
Betrayal Shatters Engagement
Chapter 3
The crystal stemware caught the candlelight as I arranged the final place setting, my hands moving with mechanical precision despite the tremor in my chest. Paloma had announced this morning that she wanted to host an intimate dinner party for Theodore's business associates—in our penthouse, at our dining table, using the china I'd selected for our future entertaining.
"Sophia, darling, could you check the wine selection one more time?" Paloma's voice drifted from the living room where she was adjusting flower arrangements with the practiced ease of someone born to hostess duties. "I want everything to be perfect for Theodore's colleagues."
I bit back the urge to remind her that I knew these people, had attended dozens of business dinners with Theodore over the past three years. Instead, I retreated to the wine cellar, running my fingers along bottles I'd helped Theodore select, each one a memory of celebrations and quiet evenings that now felt like someone else's life.
The first guests arrived at seven sharp—Richard and Margaret Ashworth, followed by the Hendersons and the Chens. I watched from the kitchen doorway as Paloma glided toward them in a stunning emerald dress that complemented the jewelry Theodore had bought her at the auction. Her smile was radiant, her posture perfect, every gesture calculated to charm.
"Welcome to our home," she said, her arm sliding possessively around Theodore's waist. "I'm Paloma King, Theodore's wife. We're so delighted you could join us tonight."
The words hit me like physical blows. Mrs. Theodore King. Our home. Wife.
Margaret Ashworth's eyes sparkled with curiosity. "How wonderful to finally meet you! Theodore has been so secretive about his personal life lately."
"Oh, you know how he is about privacy," Paloma laughed, the sound like silver bells. "We wanted to keep things quiet until we were properly settled. Marriage is such a beautiful adjustment, isn't it?"
I gripped the doorframe as Theodore beamed down at her, his hand resting on the small of her back with casual intimacy. The same spot where his hand had rested on me just weeks ago when we'd attended the Morrison's anniversary party.
"Sophia!" Richard Henderson's voice boomed as he spotted me hovering in the shadows. "There you are. We were wondering where Theodore's right-hand woman had disappeared to."
I stepped forward with a smile that felt like broken glass. "Hello, Richard. Margaret. How lovely to see you all."
Paloma turned toward me with theatrical surprise, as if she'd forgotten I existed. "Oh yes, everyone, this is Sophia Griffin. She was Theodore's former assistant and has been such a tremendous help with our transition. We're so grateful to have her staying with us temporarily while she sorts out her next steps."
Former assistant. House guest. Temporarily.
The room fell into a brief, awkward silence as the guests processed this information. I watched their faces shift from confusion to understanding to pity. Margaret Ashworth's eyes darted between Theodore and me, her expression growing increasingly uncomfortable.
"Former assistant?" Richard's eyebrows rose. "But I thought—didn't you two used to—"
"Oh, that was just a professional relationship that got a bit blurred," Paloma interjected smoothly, her hand finding Theodore's arm. "You know how these things happen in high-stress business environments. But now that Theodore and I are properly together, everything has found its natural balance."
Theodore nodded absently, his attention already shifting to business talk with the men. He didn't correct her. Didn't clarify. Didn't even seem to register the way she'd just erased three years of our life together with a few carefully chosen words.
Dinner was a masterclass in social torture. Paloma held court at the head of the table—my seat—regaling the guests with stories of her European adventures and her reunion with Theodore. She spoke of their "rediscovered love" and "second chances" while I served courses like hired help, invisible in my simple black dress.
"The wedding was so intimate," she sighed dreamily, her fingers playing with her ring. "Just the two of us and the officiant. Very romantic, very private. Sometimes the most meaningful moments are the quiet ones, don't you think?"
The women cooed their agreement while I cleared plates with hands that shook slightly. Each compliment felt like another nail in the coffin of my former life.
"And Sophia has been wonderful through this whole adjustment," Paloma continued, her voice dripping with false gratitude. "So understanding about the changes, so helpful with the household transition. It takes a special kind of person to be so gracious when circumstances shift."
Gracious. As if I had any choice. As if watching the woman who destroyed Theodore claim my life was an act of nobility rather than survival.
By the time dessert was served, I felt hollowed out, scraped clean of dignity. The guests began to leave around ten, each couple offering polite thanks and careful glances in my direction. Margaret Ashworth squeezed my hand as she passed, her eyes full of sympathy that somehow made everything worse.
"Such a lovely evening," she murmured. "You take care of yourself, dear."
When the door finally closed behind the last guest, I stood in our destroyed dining room, surrounded by dirty dishes and the lingering scent of Paloma's perfume. Theodore was already heading to his study, his phone pressed to his ear, the evening's social performance forgotten.
Paloma began gathering wine glasses with satisfied efficiency, humming softly to herself.
"Thank you for your help tonight," she said without looking at me. "The evening went perfectly, don't you think? Everyone seemed so charmed by our story."
Our story. The fiction she'd crafted where I was nothing more than a helpful bystander to their grand romance.
I picked up the remaining plates in silence, my reflection ghostlike in the darkened windows. Somewhere in this penthouse was the woman who had once been Theodore King's salvation. Tonight, I couldn't find her anywhere.
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