorite. After three years of marriage, I still believed in grand gestures, in rekindling what had begun to feel like a dying flame. Three years of choosing to see the man I fell in love with, not the increasingly distant stranger who shared my bed.
The silence of our home greeted me. Usually, Marcus's assistant would call if he planned to be home early. I placed the groceries on the kitchen counter, arranging the flowers in a crystal vase—a wedding gift from his mother. The salmon would have to wait. First, I wanted to change out of my work clothes, slip into something that might remind my husband why he had once looked at me like I was his entire world.
As I approached our bedroom, I heard it—a sound so familiar yet so out of place that my mind refused to process it at first. A woman's moan, followed by a deeper groan. My husband's voice.
My hand froze on the doorknob. Time stretched, elastic and surreal. I could walk away. I could pretend I hadn't heard. I could preserve the lie I'd been living for God knows how long.
Instead, I turned the knob.
The door swung open silently on well-oiled hinges, revealing our king-sized bed—the one Marcus had insisted on importing from Italy. The sheets I'd changed just yesterday were twisted around two naked bodies. My husband's broad back. And beneath him, her face turned toward the door, eyes meeting mine with not surprise but triumph—Victoria. My stepsister. The woman whose mother had destroyed my family when I was just fifteen.
Neither of them noticed me at first. I stood there, a ghost in my own home, as something cold and clear crystallized in my chest. With trembling fingers, I reached for my phone and took several photos, the shutter sound muted. Evidence. Something even Marcus couldn't deny or explain away.
I backed out silently, my mind oddly calm as I walked to the living room. I sat on our white leather sofa, placed my phone on the coffee table, and waited. Ten minutes later, I heard them emerging, Victoria's tinkling laugh cutting through me like glass.
"Catherine!" Marcus froze in the hallway, his usually impeccable hair disheveled. "You're home early."
Victoria appeared behind him, wearing one of my silk robes, her lips curved in a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Surprise, sister dear."
"Indeed." My voice sounded strange to my own ears—too steady, too controlled. "I thought I'd surprise my husband with dinner. It seems you beat me to it, Victoria."
Marcus stepped forward, his expression shifting to the one he used in board meetings—controlled, authoritative. "Catherine, this isn't what it looks like."
I laughed then, a hollow sound that seemed to startle even Victoria. "Really, Marcus? Because it looks exactly like you fucking my stepsister in our bed." I reached into my purse and pulled out an envelope, tossing it onto the coffee table. "Divorce papers. I want out."
His face darkened, a muscle twitching in his jaw. "You're being hysterical. We should discuss this privately."
"There's nothing to discuss." I stood, surprised by my own steadiness. "I want a divorce. I want you out of my life."
Victoria moved closer, her hand possessively on Marcus's arm. "Catherine, you've always been so dramatic. Just like your mother."
The mention of my mother—who had swallowed a bottle of pills after finding my father in bed with Victoria's mother—sent ice through my veins. "This was your plan all along, wasn't it? To do to me what your mother did to mine?"
"Don't be ridiculous," Marcus snapped, but his eyes betrayed a flicker of something—guilt? Fear? "You're clearly not thinking clearly. We'll talk when you've calmed down."
"I've never been clearer," I replied, my voice steady despite the earthquake inside me. "Sign the papers, Marcus. It's over."
That night, I packed a small overnight bag and checked into a hotel. I needed space, needed to breathe air that wasn't poisoned by their betrayal. I'd return tomorrow to collect more of my things, start the process of untangling my life from the man I'd thought would be my forever.
I never made it back to the penthouse.
Headlights blinded me on the rain-slicked road as I drove back to the city the next evening. My car spun out of control, metal screaming against guardrails. The last thing I remember thinking before darkness claimed me was that the brakes hadn't responded—they hadn't responded at all.
I woke to the steady beep of hospital monitors and Marcus's face hovering above mine, a mask of concern perfectly in place. His hand gripped mine too tightly.
"Catherine, thank God. Do you know who I am? Do you remember anything?"
In that moment, looking into his eyes, I saw something that chilled me to my core—satisfaction. Relief. The look of a man who had gotten exactly what he wanted.
And I knew. I knew with absolute certainty that my accident had been no accident at all.
"I—" I let my voice tremble, my eyes go wide and confused. "Where am I? Who are you?"
As Marcus's face split into a smile he couldn't quite hide, I made my decision. I would play the amnesiac wife. I would be docile, confused, dependent. And all the while, I would plan my escape from the man who would rather see me broken than free.
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