
Divorced After His Livestream Affair
Chapter 1
The link came in while I was setting the table.
At first, I thought it was spam.
Unknown Number:
Watch this before you marry him.
I stared at the message for three seconds, then looked toward the kitchen, where the soup was still simmering on low heat.
Ryan liked dinner ready by seven.
Not because he was old-fashioned, he always said. Because he was “busy,” because billion-dollar deals didn’t wait, because I had “more time than him.”
And because I loved him, I always smiled and said, “Of course.”
I wiped my hands on a towel and picked up my phone again.
The link was still there.
A livestream.
My thumb hovered over it.
Something inside my chest tightened.
Don’t open it, a soft voice in my head whispered.
But another voice, colder and clearer, said:
Open it.
So I did.
The screen loaded.
Loud music burst from my phone. Neon lights. A private club. A champagne tower. Thousands of comments flying up the side of the screen.
And then I saw him.
Ryan Cole.
My fiancé.
The man I was supposed to marry in twenty-six days.
He was sitting on a velvet couch, his shirt half unbuttoned, one arm stretched lazily across the backrest.
And curled against his side was Sophia Lane.
Influencer. Beauty brand ambassador. Professional homewrecker, apparently.
She laughed into the camera, glossy lips close to Ryan’s jaw.
“Come on, babe,” she said, dragging out the word babe like she owned it. “Your fans want to know. Are you really getting married?”
The comments exploded.
OMG IS THAT RYAN COLE?
Wait isn’t he engaged?
Sophia girl are you serious???
This is messy and I love it.
Ryan chuckled.
That laugh.
The same laugh he used when I burned toast. When I tripped over my own heels. When I asked questions in meetings and he said, “Sweetheart, let the adults handle this.”
“Yeah,” he said, lifting his glass. “I’m getting married.”
Sophia pouted. “So what am I?”
Ryan looked at her.
Then he kissed her.
Not a mistake. Not a drunk accident. Not a quick, guilty moment.
He kissed her like the whole world had permission to watch.
The phone almost slipped from my hand.
I gripped it harder.
Sophia pulled back and giggled. “Your fiancée is going to cry.”
Ryan leaned back, smiling.
“Emily? She cries over sad commercials.”
The comments went insane.
Poor Emily.
Does she know???
He’s so savage.
She’s probably boring anyway.
Sophia tilted her head. “But what if she finds out?”
Ryan shrugged.
“She won’t do anything.”
My breath stopped.
“She loves me too much,” he continued, like he was explaining the weather. “Emily is sweet. Quiet. Harmless. She’ll cry, sure. Maybe pack a suitcase. But by morning, she’ll be begging me not to leave.”
Sophia laughed so hard she dropped her head onto his shoulder.
“And the prenup?” she asked.
Ryan’s smile widened.
My blood turned cold.
Sophia knew about the prenup.
The prenup he had told me was “just a formality.”
The prenup he had pushed across the table three weeks ago with a kiss on my forehead and said, “Baby, this is only to keep my board happy. You know I’d never hurt you.”
On the livestream, Ryan raised his champagne glass.
“The prenup says she gets nothing if she walks away before the wedding.”
Sophia blinked at him. “Nothing?”
“Nothing.”
“What about the shares her father left her?”
Ryan smirked. “Complicated. But let’s just say after the wedding, those shares become much easier to manage.”
The room around me went silent.
The soup bubbled over on the stove, but I didn’t move.
Sophia leaned close to the camera. “So you’re marrying the cute little good girl for money?”
Ryan laughed.
“Don’t make me sound that bad.”
“You are that bad.”
“Maybe,” he said. “But she makes it easy.”
Something inside me cracked.
Not loudly.
Just one clean break.
For three years, I had softened myself for him.
I had lowered my voice when he said I sounded too emotional.
I had stopped correcting him in public because he hated feeling embarrassed.
I had worn pastel dresses because he said I looked “more wife material” that way.
I had turned myself into the kind of woman he wanted.
Gentle. Forgiving. Easy.
And all this time, he thought easy meant weak.
The livestream kept going.
Sophia traced a finger down his chest. “What if she grows a spine?”
Ryan snorted.
“My Emily? Please.”
My Emily.
The words made me sick.
Sophia said, “Maybe she’ll surprise you.”
“She won’t.”
I stared at the screen.
Then I smiled.
It felt strange on my face.
Unfamiliar.
“Oh, Ryan,” I whispered. “You have no idea.”
Another message popped up from the unknown number.
Unknown Number:
Now do you believe me?
My fingers moved before I could think.
Me:
Who are you?
The reply came almost instantly.
Unknown Number:
Alexander Black.
I froze.
The Alexander Black.
CEO of Blackstone Capital. Youngest self-made billionaire in New York. Ryan’s biggest business rival.
I had seen him twice at charity events.
Tall. Cold. Always in black. The kind of man people stopped talking around because his silence felt more powerful than their words.
I typed back slowly.
Me:
Why are you sending me this?
Alexander Black:
Because your fiancé is not only cheating on you.
A second message came.
Alexander Black:
He is using you.
My stomach twisted.
Me:
Explain.
Alexander Black:
Not over text.
I looked back at the livestream.
Ryan was now answering questions from drunk viewers.
Someone asked, “Is Emily hot?”
Sophia rolled her eyes. “She’s cute. Like a church girl.”
Ryan laughed. “She’s wife material. Sophia is fun material.”
The comments filled with laughing emojis.
My vision blurred.
Not from tears.
From rage.
Me:
Where?
Alexander Black:
The lobby bar at the Langford Hotel. Thirty minutes.
Me:
How do I know this isn’t a setup?
