
Birthday Betrayal Unveiled
Chapter 3
I returned to our penthouse that evening with my pride in tatters, the memory of Alexander's public humiliation still burning in my chest. The elevator doors opened to our Tribeca sanctuary—a place that had never felt like home but was at least my refuge from the world. Tonight, even that small comfort would be stripped away.
There, in our pristine foyer, sat a designer suitcase I didn't recognize. Cream leather with gold accents—expensive, elegant, and unmistakably feminine. Before I could process what this meant, voices drifted from the living room. Alexander's deep timbre followed by a melodic female laugh that made my stomach clench.
I rounded the corner to find them standing together—Alexander in his casual home attire of tailored slacks and a cashmere sweater, and Victoria, looking effortlessly beautiful in a simple silk blouse and jeans. They turned to me simultaneously, like actors hitting their mark in a well-rehearsed play.
"Stella," Alexander said, his voice neutral but his eyes watchful. "Victoria will be staying with us for a while."
Victoria's smile was perfectly calibrated—sympathetic but triumphant. "I hope you don't mind. The role requires intensive preparation, and Alexander thought it would be helpful if we could work together... closely."
The double meaning hung in the air between us. I stood frozen, unable to form words as Alexander placed his hand on the small of Victoria's back.
"She needs support," he said, his lips curving into a smile that never reached his eyes. "You'll adjust."
It wasn't a request. It wasn't even a statement. It was a command, delivered with the casual cruelty of someone who knew I had nowhere else to go, no power to object.
"The guest room is already made up," I finally managed, my voice sounding distant to my own ears.
"Oh, I know," Victoria replied, her fingers brushing Alexander's arm with practiced familiarity. "Alexander showed me everything."
I turned away before either could see the tears threatening to spill. Three years of marriage, and he'd never once shown me that kind of consideration. Three years, and now I was expected to watch another woman take my place in my own home.
---
Later that night, I wandered the penthouse like a ghost, unable to sleep, unwilling to retreat to my bedroom where I'd lie awake listening for sounds from the guest room. The lights in Alexander's study were still on, a thin line of gold beneath the heavy oak door. As I approached, intending to walk past to the kitchen, I heard their voices.
"This line here," Victoria was saying, her voice warm with amusement. "It's perfect for the scene where she confronts him."
Alexander's low chuckle in response sent a shard of ice through my heart. "You see it exactly as I do. That's why you're perfect for this."
I shouldn't have looked. I knew it would only hurt more. But I found myself drawn to the partially open door, peering through the crack like a child spying on adults.
They sat side by side at his desk, script pages spread before them. Victoria was leaning toward him, her shoulder touching his, her dark hair falling forward to create an intimate curtain between them. Alexander was pointing to something on the page, his face closer to hers than it had ever been to mine when we weren't posing for cameras.
As I watched, Victoria laughed again, the sound rich and genuine, and turned her face toward his. Their profiles were perfectly aligned, lips inches apart, existing in a bubble of connection I had never penetrated.
"She'll never understand what we're creating," Victoria murmured, her voice carrying just enough for me to hear. "She doesn't have the depth."
I backed away silently, my chest tight with a jealousy so acute it felt like physical pain. This wasn't just about a role anymore. This wasn't even about our marriage. They were building something together—a creative partnership, an understanding, a world—that excluded me completely.
---
I rose early the next morning, desperate to escape the penthouse before encountering either of them. I headed to Café Lux, our—my—favorite SoHo hideaway, the one place in the city that still felt like it belonged just to me.
The morning barista nodded in recognition as I ordered my usual. I took my latte to the corner table by the window, the one I always chose for its view of the street and the privacy it afforded. As I settled into the familiar wooden chair, something caught my eye—a small yellow sticky note peeking out from beneath the table edge.
Curious, I peeled it free. Written in a neat, precise hand were the words: "I would trade ten years of my life for your lifetime of happiness."
My heart stuttered. I knew that handwriting. I'd seen it on birthday cards, on legal documents, on the notes Alexander sometimes left for his assistant.
I stared at the yellow square, my coffee cooling forgotten before me. What did this mean? Was it even meant for me? Or was this another cruelty, another mind game in whatever twisted scenario Alexander was orchestrating?
I turned the note over, searching for more—a clue, an explanation, anything that might make sense of the chaos my life had become. But there was nothing else. Just those words, in Alexander's unmistakable hand, promising a sacrifice I couldn't begin to understand from a man who seemed determined to destroy me.
Could Alexander actually care? And if he did, why was he tormenting me this way?
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