
Betrayal Shatters Engagement
Chapter 1
The honeymoon brochures lay scattered across Theodore's mahogany desk like broken promises. Santorini sunsets, Parisian cafés, romantic gondola rides through Venice—all the dreams we'd planned for our wedding trip in four weeks. I picked up the Tuscany villa booking confirmation, my fingers trembling as I tried to organize the documents Theodore had asked me to sort through.
That's when I saw it.
Tucked beneath the travel insurance papers, a cream-colored document with the official seal of New York State. Marriage Certificate. My heart stopped as I read the names printed in elegant script: Theodore Alexander King and Paloma Isabella Hawkins. Date of marriage: fourteen days ago.
The paper slipped from my numb fingers, floating to the Persian rug like a death sentence. Fourteen days ago, I had been planning our rehearsal dinner menu. Fourteen days ago, Theodore had kissed me goodbye that morning, telling me he loved me more than life itself.
I stared at the certificate until the words blurred together. This had to be a mistake. Some clerical error. Theodore would never—he couldn't—
But there it was. His signature, bold and confident, next to hers—that flowing, pretentious script I remembered from the few photos he'd kept hidden away.
My legs gave out, and I sank into his leather chair, the same chair where I'd held him during those dark nights three years ago when he couldn't stop shaking, when he'd whispered that he wanted to die. The same chair where we'd celebrated his first major business deal after his recovery, where he'd proposed to me six months ago with tears in his eyes, calling me his salvation.
The office door felt impossibly heavy as I pushed through it, the marriage certificate clutched against my chest like evidence of a crime. The elevator ride to the forty-second floor stretched into eternity, each floor a countdown to the moment my world would officially shatter.
Theodore's assistant, Janet, looked up with her usual warm smile. "Sophia! How lovely to see you. Mr. King is just finishing up a conference call."
I managed a nod, my voice caught somewhere between my throat and my breaking heart. Through the glass walls of his corner office, I could see him—tall, commanding, gesturing animatedly as he spoke into his headset. The same man who'd cried in my arms, who'd sworn he'd never hurt me, who'd promised me forever.
When he finally noticed me standing there, his expression shifted from business focus to genuine joy. He held up one finger—just one more minute—and I almost laughed at the absurdity. One more minute before my life imploded.
"Sophia, darling." He pulled off his headset and moved toward me with that confident stride that had taken him from broken to legendary. "Did you get the documents sorted? I know it's tedious, but—"
"What is this?" I held up the certificate with a steadiness that surprised us both.
The color drained from his face so quickly I thought he might faint. For a moment, he looked exactly like the broken man I'd found three years ago—lost, terrified, desperate.
"Sophia, I can explain—"
"Explain what? That you're married? That while I've been planning our wedding, addressing invitations, choosing flowers, you've been married to someone else?"
He reached for me, but I stepped back, the certificate creating a paper barrier between us. "It's not what you think. It's just paperwork. Legal protection. Paloma came back, and she was in trouble—real trouble. Her ex-boyfriend in Europe, he was dangerous, abusive. She needed legal status to stay safe, and I—"
"You married her." The words tasted like poison.
"It doesn't mean anything!" His voice cracked with desperation. "Sophia, you have to believe me. You're the woman I love. You're the one I want to spend my life with. This thing with Paloma, it's just—"
"Just what? Just a marriage? Just a legal document that makes her your wife and me your mistress?"
Theodore's hands shook as he ran them through his hair. "She was desperate. She said if she went back to Europe, he'd kill her. What was I supposed to do? Let her die?"
"You were supposed to tell me!" The words exploded from me with three years of devotion behind them. "You were supposed to trust me enough to include me in this decision. You were supposed to remember that I'm the one who put you back together when she left you broken!"
The silence stretched between us like a chasm. Outside his floor-to-ceiling windows, New York continued its relentless pace, oblivious to the fact that my entire world had just collapsed in a corner office on the forty-second floor.
"She means nothing to me now," he whispered. "You saved me, Sophia. You made me whole again. This marriage to Paloma—it's temporary, just until she's safe. Then we'll have it annulled, and you and I will—"
"Will what? Pretend this never happened? Pretend you didn't choose her over me when she snapped her fingers?"
Theodore's face crumpled. "I chose to help someone in need. That's what you taught me—compassion, putting others first. I learned that from you."
The cruel irony of his words hit me like a physical blow. I had taught him compassion. I had rebuilt his capacity to love. And now he was using my own lessons to justify betraying me.
"Where is she now?" I asked quietly.
His hesitation told me everything. "She's... she's staying at the penthouse. Just temporarily. Until we figure out—"
"Our penthouse. The home we built together."
"Sophia, please. Let me fix this. Let me make this right."
I looked at the man I'd loved with every fiber of my being, the man I'd sacrificed three years of my life to heal, and realized I was looking at a stranger. The Theodore I'd saved would never have done this. But perhaps the Theodore I'd saved had never really existed at all.
"There is no fixing this," I said, my voice hollow with the weight of understanding. "There's only the choice you made. And you chose her."
As I turned to leave, Theodore's broken voice followed me. "Sophia, wait! Please, don't leave. We can work through this. I love you!"
I paused at the door, not turning around. "If you loved me, Theodore, you would have chosen me. Instead, you chose the woman who destroyed you. Again."
The elevator doors closed on his anguished face, and I finally allowed myself to fall apart.
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