
Betrayal Turns to Desperate Love
Chapter 1
The elevator's golden numbers climbed steadily—thirty-seven, thirty-eight, thirty-nine—each floor bringing me closer to what I thought would be the perfect surprise. Chase's penthouse key felt warm in my palm, a symbol of the trust we'd built over two years together. Today marked our anniversary, and I'd planned everything down to the last detail: his favorite wine chilling in my bag, reservations at the restaurant where we'd shared our first kiss, and a small velvet box containing cufflinks engraved with our initials.
The hallway stretched before me, silent except for the soft hum of expensive air conditioning. Chase's door stood at the end, mahogany gleaming under crystal chandeliers. I'd surprised him like this before—showing up unannounced with takeout or just because I missed him. He always said it was one of the things he loved about me, how spontaneous I could be.
I slipped the key into the lock, turning it slowly to avoid the metallic click that might spoil the surprise. The door swung open on well-oiled hinges, revealing the familiar luxury of Chase's living space. Afternoon sunlight streamed through floor-to-ceiling windows, casting everything in golden hues. The silence felt different somehow—heavier, charged with something I couldn't name.
"Chase?" I called softly, setting my bag on the marble counter. "I know you're probably in a meeting, but—"
A sound stopped me cold. Low, intimate, unmistakably human. My heart began a strange, rapid rhythm as I followed the sound toward his bedroom, each step feeling like walking through thick honey. The door stood slightly ajar, and through that narrow gap, my world imploded.
Chase's broad shoulders moved rhythmically above a cascade of blonde hair I knew as well as my own reflection. Paris. My best friend since college, the woman who'd held my hair when I was sick, who'd helped me pick out the dress I wore on my first date with Chase. Her manicured fingers—the same ones that had braided friendship bracelets for us just last month—clutched at his back with desperate passion.
Time fractured. I watched them move together with the practiced ease of lovers, not the fumbling urgency of a first betrayal. This wasn't a moment of weakness or a drunken mistake. The way Paris arched beneath him, the way Chase whispered her name like a prayer—this was a relationship. A secret, beautiful, devastating relationship that had been blooming in the shadows of my happiness.
"God, I've missed you," Chase breathed against Paris's throat, his voice carrying the same tenderness he'd once reserved for me. "When can we stop pretending? When can we just—"
"Shh," Paris silenced him with a kiss, her eyes fluttering closed in bliss. "We've talked about this. Mira can't know. Not yet."
The wine bottle slipped from my numb fingers, shattering against the hardwood floor with a sound like breaking bones. They froze, two deer caught in headlights, Chase's face draining of color as our eyes met across the wreckage of everything I'd believed in.
"Mira—" he started, scrambling for a sheet.
I ran.
The elevator couldn't come fast enough. My reflection in its polished doors showed a stranger—hollow-eyed, pale, trembling. The woman who'd walked into that penthouse no longer existed. She'd died in that doorway, murdered by the two people she'd loved most in the world.
Outside, the city buzzed with life, oblivious to my devastation. Couples walked hand in hand, friends laughed over coffee, the world continued spinning as if mine hadn't just stopped completely. I found myself on a park bench, staring at the engagement ring I'd been planning to surprise Chase with next month. The diamond caught the light, throwing rainbows across my tear-stained cheeks.
How long had they been lying to me? How many times had Paris sat across from me, asking about my relationship with Chase while secretly knowing the taste of his kisses? How many times had Chase told me he loved me while his heart belonged to someone else?
My phone buzzed incessantly—Chase calling, Paris texting, both of them probably coordinating their damage control. I turned it off and sat in the gathering dusk, watching the city lights flicker to life like stars in a universe that no longer made sense.
By the time I finally stood, something had crystallized in my chest. Not just heartbreak—that would heal eventually. This was something harder, sharper. Something that would cut through the soft girl I'd been and forge someone entirely new.
They thought they could betray me and simply deal with the fallout. They thought they knew me well enough to predict my reaction, to manage my pain.
They were about to discover how wrong they were.
You may also like





