
Betrayed Wife's Escape After Husband's Cruel Deception
Chapter 2
I barely slept that night. The image of Reid and Cali together, surrounded by champagne bottles, burned behind my eyelids whenever I closed them. By morning, my eyes were raw, but I refused to let tears fall. I'd cried enough.
The sound of the front door opening jolted me awake. I'd fallen asleep on the couch, still wearing my red dress from the night before. Reid's footsteps echoed through our marble foyer, confident and unhurried.
"Evangeline?" he called, his voice carrying its usual authority. "Where are you?"
I stood up, smoothing my wrinkled dress. "In here."
He appeared in the doorway, looking fresh in his tailored suit. No trace of last night's events showed on his face—no guilt, no shame, not even anger.
"You're still in yesterday's clothes," he said, frowning slightly. "Are you going to make breakfast? I have a meeting in an hour."
I stared at him, disbelief washing over me. "You think I'm going to make you breakfast?"
"Don't start this again," he sighed, checking his watch. "Whatever scene you made last night at the club, I don't have time for it now."
I moved to my purse, pulling out the manila envelope I'd prepared before going to bed. "These are divorce papers. My lawyer drew them up last night."
Reid's eyes flickered to the envelope, then back to me. Without breaking eye contact, he took the envelope, tore it in half, then quarters, letting the pieces flutter to the floor.
"You're being hysterical," he said dismissively. "We're not getting divorced."
"We are," I insisted, my voice steadier than I felt. "I won't be your convenient wife anymore."
He laughed, the sound cutting through me. "Is that what this is about? You're jealous of Cali? She's just entertainment, Evangeline. Nothing serious."
"Just entertainment you bought five hundred bottles of champagne for," I countered.
"You should be grateful I still come home to you," he said coldly. "Many men in my position wouldn't bother."
I felt something harden inside me. "Not anymore."
His phone buzzed. He glanced at it, his expression softening slightly. "I'm bringing Cali to Mother's birthday dinner this weekend."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Victoria Morrison's birthday celebration was a sacred family event. "You can't."
"Why not? Mother always insists on meeting my... friends."
---
Victoria Morrison's birthday celebration was held in the grand dining room of the family estate. Crystal chandeliers cast a warm glow over the assembled guests—family members, close friends, and key business associates.
I arrived alone, wearing a conservative navy dress that had been Victoria's favorite. She greeted me with an air kiss, her eyes already scanning the room.
"Reid's running late," she said, though her tone suggested she knew exactly why.
When Reid finally arrived, Cali was on his arm. She wore a cream-colored dress with delicate lace trim—almost identical to the one I'd worn to our wedding reception. The sight of it made my stomach turn.
"Mother," Reid announced, "I'd like you to meet Cali Vargas, my close friend."
Victoria's eyes narrowed slightly, but her social smile remained fixed. "How lovely to meet you, dear."
Cali beamed, clutching Reid's arm tighter. "Reid has told me so much about you."
Throughout dinner, Reid barely acknowledged my presence. When Victoria asked about grandchildren—a traditional topic at family gatherings—Reid's gaze slid to Cali.
"I'm looking forward to starting a family someday," he said, his hand finding Cali's under the table. "Someone young enough to give me plenty of children."
The words sliced through me. Five years ago, I'd sacrificed my fertility to save Reid's life during a medical emergency. He'd known then what it meant—that we would never have children together.
---
The first photo arrived three days later. My phone pinged with an anonymous message containing an image of Reid and Cali in our bedroom—my bedroom—tangled in sheets I'd chosen.
"This is where he belongs now," read the caption.
I deleted it immediately, hands shaking.
The next day, another photo came: Reid kissing Cali in the restaurant where he'd proposed to me.
"He says your perfume smells like old lady flowers," the message read.
Then came an image of them at the lake where we'd spent our first anniversary, Cali wearing my favorite scarf.
"Look how much better it looks on someone young and beautiful," the text mocked.
Each photo was a calculated wound, each message designed to break me apart piece by piece. But with every image, something strange happened—the pain began to crystallize into something harder, sharper.
Something dangerous.
As I stared at the latest photo—Reid asleep with Cali curled against him, in the bed we'd shared for five years—I realized I was no longer crying.
I was planning.
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