Alexander Black:
You don’t.
I stared at that.
Then another message came.
Alexander Black:
But if I wanted to destroy you, Emily, I wouldn’t have warned you first.
I turned off the stove.
The soup had burned at the bottom.
Good.
Ryan hated burned soup.
I walked upstairs, opened my closet, and stood in front of the row of soft dresses Ryan loved.
Cream. Blush pink.Baby blue.
All delicate. All obedient.
My hand moved past them and stopped on a black dress I hadn’t worn in years.
Ryan once told me it made me look “too cold.”
I put it on.
Then I wiped off my pale lipstick and painted my mouth red.
When I came downstairs, my phone buzzed again.
Ryan.
Ryan:
Dinner ready?
I looked at the message.
For a moment, the old Emily almost answered.
Yes, baby.
Of course.
Drive safe.
Instead, I typed:
Me:
Yes.
Then I deleted it.
I typed again.
Me:
Almost.
That was better.
Let him come home to burned soup.
Let him think I was still waiting.
I grabbed my coat and left through the back entrance.
The Langford Hotel was only twenty minutes away, but the ride felt longer.
Every traffic light gave me another memory I wished I could erase.
Ryan proposing under fireworks.
Ryan holding my hand at my father’s funeral.
Ryan telling me, “You’re safe with me.”
Liar.
By the time I reached the hotel, my hands had stopped shaking.
Alexander Black was already there.
He sat alone near the window, dressed in a black suit, no tie, one hand resting on a glass of whiskey he didn’t seem interested in drinking.
He looked up the second I walked in.
For a heartbeat, neither of us spoke.
Then he stood.
“Emily Hart.”
His voice was low. Calm. Controlled.
I walked to the table.
“Mr. Black.”
“Alexander.”
“I don’t think we’re friends.”
“No,” he said. “Not yet.”
I sat down across from him.
A waiter approached, but Alexander lifted one finger, and the man disappeared.
Power, I thought.
Quiet. Effortless. Real.
Ryan performed power.
Alexander owned it.
I placed my phone on the table.
“Talk.”
His eyes flicked to my face.
“You’re not crying.”
“Disappointed?”
“No,” he said. “Impressed.”
I laughed once, without humor. “Don’t be. I cried enough for him already.”
Alexander leaned back.
“Ryan has been moving money through three shell companies for the past eight months. One of them is connected to Sophia Lane.”
I went still.
“What?”
“He is planning to marry you, gain influence over Hart Group shares, push you out of voting control, and merge your family’s company into Cole Enterprises.”
“No.” The word left my mouth automatically.
Alexander didn’t blink.
“Yes.”
“My father built that company.”
“I know.”
“Ryan told me the merger was just future planning.”
“Ryan lied.”
I swallowed.
Alexander slid a folder across the table.
I didn’t touch it at first.
“What’s in there?”
“Bank transfers. Company registrations. Messages between Ryan’s CFO and Sophia’s manager. Enough to prove intent, but not enough to win yet.”
“Yet?”
“Yet,” he said.
I opened the folder.
Numbers. Names. Dates.
Ryan’s signature appeared on one page.
Sophia’s legal name appeared on another.
My engagement ring suddenly felt too tight.
I pulled it off and placed it on the table.
Alexander watched the movement.
“Are you sure?”
I looked at him.
“About the ring?”
“About what comes next.”
I almost laughed.
“What do you think comes next?”
“You go home,” he said. “You smile at him. You let him believe you’re still the woman he mocked on that livestream.”
My mouth went dry.
“And while I do that?”
“I help you collect everything.”
“Why?”
His jaw tightened slightly.
It was the first crack in his perfect calm.
“Because Ryan Cole has been trying to destroy my company for years.”
“So this is revenge for you too.”
“Yes.”
At least he was honest.
I appreciated that more than I expected.
“And after Ryan falls?” I asked. “What do you get?”
Alexander held my gaze.
“That depends on you.”
I narrowed my eyes. “Careful.”
His lips almost curved.
“There she is.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means the woman in that livestream didn’t sound like you.”
I looked away.
“For three years, I tried to be soft.”
“Why?”
“Because I loved him.”
Alexander was silent.
I looked back at him.
“I thought love meant making room for someone else. I thought it meant being patient. Forgiving. Gentle.”
“And now?”
I picked up the folder.
“Now I think love made me polite.”
My voice hardened.
“But betrayal just made me honest.”
Alexander’s eyes darkened with something like approval.
“Good.”
My phone buzzed again.
Ryan:
Where are you?
Then:
Ryan:
The soup is burned.
Then:
Ryan:
Emily?
Then:
Ryan:
Don’t tell me you’re crying somewhere again.
I stared at the screen.
Alexander read my expression.
“What did he say?”
I turned the phone so he could see.
For the first time, Alexander smiled.
Not warmly.
Dangerously.
“He really is stupid.”
I looked at Ryan’s messages.
Then I typed:
Me:
Sorry. I went out to buy dessert.
Ryan:
Hurry up. I’m hungry.
I put the phone down.
Alexander lifted an eyebrow.
“Dessert?”
I closed the folder.
“Yes.”
“What dessert?”
I stood.
“The kind served cold.”
Alexander stood with me.
“Emily.”
I paused.
“If you start this, you can’t go back.”
I looked at the ring on the table.
The diamond caught the light.
For three years, I had thought it was a promise.
Now it looked like a leash.
I left it there.
“I’m not going back,” I said.
Then I walked out of the Langford Hotel with Ryan’s downfall in my hands.
And for the first time in three years, I wasn’t afraid of what would happen when I got home.
I was looking forward to it.
You may also like





