
Breaking Free from Betrayal
Chapter 1
The morning light filtering through our Seattle apartment's windows felt different somehow—softer, more romantic. February fourteenth. Valentine's Day. I stretched beneath the covers, my heart already fluttering with anticipation as I reached for my phone to check the time.
Cade had left early for the office, as usual, but he'd kissed my forehead and whispered something about having a surprise for me later. After five years together, he still managed to make me feel like that giddy college girl who'd first fallen for his ambitious dreams and charming smile.
I scrolled through my social media feeds, expecting the usual flood of couple photos and romantic declarations. Instead, my thumb froze mid-swipe. There, trending with thousands of views and comments, was a video that made my blood turn to ice.
The thumbnail showed Cade—my Cade—leaning over a desk, his hand tenderly brushing a strand of hair from Giselle Fox's face. The title read: "CEO & Secretary: When Office Romance Gets Real 💕 #CoupleGoals #OfficeLove."
My hands trembled as I tapped play. The video was professionally shot, intimate and polished. Cade wore the navy suit I'd bought him for Christmas, the one he claimed was his favorite. Giselle sat perched on his desk in a silk blouse that probably cost more than my monthly grocery budget, her perfectly manicured fingers tracing patterns on his chest.
"Some people think office romances are unprofessional," Cade's voice was warm, affectionate—the same tone he used when he told me he loved me. "But when you find your soulmate, you can't let corporate policies stand in the way."
Giselle giggled, a sound like wind chimes that made my stomach lurch. "Especially when certain jealous employees try to sabotage what we have. But true love always wins, doesn't it, darling?"
The camera panned to show printed emails scattered across the desk—emails with my name clearly visible, doctored to make me look like some scheming villain trying to destroy their relationship. Comments flooded the screen: "Iris is so pathetic," "Imagine being that desperate," "Girl needs to take the hint and move on."
I watched in horror as they staged intimate moments—sharing coffee from the same mug, Cade spinning Giselle around the office, tender kisses that looked devastatingly real. The worst part was how natural they seemed together, how effortlessly romantic.
My phone clattered to the floor as I stumbled to the bathroom, bile rising in my throat. Five years. Five years of supporting his dreams, of believing in us, of sacrificing my own career to help build his startup from nothing. And this was how he repaid me?
I splashed cold water on my face, staring at my reflection in the mirror. When had I become so... ordinary? My brown hair hung limp around my shoulders, nothing like Giselle's glossy blonde waves. My eyes were puffy from sleep, my skin pale from too many late nights helping Cade with proposals and presentations.
The drive to his office passed in a blur of rage and heartbreak. Seattle's February drizzle matched my mood perfectly, each raindrop on the windshield like another tear I refused to shed. Not yet. Not until I heard his explanation.
The elevator to the fifteenth floor felt like a descent into hell. Each floor that passed gave me more time to imagine what I'd say, how I'd demand answers. But nothing could have prepared me for what I found.
Cade's office door was open, and there they were—not filming this time, but wrapped in each other's arms like lovers who'd been apart for years instead of hours. Giselle's laugh tinkled through the air as she traced her finger along his jawline.
"Cade." My voice came out as barely a whisper.
They sprang apart, but not with the guilt I expected. Instead, Cade's expression shifted to one of annoyance, like I was an unwelcome interruption to his day.
"Iris." He straightened his tie, not even having the decency to look ashamed. "What are you doing here?"
"What am I—" The words caught in my throat. "I saw the video, Cade. The videos. How could you do this to me?"
Giselle perched on the edge of his desk, her smile sharp as broken glass. "Oh, honey. You saw those?" She tilted her head with mock sympathy. "They're just for fun. For my social media presence. You know how important it is for influencers to create engaging content."
"Engaging content?" My voice cracked. "You made me look like some desperate, pathetic woman trying to break you up. You used my private emails—"
"Those emails were hardly private," Cade interrupted, his tone dismissive. "And honestly, Iris, you're being dramatic. It's just acting. You know Giselle's trying to build her brand."
The casualness of his dismissal hit me like a physical blow. "Just acting? Cade, you told the entire internet that I was trying to sabotage your relationship. With her." I gestured toward Giselle, who was examining her manicure with bored interest.
"Well," Giselle said, her voice honey-sweet with venom, "you have been rather... clingy lately. Always questioning where Cade goes, who he talks to. It's not exactly attractive, is it?" She stood and moved closer to me, her heels clicking against the polished floor. "I mean, look at us, Iris." She gestured between herself and me. "Can you really blame him for wanting something... more?"
My gaze traveled between them—Cade in his expensive suit, Giselle in her designer clothes, both of them beautiful and successful and so perfectly matched. Then I caught sight of something that made my heart shatter completely.
On Cade's desk sat an elegant vintage camera, the brass fittings gleaming in the office lights. The exact camera I'd been dreaming about for months, the one I'd bookmarked on countless websites and mentioned at least a dozen times.
"That's..." I pointed at it with a shaking finger. "That's the camera I wanted."
Cade followed my gaze and shrugged. "Giselle mentioned she was interested in photography. I thought it would be perfect for her content creation."
The words hit me like a slap. All those times I'd shown him vintage cameras online, all those hints about wanting to get back into photography—my old passion that I'd abandoned to support his dreams. And he'd given it to her.
"You're being dramatic, Iris," he said, his voice taking on that condescending tone I'd grown to hate. "You need to get over yourself. This jealousy isn't a good look on you."
Giselle picked up the camera, cradling it like a precious baby. "It really is beautiful, isn't it? Cade has such exquisite taste. He knows exactly what a woman wants."
The emphasis on 'woman' wasn't lost on me. Neither was the way she looked me up and down, her eyes cataloging every flaw, every way I fell short of her polished perfection.
I stood there in that gleaming office, surrounded by the success I'd helped build, facing the man I'd loved for five years and the woman who'd helped him destroy me, and realized that everything I'd believed about my life had been a carefully constructed lie.
And the worst part? They expected me to just accept it.
You may also like





