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Beyond The Champagne Silk: The Wife's Defiant Return Novel Cover

Beyond The Champagne Silk: The Wife's Defiant Return

I spent forty hours hand-beading a gown for a woman who was currently sleeping with my husband. My fingers were raw, my vision blurred, and the needle had just driven deep into my index finger, leaving a drop of blood on the silk. Braxton walked into our penthouse, rain dripping from his suit, and didn't even look at me. But the scent hit me instantly—Bulgarian rose and white musk. It was the custom perfume Griselda, my own sister, commissioned in Paris. I had spent three years as a ghost in my own marriage, sewing costumes for the woman who had haunted my vows since day one. Braxton didn't bother to hide it anymore; there was a smudge of her coral lipstick on his collar. He didn't offer an explanation, only a command to finish the gown for the Met Gala so I wouldn't embarrass them. My mother called moments later, her voice sharp with the usual dismissal. She didn't care that I was bleeding or that my husband was cheating with my sister. She only cared that I was "falling behind" on Griselda's gown. I sat in the silence of that cold, marble cage, staring at the needle in my hand. For years, I had swallowed every insult and stitched every lie, believing I was the capable one who had to make them happy. But as the clock ticked, a door inside me finally clicked shut. I wasn't just tired; I was finished. I set the needle down, picked up my phone, and dialed my sister’s number to tell her she’d have to find someone else to bleed for her.
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Chapter 1

The needle slipped.

Delphine Ferrell's vision blurred for half a second as her fingers cramped from six hours of meticulous sewing. The sharp steel needle veered to the left, piercing the pad of her left index finger without a sound. Years of swallowing her discomfort had robbed her of that instinctive reaction.

Delphine raised her hand to her mouth and sucked the blood from her fingers.

The electronic lock on the front door clicked shut.

Delphine straightened her back. Three years of conditioned reflexes had caused her body to straighten abruptly before her thoughts could catch up. Her pulse quickened abruptly, a sudden, irregular throbbing against her ribs. She took her finger out of her mouth and wiped it on the hem of her cotton work shirt, leaving a faint rust-colored stain.

Braxton Morton entered the foyer, shaking the rain from his hair. Rain dripped from the shoulders of his charcoal-grey Tom Ford suit, leaving dark stains on the Italian marble where he stood. He didn't look at her. He never looked at her first.

Delphine watched him take off his jacket. He tossed it toward the nearest armchair. Missing his mark, the jacket grazed the silk cushions and landed halfway on the floor. He didn't right it. He walked toward the wet bar, his shoes leaving faint marks on the stone.

Then, the smell drifted over to her.

Bulgarian rose. Madagascar vanilla. A whisper of white musk, clinging tightly to the wool fibers of his discarded jacket.

Delphine's body stiffened. The air in her lungs turned to ice. Her hands froze on the fabric of her knees. The perfume was custom-made. Exclusive. Available only through an appointment-only studio in Paris, commissioned by a lady in New York.

Griselda Hodge.

Her sister. Her husband's...? Delphine couldn't find a word to describe what Gricelda meant to Braxton. A lack of vocabulary. Childhood sweetheart or family friend? A ghost that had haunted their marriage since the moment they exchanged vows.

Braxton poured bourbon into a crystal glass. He drank half of it, then turned to face her.

"Are you still working on that?" His voice carried a flat weariness, like a man talking to furniture.

Delphine swallowed the lingering taste of blood in her mouth. "It must be finished by tomorrow."

“Griselda needs it for the Met Gala,” he said, uttering her name with a tone that was both prayerful and forceful. “You’ll get it.”

This is not a question. It is a confirmation of delivery.

Delphine's gaze moved from the sewing basket upwards to his throat. Her eyes followed the sharp lines of his jaw downwards, with a terrifying, magnetic inevitability. His tie was loose. The top button of his shirt was undone. There, on the starched white collar, was a splash of color, narrower than a fingernail.

Coral pink. Matte finish. Not her shade. Delphine doesn't have anything coral. She doesn't have anything that would leave a mark on her husband.

