
Dress Sale, Love's Ruin
Chapter 3
The cemetery was quiet that afternoon, the late autumn sun casting long shadows across the rows of headstones. I clutched the small bouquet of white lilies—Mom's favorite—as I made my way along the familiar path to her grave. After discovering the truth about my mother's dress and her connection to Demi, I needed this moment with her more than ever.
The weight of betrayal had settled in my chest like a stone. Ryan had been on a "business trip" since yesterday, conveniently absent after our confrontation. His gaslighting attempts had only strengthened my resolve to uncover the full truth.
As I rounded the curve near the old oak tree, I froze. Two figures stood by my mother's headstone—one tall and unmistakably Ryan, the other a slender woman with highlighted blonde hair. Demi Sullivan.
I ducked behind a large memorial statue, my heart hammering against my ribs. Ryan was supposed to be in Chicago. Yet here he was, at my mother's grave with the very woman connected to her death.
Demi was laughing—actually laughing—as she positioned herself against my mother's headstone, phone extended for a selfie. Ryan stood close behind her, his hand resting possessively on her waist in a way he'd never touched me in public.
"This place is so peaceful," Demi's voice carried on the still air. "Perfect backdrop for the 'thoughtful reflection' post I need for my Instagram aesthetic."
Ryan chuckled. "Just make it quick. I told Kate I'd be calling her from the hotel conference room in twenty minutes."
The lilies trembled in my grip as rage and grief collided inside me. This woman—whose cosmetic surgery had been paid for with my mother's wedding dress, who had been involved in the accident that took my mother's life—was using Mom's grave as a photo prop.
I watched as Demi tilted her head, pouting performatively at the camera while wearing a diamond necklace I'd never seen before. The sunlight caught its facets, sending prisms of light dancing across my mother's name etched in stone.
"Is that the necklace from Cartier?" Ryan asked, his fingers tracing her collarbone.
"Mmm-hmm. The one you got with the extra money from the dress sale." She turned to kiss him, right there at my mother's grave. "It looks perfect on me, doesn't it?"
Something inside me hardened as I watched them walk away, hand in hand, laughing. I waited until they disappeared from view before approaching Mom's headstone, wiping away the lingering perfume scent Demi had left behind.
"I'm so sorry, Mom," I whispered, placing the lilies where Demi had posed. "I'll make this right."
Instead of staying to talk to my mother as I'd planned, I found myself following them at a distance. My car trailed theirs to the Grand Meridian Hotel downtown—definitely not the airport where Ryan should have been heading for his supposed Chicago meeting.
I parked across the street, watching through the lobby's glass front as Ryan checked them in, his arm never leaving Demi's waist. She twirled the new diamond necklace between her fingers—jewelry bought with the money from my mother's dress—while leaning into him with practiced familiarity.
The intimacy between them was unmistakable. This wasn't new. This was comfortable, routine—the ease of lovers who had been together for years, not a recent indiscretion.
I drove home in a daze, tears blurring my vision. The house—our house—felt like a monument to lies. In a burst of determination, I headed straight for Ryan's study. If he'd lied about the dress and the business trip, what else had he hidden?
The bottom drawer of his desk had always been locked. I'd respected his privacy before, but that courtesy had died in the cemetery. With trembling hands, I pried it open using a letter opener, the wood splintering around the lock.
Inside lay dozens of manila folders, meticulously labeled and organized. The first one I opened contained divorce papers—pre-signed, dated three years ago. The signature wasn't quite my handwriting, but close enough to pass a cursory inspection. I flipped through more folders, finding more divorce papers, each with slightly different versions of my forged signature.
Beneath them lay financial records: tuition payments to Westlake University for Demi Sullivan dating back three years, rent payments for an apartment I'd never heard of, credit card statements showing purchases of jewelry, clothing, and spa treatments—all for her.
The Ryan I thought I knew had never existed. The man I'd agreed to marry, the man I'd planned to have children with, had been crafting an exit strategy for years while funding another woman's lifestyle with my family heirlooms.
I sank to the floor of his study, surrounded by the evidence of his betrayal, clutching my mother's locket as the full magnitude of his deception crashed over me.
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