
His Father’s Secret Wife Slapped My Mother-in-Law at a Charity Auction
Chapter 2
The sound that escaped Diane's throat was barely human—a laugh that scraped against my nerves like nails on glass. She stepped closer to Margot, who was still struggling to breathe, the nitroglycerin tablet dissolving slowly under her tongue.
"If she's dying, that's not my problem," Diane announced to the crowd, her voice carrying across the silent ballroom with chilling clarity. "Thieves don't get ambulances."
I fumbled for my phone, my hands shaking as I tried to dial 911. "She needs medical attention—"
"No." Diane's hand shot out, knocking my phone from my grasp. It clattered across the marble floor, the screen cracking on impact. "Not until everyone sees what kind of people you really are."
With theatrical precision, Diane reached into her Hermès clutch and withdrew something that made my blood turn to ice. A black American Express card, its obsidian surface gleaming under the chandelier light. But it wasn't just any black card—engraved in elegant script across its face was a name that shouldn't exist.
*Sterling Blackwell.*
The crowd pressed closer, their collective intake of breath audible. Diane held the card aloft like a weapon, her smile triumphant and cruel.
"Sterling's card has been locked in the family vault for over a decade," I said, my voice hoarse with disbelief. "It's impossible for you to have it. That has to be a fake."
Diane's laugh echoed through the ballroom again. "Oh, darling. Let's find out, shall we?"
She strode toward the registration table where Marcus Pemberton, the auction house's chief financial officer, stood frozen with his tablet. Marcus was a thin man with wire-rimmed glasses who had been authenticating payments all evening with meticulous precision.
"Mr. Pemberton," Diane called out sweetly, "would you be so kind as to verify this card's authenticity?"
Marcus's hands trembled slightly as he accepted the black Amex. The entire ballroom had fallen into a silence so complete I could hear my own heartbeat thundering in my ears. He swiped the card through his verification device, his face growing paler with each passing second.
The machine beeped. Once. Twice.
Then Marcus looked up, his voice barely above a whisper. "The card is... it's authentic. Active account, unlimited credit line. Registered to Sterling Blackwell."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Around us, the crowd erupted into whispers and gasps. I heard fragments of conversation—"always knew something was off about that family"—"poor Diane, imagine discovering your husband's affair like this"—"and at a charity event, no less."
But it was Margot's reaction that shattered me completely.
My mother-in-law's face crumpled, tears streaming down her cheeks as she stared at the card in Diane's manicured fingers. Her voice, when it came, was broken and raw.
"Sterling said..." She pressed a hand to her chest, her breathing still labored. "He told me that card only belonged to me. That it would never... never be given to anyone else."
The pain in her voice was so raw, so genuine, that even some of the hostile crowd members shifted uncomfortably. But Diane wasn't finished.
"Ladies and gentlemen," she announced, turning to address the ballroom like she was hosting her own show, "what you're witnessing is the exposure of a decades-long deception. This woman has been living off stolen wealth, wearing stolen jewelry, playing the grieving widow when she was nothing more than a mistress who outlived her usefulness."
Phones emerged from evening bags like weapons. The soft clicking of camera shutters filled the air as Manhattan's elite documented our humiliation for posterity. I could already imagine the headlines: "Society Scandal: Sterling Family Fraud Exposed at Charity Gala."
Desperation clawed at my throat. There had to be an explanation. There had to be something we were missing. I reached for my phone, then remembered it was broken on the floor.
"I need to call my husband," I said, my voice cutting through the chaos. "Weston will explain everything."
But before I could move toward the registration table to borrow Marcus's phone, Diane was already pulling out her own device. Her fingers moved with practiced ease, and within seconds, the distinctive ringtone of a video call filled the air.
She held the phone high, making sure the camera captured both Margot and me in the frame. The screen flickered, and then a familiar face appeared—but the angle was wrong, the lighting too intimate. Weston was clearly in a bedroom, his hair tousled, wearing only a white dress shirt that hung open at the collar.
"Weston, baby!" Diane's voice was sickeningly sweet, but loud enough for the entire ballroom to hear. "I need you to come help Mommy deal with this woman who's been destroying our family!"
The word 'Mommy' hit me like a sledgehammer to the chest. I stared at the phone screen, waiting for Weston to correct her, to demand an explanation, to defend his wife and mother.
Instead, he smiled.
It was a warm, affectionate smile—the kind he used to give me during our early dating days. But now it was directed at this woman who had just assaulted his mother and publicly humiliated his wife.
"Mom," he said, and the single word destroyed everything I thought I knew about my life. "I already sent Mr. Huxley ahead to handle the legal side. I'll be there in twenty minutes."
Mom.
He called her Mom.
The ballroom spun around me, the faces of the crowd blurring into a kaleidoscope of judgment and schadenfreude. My legs felt unsteady, and I reached for the nearest table to keep from collapsing.
Three years of marriage. Three years of believing I knew the man I shared a bed with, planned a future with, trusted with every secret of my heart. And he was calling another woman Mom while his real mother stood beside me, tears streaming down her face, clutching her chest as her heart struggled to keep beating.
The phone was still connected, Weston's face still visible on the screen. I stepped forward, my voice barely controlled.
"Weston," I said, and he looked directly at me through the camera. There was no surprise in his expression, no shock at seeing me there. Just a cold acknowledgment that made my stomach turn. "We need to talk. Now."
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