A strange throbbing stirred in her heart. It wasn't the sharp pain of discovery—she'd known for years. It was something more sluggish. Something heavier. A knife slowly sliced ​​through the tissue, hooking into every fiber. It was utter, insulting laziness. He couldn't even be bothered to look in the mirror.

Braxton followed her gaze to his collar. He raised his hand to adjust his tie, concealing the stain. His fingers didn't tremble. His breathing didn't falter. He didn't back down. There was no explanation.

“Don’t look at me like that,” he said. “You have no right to ask me where I’ve been.”

"I didn't ask."

“That’s what you were going to ask.” He finished his drink and slammed the glass down on the table, the click making her flinch. “You’re always like this. Pathetic little questions. ‘Are you coming home for dinner tonight?’ ‘Did you sleep well?’ As if these things even matter.”

He walked toward her. He stopped close enough that she could smell the bourbon in his breath, the rain in his hair, and the lingering ghostly scent of Griselda perfume on his skin. The invisible miasma of his betrayal enveloped her, thick and suffocating.

“Get this to her apartment by noon tomorrow.” He gestured to the half-finished dress on the mannequin. “Griselda has been very patient with your delays. Don’t embarrass her in front of the committee.”

Delphine's sewing needle trembled. She gripped it tighter, letting the metal pierce her palm, using the sharp, fleshy pain to anchor her plummeting thoughts.

Her phone suddenly vibrated on the side table.

The vibrations were violent and rapid. The screen lit up, and the name displayed made her throat tighten. Meredith Hodge. Her mother in all legal senses. Her guardian in all other respects.

Braxton's lips curled upwards. "Answer the phone. Don't complain. She's worried about her daughter."

Which daughter? The words stuck in Delphine's throat, bitter and useless. She knew which daughter Meredith was worried about. It was never her.

She swiped the screen and held the phone to her ear. "Hello, Mom."

“Delphin.” Meredith’s voice came through sharply and clearly, the tone she used when speaking to her social secretaries who had disappointed her. “I called about the dress. Griselda said you looked overwhelmed when she came to check on the progress.”

Come check. Delphine's pricked finger throbbed. The smell of blood returned, heavy with metallic tang. The coral stain on Braxton's collar flashed through her mind. Come check…where? The office? The hotel?

“She’s worried you’re falling behind,” Meredith continued. “The charity gala is important to her foundation’s work. You know how dedicated she is to those children. If you can’t manage the timeline, we can arrange for a suitable fashion house to take over. Although I really don’t want to think about what impact that will have on your reputation, given how little you have.”

Delphine stared at her reflection in the dark window. A pale woman in rumpled clothes, clutching a needle like a weapon she had forgotten how to use. Rain streamed down the glass, washing away the city outside.

“I finished on time,” she said. Her voice sounded unfamiliar even to herself. Flat. Empty.

“You better be.” Meredith let out a slight sneer, her tongue clicking against her teeth. “Griselda has always been good to you. Don’t repay her with your usual drama.”

The call ended.

Delphine put down her phone. The screen gradually went black. In the sudden silence, she could hear Braxton pouring himself another drink, the sound of ice cubes moving in the bucket, and the distant wail of an ambulance seventeen stories below.

She looked at the dress. The champagne-colored silk caught the light like spilled honey. Forty hours of work, dedicated to a woman who had visited her husband's office, his car, his skin, and then "casually" checked on her progress.

Delphine's jaw throbbed. She realized she had been clenching her teeth, locking everything within the tight cage of her teeth. She opened her mouth. Air rushed in, cold and unfamiliar.

Something fundamental within her had changed. Not anger. Anger should be fiery, vibrant. This was colder. Like a door closing in a house she'd never realized was empty. It was a prisoner's cry, a terrifying, absolute clarity, the realization that the cell door had never been locked.

She placed the needle on the needle holder. This small gesture carried a sense of ritual. The end.

Braxton turned from behind the bar, glass in hand, ready to say something. He caught her expression and paused. In that instant, three years of marriage condensed into a single second of eye contact.

Delphine did not look away. She did not back down. She simply sat there quietly, blood silently seeping into her palms, letting him see everything he could see.

He turned his head away first.

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