
Dress Sale, Love's Ruin
Chapter 2
I couldn't breathe. Ryan's words echoed in my head as I stood frozen in the hallway. My mother's wedding dress—sold for Demi's procedure. The betrayal cut deeper than any knife could reach.
"Ryan," I called out, my voice steadier than I felt. "We need to talk."
He emerged from his study, phone hastily shoved into his pocket, that practiced smile on his face. "Ready to go?"
"You sold my mother's wedding dress." It wasn't a question.
The smile faltered for just a second before returning, more forced than before. "What are you talking about, Kate?"
"I heard you on the phone just now. You sold Mom's dress to pay for something for Demi." My fingers found my mother's locket, clutching it like a lifeline.
Ryan's expression shifted to one of patronizing concern. He approached me, hands outstretched as if calming a frightened animal. "Kate, honey, you're being overly emotional. I was talking about a different dress—that vintage one you never wear. Remember? We agreed to sell it months ago."
"We never agreed to sell anything of mine, especially not my mother's wedding dress." I stepped back, avoiding his touch.
"You're confused," he said softly, his tone making me doubt myself for just a moment. "This IVF process has you stressed. You're imagining things."
"I know what I heard."
"Do you?" His voice remained gentle, reasonable. "You've been forgetful lately. Remember when you thought you'd put your keys in the kitchen drawer and they were in your coat pocket all along?"
The memory surfaced—along with a dozen similar instances where I'd been "forgetful" according to Ryan. Had I misheard? Was I overreacting?
No. I knew what I'd heard.
"The appointment," Ryan reminded me, checking his watch. "We should go."
I went through the motions of the fertility clinic appointment in a daze, Ryan's hand possessively on my lower back as Dr. Wilson explained the IVF process. All I could think about was my mother's dress and the name Demi.
That evening, while Ryan showered, I slipped into his study. My hands shook as I rifled through his jacket pockets, guilt and anger warring within me. In the inner pocket, I found a folded receipt.
"Sullivan Medical Center," I read aloud, my heart pounding. The payment was for $8,500—labeled "cosmetic procedure." The date matched when I'd last seen my mother's dress.
I grabbed Ryan's phone from his desk, thankful he'd never changed his password from my birthday. With trembling fingers, I scrolled through his photos, stopping cold at images I was never meant to see.
Demi Sullivan, his young secretary, in a hospital bed. Ryan's hand holding hers. Close-ups of her face—before and after what appeared to be rhinoplasty and chin augmentation. His messages to her were filled with heart emojis and promises to visit.
I sank into his chair, nausea rising in my throat. Not only had he sold my mother's irreplaceable dress, but he'd done it to pay for his secretary's cosmetic surgery. The intimacy in those photos couldn't be explained away as professional concern.
The next day, I called Sarah, my voice breaking as I explained everything.
"That bastard," she hissed. "Kate, there's something else you should know about Demi Sullivan."
"What?"
"Remember when you told me Ryan mentioned meeting her in college? I thought the name sounded familiar. I did some digging." Sarah paused. "Kate, the night your mom died—the accident report mentioned she was rushing to help Ryan with a 'personal emergency' involving his college protégé."
"What are you saying?" My voice came out as barely a whisper.
"I found the police reports," Sarah continued. "Your mom was driving to a motel on Route 16 where Ryan was staying with a young woman who'd overdosed. The woman's name was Demi Sullivan."
The room spun around me as pieces clicked into place. My mother had died rushing to help Ryan and Demi—and now he'd sold her wedding dress to pay for Demi's surgery.
The betrayal wasn't just about an affair or a dress. It went back years, to the very night that had shattered my world forever.
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