
Contract Marriage Turns to Passion
Chapter 3
I had to see it with my own eyes. The contract wasn't enough—I needed to witness the truth that had been hiding in plain sight all these years. That's why I followed Alexander to the Hamptons, trailing his silver Bentley in a rental car, keeping just enough distance that he wouldn't notice me in his rearview mirror.
The neighboring estate to Alexander's waterfront property belonged to an aging hedge fund manager who barely remembered me from a Christmas party years ago. But he remembered my camera, how I'd captured his grandchildren in a moment of pure joy. That memory was enough for him to grant me access to his dock with a sympathetic nod.
"Trouble in paradise?" he'd asked, not unkindly.
I'd forced a smile and muttered something about a surprise anniversary photo. The lie tasted bitter on my tongue.
Now I crouched at the edge of the weathered dock, my telephoto lens an extension of my eye as I focused on Alexander's yacht. The Isabelle—named for me in those early, intoxicating days of our relationship—bobbed gently in the afternoon sun. My camera's shutter clicked softly as I captured Alexander pacing the deck, checking his watch, straightening his tie with unusual nervousness.
Victoria arrived in a sleek white dress that clung to her slender frame, her dark hair loose around her shoulders—so different from the severe bun she wore at the office. Through my viewfinder, I watched Alexander's face transform as he helped her aboard. The mask he wore with me fell away, revealing an expression of raw hunger I hadn't seen in years.
I zoomed in tighter, my photographer's hands steady despite the trembling in my chest. A waiter appeared with champagne. Alexander took Victoria's hands in his, and then—
He knelt.
The camera captured what my heart couldn't bear to process: Alexander Blackwood on one knee, sliding a diamond ring onto Victoria Sterling's finger. The stone caught the sunlight, sending prisms dancing across the deck—larger than the one on my own hand, I noted with detached precision.
The cork popped from the champagne bottle in slow motion through my lens. Once. Twice. Three times. Each explosion a gunshot to my chest. Victoria threw her head back in laughter, champagne frothing over her fingers as Alexander rose to kiss her. His hands cradled her face with a tenderness I'd forgotten existed.
I took photo after photo, documenting my own destruction with professional detachment. Click. Alexander lifting her off her feet. Click. Victoria's ring glinting as she ran her fingers through his hair. Click. Their foreheads pressed together, sharing secrets I would never know.
When I couldn't bear it anymore, I lowered my camera and stumbled away from the dock, away from the yacht, away from the life I thought was mine. My feet carried me to a deserted stretch of beach, the sand cool beneath my bare feet as the afternoon faded toward evening.
I sank to my knees at the water's edge, camera still clutched in my hands like a talisman. Instinctively, I raised it to my eye, framing the rolling waves through the viewfinder. The familiar action that had always brought me comfort now felt hollow. The ocean blurred through my tears, the horizon line wobbling as my hands finally betrayed the earthquake in my heart.
Photography had been my sanctuary since I was a lost girl in the foster system, my way of creating permanence in a world where nothing lasted. Alexander had understood that, had nurtured that part of me. Or so I'd thought. Now my art felt like just another weapon he'd given me to wound myself with—each frame capturing a truth I couldn't escape.
I lowered the camera to my lap and let the tears come freely, tasting salt on my lips from both the sea spray and my own grief. The waves continued their relentless rhythm, indifferent to my pain. In and out. Destruction and renewal. Nature's cruel reminder that life continues even when yours has shattered.
Three days later, I returned to our Manhattan penthouse, my face composed into a mask that rivaled Alexander's. I'd expected confrontation, accusations, perhaps even a confession. Instead, he was waiting for me in our home studio, his expression unreadable as he gestured for me to sit.
"I have a proposition for you," he said, his voice businesslike. "Victoria needs a photographer for her maternity shoot."
The words hit me like physical blows. Maternity. Victoria. Shoot.
"You want me to photograph your pregnant mistress?" My voice sounded distant, as if it belonged to someone else.
"I want you to be professional." His eyes hardened. "Your exhibition funding comes from my accounts, Isabella. Don't forget that."
The threat wasn't subtle. My exhibition—my first real chance at professional recognition—hung in the balance. With it, my only hope for independence.
I swallowed hard, photographer's mind already calculating angles and lighting despite my revulsion. "When?"
"Tomorrow. And the following week." He stood, straightening his cufflinks. "I expect your best work."
The next day, I arranged soft box lighting in our home studio, adjusting the muslin backdrop while Victoria preened before the mirror. Her belly, rounded with what could only be Alexander's child, protruded proudly beneath a flowing white gown.
"Just like our wedding photos," she said with a smirk, catching my eye in the reflection.
I focused on my camera settings, refusing to give her the satisfaction of my pain. "Face the window, please. The natural light will complement the artificial."
Throughout the session, Alexander hovered nearby, his eyes never leaving Victoria. When I directed her to cradle her belly, he stepped into the frame, placing his hands over hers with reverent tenderness.
"Capture this," he commanded, not looking at me as he bent to whisper in Victoria's ear. "This moment matters."
I pressed the shutter, documenting their intimacy with mechanical precision, each click driving the knife deeper. Through my viewfinder, I watched Alexander kiss her temple, her cheek, her lips—each gesture a deliberate desecration of our vows.
As I adjusted my lens for the final shot, I heard him whisper, "Just a little longer, my love. Soon we won't have to hide."
Victoria's eyes met mine through the camera, triumphant and cold. I took the shot, capturing not just her victorious smile, but the hollow depths of my own reflection in her eyes.
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