
Betrayal Leads to Ruin
Chapter 2
The morning after our argument about the promotion, the Sterling Corporation building hummed with its usual Tuesday activity. Joseph and I had barely spoken during breakfast, the tension between us stretching like a taut wire. We'd driven to work in separate cars—my suggestion. I needed space to think, to process his betrayal.
As we entered the gleaming lobby with its marble floors and soaring ceilings, Joseph checked his watch. "I have a meeting on twelve," he said, his voice professionally neutral. "You go ahead. I'll catch the next one."
I nodded stiffly and stepped into the executive elevator alone. The doors were closing when I caught a glimpse of Joseph's face through the narrowing gap—distant, preoccupied, already mentally elsewhere. The polished metal doors slid shut with a soft hiss, sealing me inside.
The elevator began its smooth ascent. Floor numbers illuminated one after another as I leaned against the back wall, my mind replaying last night's conversation in an endless, painful loop. How could he ask me to give up everything I'd worked for? How could he value Evelyn's needs above mine?
Between the fourteenth and fifteenth floors, it happened. A violent jolt threw me against the wall. The lights flickered once, twice, then steadied as the elevator ground to a shuddering halt. My heart hammered against my ribs as the car swayed slightly, suspended between floors.
"Hello?" I called out, pressing the emergency button. The alarm began to wail, its piercing sound filling the enclosed space. Through the glass doors, I could see people gathering in the hallway of the fifteenth floor, pointing and talking. And there, pushing to the front of the crowd, was Joseph.
Our eyes met through the glass. I saw the moment of recognition, the widening of his eyes as he realized I was trapped. I pressed my palm against the door, relief washing over me. He would help. He would make sure they got me out quickly.
But as building security arrived and began ushering people toward the emergency stairwells, I watched in disbelief as Joseph hesitated, looked at his watch, and then—without another glance in my direction—turned and followed the evacuating employees.
"Joseph!" I shouted, my voice bouncing off the elevator walls. "Joseph, I'm in here!"
He didn't look back.
Hours passed in that suspended metal box. The maintenance crew's voices filtered through occasionally, assuring me they were working to safely extract me. A sharp cramp seized my lower abdomen, making me gasp and double over. I hadn't told Joseph yet—hadn't found the right moment amidst our growing tension—but I was six weeks pregnant. Our child, growing inside me, a secret joy I'd been nurturing alone.
Another cramp, stronger this time. I pressed my hand against my stomach, whispering soothing words more to comfort myself than anything else. "It's okay, it's okay, we'll be out soon."
By the time they finally pried the doors open three hours later, my blouse was sticking to my skin with cold sweat. The maintenance chief helped me out with gentle hands.
"Ma'am, you should see a doctor," he said, noting my pallor. "You've been through quite an ordeal."
I nodded weakly, scanning the lobby for Joseph. Surely he would have returned once the building was cleared, once he knew it was safe. Surely he wouldn't have just left me.
But when I called his cell phone, it went straight to voicemail. When I asked the security guard if he'd seen my husband, the man's expression turned apologetic.
"Mr. Ross? He told us he assumed you'd already been evacuated with another group. Said he had an important lunch appointment he couldn't miss."
The words hit me like physical blows. Another cramp twisted through me, sharper than before, as I realized exactly where—and with whom—that lunch appointment was.
Evelyn Butler. Always Evelyn.
I clutched the edge of the security desk as a wave of dizziness washed over me, my body protesting both the physical trauma and the emotional betrayal. The child inside me, our child, stirred with discomfort as if sensing its father's abandonment.
"Ma'am?" The security guard's voice seemed to come from very far away. "Ma'am, are you alright?"
I wasn't alright. Nothing was alright. And somewhere deep inside, I knew nothing would ever be alright again.
You may also like





