
Betrayal Leads to Redemption
Betrayal Leads to Redemption Chapter 1
I woke before dawn on my thirty-fifth birthday, my hand automatically reaching across the cold expanse of sheets beside me. Empty, as usual. Marcus's side of the bed hadn't been warm when I'd fallen asleep, either. The digital clock on my nightstand glowed 5:17 AM in harsh red numbers that seemed to mock the significance of the day.
Slipping into my robe, I padded downstairs to the kitchen of our Silicon Valley mansion—fourteen thousand square feet of echoing emptiness that had never quite felt like home. The kitchen lights were off, the counters pristine. No birthday card. No small wrapped gift. Not even a hastily scrawled note.
Marcus and Leo had already left the house.
"For the surprise," I whispered to myself, trying to believe it. The words hung in the air, unconvincing even to my own ears.
I made coffee in the silence, my fingers absently sketching a circuit diagram on the condensation of the kitchen window as I waited for the machine to finish brewing. The diagram evolved into something more complex—a potential improvement to the microprocessor design that had become the cornerstone of Marcus's company. My company too, once. Before I signed away the patents. Before I became invisible.
I spent the day in my hidden home office, the one place in this vast house that felt truly mine. Classical music flowed through my headphones—Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto, the complex harmonies filling the spaces in my mind where doubt and disappointment threatened to creep in. Marcus had always called it "unproductive noise." Today, it was my armor.
The hours passed in a blur of productivity. I lost myself in the work I still loved, designing and refining concepts that would never bear my name. By the time I glanced at the clock again, the sun was setting. I should go downstairs, I thought. They might be planning something.
I changed into a simple black dress—elegant but understated. The mirror reflected a woman I barely recognized anymore: intelligent eyes shadowed by years of diminishing self-worth, the fine lines at their corners that Marcus had recently begun to comment on with increasing frequency.
"Happy birthday," I whispered to my reflection, forcing a smile that didn't reach my eyes.
When I opened our front door at dusk, the house was transformed. Balloons in silver and gold cascaded from the vaulted ceiling of our entryway. Champagne bottles gleamed on the marble-topped bar. The catering staff I hadn't been consulted about moved efficiently through our space, carrying trays of hors d'oeuvres I hadn't selected.
And there, at the center of it all, stood Ashley Chen.
She was radiant in a dress that seemed designed to highlight everything I was not—young, fresh, unburdened. Her glossy black hair fell in perfect waves around a face that beamed with the confidence of someone who knows they belong exactly where they are. Marcus stood beside her, his hand resting possessively at the small of her back. My son Leo orbited around them, his attention fixed on Ashley as if she were the sun.
"Mom! You're finally here!" Leo called out, but his eyes barely flickered toward me before returning to Ashley. "Ashley-mom picked out all the decorations herself. Isn't she amazing?"
Ashley-mom. The seventeenth time he'd called her that in the half hour I'd been home. I'd been counting, each utterance a tiny dagger. More times than he'd called me "mom" in his entire life.
I stood frozen as guests I barely recognized filled our home, all seeming to know exactly what was happening while I remained lost in my own birthday celebration.
Marcus finally approached, champagne flutes in hand. "There you are, Catherine. We were beginning to think you'd forgotten your own party." His smile didn't reach his eyes—it never did anymore.
"I wasn't aware there would be a party," I said quietly.
"Ashley thought it would be nice to surprise you." He handed me a glass, his fingers deliberately avoiding contact with mine.
The room quieted as Marcus raised his glass for a toast. This was it—the moment when my husband would acknowledge me, would perhaps remind our son and these strangers of who I was, of what I had contributed.
"To Ashley," Marcus announced instead, his voice carrying through our home. "Whose youth and beauty bring such light to our lives." Laughter rippled through the crowd as he turned to me with a smirk. "Something we could use around here, now that Catherine's getting so... old and worn out."
The champagne glass nearly slipped from my fingers as the room erupted in polite, uncomfortable titters. I looked at my son, seeking some sign of defense, of recognition that this was wrong. But Leo was laughing too, his eyes fixed adoringly on Ashley.
In that moment, something inside me—the last fragile illusion that I mattered to my family—shattered completely.
Betrayal Leads to Redemption of Contents
New Release Novels

















