
Betrayed Wife Fights Back
Betrayed Wife Fights Back Chapter 1
I leaned against the cool glass of my office window, watching Ryan buckle Madison into her car seat. The July sun glinted off his black BMW in our circular driveway, three stories below my corner office in our Beverly Hills home. Something about the scene made my chest tighten with unexpected emotion.
Ryan's hand lingered on Madison's cheek, and even from this distance, I could see her delighted smile. These moments had become rare treasures—glimpses of the man I'd married five years ago, the hero who'd once taken a knife for me.
"I didn't think he'd remember," I whispered to myself, twisting the silver locket at my throat—my mother's last gift before cancer took her. Madison's piano lessons had been on my calendar for weeks, but Ryan had never volunteered to take her before.
I pressed my palm against the window, savoring this fragile hope. Maybe things were finally changing. Maybe the distance that had grown between us was beginning to close.
Ryan looked up suddenly, as if sensing my gaze. He waved, flashing that disarming smile that had once made my heart race. Now it just made me wonder what lay beneath it. Still, I waved back, allowing myself to believe, just for a moment, that we might find our way back to each other.
"Mrs. Matthews-Carter?" My assistant's voice pulled me from my thoughts. "The board is waiting."
I nodded, smoothing my silk blouse as I turned away from the window. "Of course, Sarah. I'll be right there."
Three hours later, I was deep in quarterly projections when my phone vibrated against the polished mahogany table. I glanced at it, prepared to silence it, when Madison's face flashed on the screen. My heart skipped—she never called from Ryan's phone unless something was wrong.
"Excuse me," I murmured to the room of executives, rising from my chair. "I need to take this."
I stepped into the hallway, pressing the phone to my ear. "Madison? Sweetheart?"
The sound that came through froze my blood—a gasping, trembling intake of breath, followed by my daughter's terrified voice.
"Mommy?" The word was barely audible, choked with tears. "Mommy, I can't breathe. It's so hot."
My fingers tightened around the phone. "Madison, where are you? Where's Daddy?"
"He left me in the car." Her voice cracked, each word a struggle. "I woke up and he was gone. The doors won't open. Mommy, please—it's so hot."
The world tilted beneath my feet. "Where are you, baby? Can you see anything outside?"
"Buildings. Tall ones." Her breathing was becoming more labored. "There's a fountain. And a sign with a palm tree."
I was already moving, heels clicking frantically against marble as I raced toward the elevator. "I'm coming, Madison. Stay on the phone with me. Try to stay in the shade if you can."
"I tried to open the windows," she whispered, her voice growing fainter. "Daddy took his keys. I can't—"
"Madison?" Panic clawed up my throat when she didn't respond. "Madison!"
A weak cough came through the line. "I'm dizzy, Mommy."
I burst through the lobby doors, frantically digging in my purse for my car keys. "I need you to be brave, sweetheart. I'm coming right now."
I pulled up the location tracking on my phone while sprinting to my Volvo. The little blue dot showed Ryan's car in Santa Monica—nowhere near Madison's piano studio in Beverly Hills.
My hands shook as I jammed the key into the ignition. "Madison, can you hear me? I'm on my way."
Her only response was shallow, rapid breathing.
I peeled out of the parking garage, cutting off a delivery truck that blared its horn. My mind raced faster than my car as I weaved through traffic. Why would Ryan leave her? Where was he? The Santa Monica address made no sense—we knew no one there.
"Madison, talk to me, baby," I pleaded, my voice breaking as I ran a red light, earning more angry honks.
"Elephant," she murmured, so quietly I almost missed it. She was talking about the stuffed toy I'd given her as a baby, the one she still clutched when scared.
"Is Elephant with you?" I asked, desperate to keep her conscious as I swerved around a slow-moving van.
No answer.
"Madison!" I screamed into the phone, tears blurring my vision as I pushed the Volvo faster, praying I wouldn't be too late.
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