
Divorce at the Gala
Chapter 1
I scrolled mindlessly through Instagram, the blue light from my phone casting shadows across our pristine white leather sofa. The penthouse was quiet except for Madison's occasional laughter drifting from her study. At least someone was happy tonight.
William had missed dinner again. The salmon I'd prepared—his favorite—sat wrapped in the refrigerator, untouched. Another business emergency, he'd texted. Too important to reschedule.
I paused my scrolling when Victoria Hayes's story appeared. My finger hovered over the screen, a familiar knot forming in my stomach. I shouldn't look. I knew better. Yet I tapped anyway, a moth drawn to the flame that had been burning me for years.
The first image showed Central Park bathed in golden afternoon light. The second made my breath catch—William pushing a laughing boy on a swing, his face lit with genuine joy. I'd seen that expression so rarely it seemed almost foreign on my husband's features. Certainly never directed at Madison.
I zoomed in on William's face. The crinkles around his eyes. The unrestrained smile. The gentle way his hands steadied the child on the swing.
'Daddy's day off!' Victoria's caption read, followed by a string of heart emojis.
My phone pinged with a calendar reminder: 'Madison's Europe Trip - CANCELED.' William had shut down Madison's post-SAT celebration just last week. An unavoidable business emergency, he'd claimed. Madison had nodded stoically, but I'd seen the disappointment in her eyes before she masked it.
I checked the timestamp on Victoria's story. This afternoon. The same 'emergency' that had crushed our daughter's dreams.
Twenty years of compromise and silence crystallized into something hard and sharp inside me. My thumb hovered over Victoria's story. The rational part of my brain—the part that had kept peace for two decades—screamed at me to close the app. To swallow this insult like I had swallowed hundreds before.
Instead, I typed: 'Lucky boy—to have a father so devoted.'
The moment I hit send, a strange calm washed over me. No regret. No panic. Just the quiet certainty that something fundamental had shifted.
Seconds later, my phone buzzed. William's name flashed on the screen. I answered, holding the phone slightly away from my ear.
'Have you lost your mind?' His voice was low, dangerous. 'Delete that comment. Now.'
'Why?' I asked, surprised by the steadiness in my voice. 'It's just an observation.'
'This is not a game, Catherine.' His tone shifted to the one he used when explaining simple concepts to incompetent employees. 'You're embarrassing yourself. And me.'
'Am I?' I walked to the window, looking out at the glittering Manhattan skyline. 'I'm simply noting what a dedicated father figure you appear to be. To Victoria's son.'
'This is not a conversation we're having over the phone.'
Through the crackling speaker, I heard a child's voice in the background. 'Dad, catch me!'
My breath stopped.
'Coming, buddy!' William's voice transformed, warm and tender in a way I'd never heard directed at Madison. 'Just one second.'
Dad. Not William. Not Mr. Sterling.
Dad.
The last fragile thread of hope I'd been clinging to—that perhaps this was just a casual affair, that the boy was someone else's child—snapped clean.
'Catherine,' William's voice returned, sharper now. 'Delete the comment and we'll discuss this when I get home.'
'When will that be?' I asked, though I already knew the answer. 'After you're done playing family with your other child?'
Silence hung between us for three heartbeats.
'You're being hysterical,' he finally said, his tone dismissive. 'We'll talk when you're rational.'
The call ended.
I stood motionless, phone still pressed to my ear. Behind me, Madison's laughter had stopped. The penthouse felt suddenly vast and hollow, like a museum dedicated to a life that had never really existed.
Twenty years of marriage. Twenty years of building his company, raising his daughter, maintaining his home, protecting his image. Twenty years of shrinking myself to fit the spaces he allowed me to occupy.
And all it took was one Instagram story to show me exactly how little any of it meant to him.
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