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Betrayed Wife's Ascent Novel Cover

Betrayed Wife's Ascent

I smoothed the silver silk of my dress, checking my reflection one last time in the mirror. Five years of marriage. Five years of trying to prove myself worthy of the Sterling name. Tonight would be different. Tonight, Nathan would finally see me—truly see me—through my art. The centerpiece of my anniversary exhibition stood draped in midnight blue velvet in our penthouse's glass-walled studio. "Sanctuary" had consumed me for months—a sweeping metal sculpture of intertwined figures rising from a tempest of twisted silver and bronze. It represented everything I'd poured into our marriage: vulnerability, strength, and unwavering hope. "Ms. Isabella, the first guests have arrived," Margaret, our elderly housekeeper, announced from the doorway, her eyes crinkling with rare warmth.
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Chapter 1

I smoothed the silver silk of my dress, checking my reflection one last time in the mirror. Five years of marriage. Five years of trying to prove myself worthy of the Sterling name. Tonight would be different. Tonight, Nathan would finally see me—truly see me—through my art.

The centerpiece of my anniversary exhibition stood draped in midnight blue velvet in our penthouse's glass-walled studio. "Sanctuary" had consumed me for months—a sweeping metal sculpture of intertwined figures rising from a tempest of twisted silver and bronze. It represented everything I'd poured into our marriage: vulnerability, strength, and unwavering hope.

"Ms. Isabella, the first guests have arrived," Margaret, our elderly housekeeper, announced from the doorway, her eyes crinkling with rare warmth.

"Thank you, Margaret." I took a steadying breath. "Is Nathan...?"

"Mr. Sterling is greeting them now."

I nodded, grateful. For once, he was on time, present for something that mattered to me. Perhaps the carefully worded invitation I'd sent to his office had made an impression. Perhaps tonight would be the turning point I'd been waiting for.

The exhibition space filled quickly with Manhattan's elite—critics, collectors, and the social circle Nathan's mother Eleanor insisted we maintain. I moved through them with practiced grace, accepting congratulations while scanning the crowd for my husband's tall frame.

"Your work has evolved remarkably," said an older critic whose approval I'd been seeking for years. "There's something raw here, something honest."

"Thank you," I replied, warmth blooming in my chest. "I've been exploring themes of shelter and vulnerability in—"

A collective murmur rippled through the crowd. Nathan had appeared at the entrance, his expression thunderous, phone clutched in his white-knuckled grip. Our eyes met across the room, and the temperature seemed to drop twenty degrees.

Something was terribly wrong.

He strode toward me, cutting through the crowd like an arctic wind. Guests parted before him, conversation dying as he approached. When he reached me, he didn't speak—just thrust his phone into my face.

On the screen was Victoria's Instagram post: her prized antique cello in pieces, the strings severed, the polished wood splintered. Beside the wreckage lay my distinctive rose brooch, the one Nathan had given me on our first anniversary.

"Nathan, I didn't—" My words evaporated as I recognized the calculated cruelty of the setup. Victoria had finally made her move.

"Five years of supporting your little hobby," he hissed, his voice low enough that only I could hear the venom. "And this is how you repay me? By destroying what matters to her?"

"Nathan, please, I was here all day preparing the exhibition. I never—"

He didn't wait for my explanation. With deliberate calm, he pulled on the pair of leather gloves he always carried in winter, then moved toward the draped centerpiece.

"No," I whispered, understanding his intent instantly. "Nathan, don't—"

He yanked the velvet covering from "Sanctuary" with a theatrical flourish. For one suspended moment, the sculpture gleamed under the gallery lights, capturing gasps of appreciation from the crowd.

Then Nathan's gloved hands closed around one of the delicate silver spirals and wrenched.

Metal screamed against metal. The sound cut through me like a physical pain as he methodically dismantled months of work, years of hope. Each piece he tore free, he dropped to the hardwood floor with a sickening clang.

"Stop!" I lunged forward, but two of his friends—men I'd served dinner to, whose children's birthdays I'd remembered—held me back with apologetic murmurs.

The crowd watched in horrified fascination. No one intervened. These were Nathan's people, not mine. They would never choose sides against a Sterling.

Piece by piece, he destroyed every sculpture in the exhibition. The metalwork I'd welded with burned fingers and exhausted eyes crashed to the ground, reduced to scrap. When he reached the smaller pieces—delicate brooches and pendants displayed in glass cases—he swept them to the floor with one violent gesture.

I stopped struggling against the hands that held me. Something inside me went very quiet, very still, watching this man I'd loved dismantle everything I'd created.

When he finished, Nathan straightened his tie, removed his gloves, and looked directly at me for the first time.

"Happy anniversary, Isabella," he said, his voice carrying in the stunned silence. "I believe we have some matters to discuss privately."

As he walked away, leaving destruction in his wake, I caught sight of my reflection in the fractured remains of a mirror sculpture. My face was pale, tear-streaked—but my eyes held something I hadn't seen there before.

The first spark of a fire that would eventually consume us both.

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