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Divorce After His Betrayal Novel Cover

Divorce After His Betrayal

I smoothed the burgundy silk dress against my thighs for the third time, checking my reflection in the hallway mirror. The dress still fit perfectly—the same one Sterling had surprised me with for our first anniversary, when he'd whispered that the color made my eyes look like melted chocolate. Tonight marked five years since we'd exchanged vows, five years since I'd believed I was the luckiest woman alive to marry my best friend. The restaurant reservation was at seven-thirty. Sterling's favorite table by the window, overlooking the city lights that had witnessed so many of our conversations about the future. I'd called ahead to ensure they had his preferred Bordeaux chilled and waiting—the 2015 vintage he'd discovered during our honeymoon in France, back when everything felt possible. My fingers traced the delicate pearl necklace at my throat, another gift from Sterling. Tonight felt important somehow, weighted with significance beyond just marking another year. Maybe it was time to finally discuss adoption seriously, or perhaps explore other paths to parenthood. The doctors had been clear about my limitations after the accident, but there were options.
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Chapter 2

I waited until Sterling's breathing deepened into sleep before slipping out of bed. My bare feet made no sound on the hardwood floors as I crept to his home office, heart hammering against my ribs. The digital clock on his desk read 2:17 AM—the witching hour, when truths refused to stay buried.

His phone lay charging beside his laptop. Five years of marriage, and I'd never once felt the need to check it. Trust had been our foundation. Or so I'd believed.

"Our son," he'd said. The words replayed in my mind like a broken record as I picked up his phone with trembling fingers. The screen lit up, demanding a passcode. Of course. I tried his birthday. Access denied. Our anniversary date. Nothing. Then I typed in the date we met—the day he claimed changed his life forever.

The screen unlocked.

Text messages appeared first, dozens from someone named "V." I scrolled through them, each word burning into my consciousness.

"Little man is asking for you again."

"He wore the baseball cap you bought him all day."

"We miss you. When are you coming home?"

Home. As if Sterling had two homes, two lives running parallel. I set the phone down, suddenly nauseated, and turned to his laptop. The password was the same—the day we met. How ironic that the date he used to hide his betrayal was the one that had once symbolized our beginning.

I pulled up his email, then his bank statements. Regular transfers to an account I didn't recognize. Monthly payments to an address across town—an apartment, judging by the property management company name. Credit card statements showed purchases at children's clothing stores, toy shops, and a pediatrician's office.

Dr. Rosenberg, Pediatrics. The name appeared monthly. A child's doctor.

Each new discovery felt like another knife sliding between my ribs. I printed what I needed, hands shaking so badly I nearly dropped the papers. Back in our bedroom, Sterling slept peacefully, unaware that I was dismantling the beautiful lie we'd been living.

The next morning, I called in sick to my charity board meeting. Instead, I parked my car across from the apartment address I'd found. It was a nice building in a family-friendly neighborhood—trees lining the sidewalks, a playground visible from the street. I waited, wondering if this was what madness felt like—this calm, detached observation of my life crumbling.

At 10:30, Sterling's car pulled up. He was supposed to be at a business meeting downtown. I sank lower in my seat, watching as he stepped out, checking his reflection in the car window before heading inside.

Twenty minutes later, he emerged with a woman and a small boy. The woman was stunning—tall and graceful with flowing dark hair. The child couldn't have been more than three, his little hand clasped in Sterling's as they walked toward the park across the street.

I followed at a distance, slipping on sunglasses and a hat I'd brought for disguise. They settled at a playground, and I found a bench with a clear view. The scene that unfolded before me was one I'd dreamed about for years—Sterling pushing a laughing child on the swings, lifting him high on the slide, catching him at the bottom with strong arms and proud smiles.

The boy had Sterling's eyes. Those distinctive green eyes that I'd once thought would be passed down to our children, before the accident took that future from me.

The woman—Violette, I presumed—watched them with obvious adoration. At one point, Sterling joined her on their bench, slipping an arm around her shoulders and kissing her temple in a gesture so familiar it made my stomach clench. They looked like a perfect family, the kind we'd planned to be.

I photographed them with my phone, each click feeling like I was documenting my own funeral. When they headed back to the apartment, I returned to our house—the house that now felt like a museum of false memories.

I spent hours arranging the evidence in Sterling's home office. Bank statements. Phone records. Photos. By the time his key turned in the lock that evening, I was sitting calmly at his desk, waiting.

"Madeline?" He called out, confusion in his voice at finding me in his sanctuary. "What are you doing in here?"

I gestured to the papers spread before me. "I think we need to talk about your son, Sterling. And about Violette."

His face drained of color. "I don't know what you're—"

"Stop." My voice was steady, surprising even myself. "I heard you on the phone at our anniversary dinner. I've seen the apartment you pay for. I watched you at the park today with them." I pushed the photos toward him. "So please, don't insult me by lying anymore."

He stared at the evidence, shoulders slumping. Then his expression hardened. "You followed me? You invaded my privacy?"

"You invaded our marriage," I countered, ice forming around my heart. "You have a child with another woman."

"It's not what you think," he said, running his hand through his hair—his tell when lying. "Violette is just—it doesn't mean anything. You're my wife, Madeline. You're the one I love."

"Love?" The word tasted bitter. "Is this what love looks like to you?"

"It was a mistake," he insisted, approaching me with hands outstretched. "A weakness. But it doesn't change us. I won't let you throw away five years over this."

"I'm not throwing anything away," I said quietly. "You already did that."

"You're being hysterical," he snapped, mask slipping. "This is why I kept it from you. I knew you couldn't handle it rationally."

I stood, gathering the evidence into a folder. "I want a divorce, Sterling."

"No." His voice was flat, final. "That's not happening. We can work through this. I'll end things with her. Whatever you want."

"What I wanted," I said, walking toward the door, "was not to be lied to for years while you built a family with someone else."

His hand caught my arm, grip tight. "You're not leaving me, Madeline. The Bennetts don't divorce. Think about what that would do to our families, to the business."

I looked down at his fingers digging into my skin, then back up to his face—this stranger wearing my husband's features.

"Let go of me," I said softly. "Or I'll make sure everyone knows exactly why the perfect Bennett marriage failed."

His hand dropped away as if burned, and I walked out, leaving him standing amid the ruins of our life together.

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