
Ex - Wife's Revenge
Chapter 1
The stadium lights blazed like a thousand suns, and I stood in the VIP box with my hands gripped so tightly on the railing that my knuckles turned white. Ten years. Ten cities. Ten concerts. And tonight—the final show of Lane's "Decade Global Tour"—I'd told myself things would be different.
Below me, eighty thousand fans screamed Lane's name, their voices merging into a deafening roar that vibrated through my chest. The stage glittered with pyrotechnics, and there he was—my husband, Lane Tucker—bathed in golden light, his voice soaring through the opening notes of "Endless."
Our anniversary song.
My throat tightened. I'd worn the burgundy dress he once said made me look like starlight. I'd arrived early, checked the setlist three times, coordinated with his team to ensure everything ran smoothly. Just like always. Because that's what I did—I made Lane's world perfect while mine crumbled at the edges.
The "Serenade Segment" was coming. I knew the routine by heart. Lane would scan the VIP section, his eyes searching for someone special, and he'd invite them onstage for an intimate performance. In my pocket, my phone buzzed with messages from friends watching the livestream: "This is it! He's finally going to acknowledge you!"
I wanted to believe them. God, I wanted to believe.
Lane's voice dropped to a tender whisper as the music shifted. "Tonight is special," he told the crowd, and my heart hammered against my ribs. "Tonight, I want to dedicate this song to someone who's been on my mind every single night of this tour."
The spotlight swung toward the VIP section. I straightened, my breath catching.
It swept past me.
Time seemed to fracture. The light landed three boxes to my left, illuminating a woman with cascading auburn hair and a white dress that clung to her curves like water. Remi Morgan. Lane's ex-girlfriend. The woman who'd left him when he had nothing, who'd chosen wealth over his dreams.
The woman he'd chosen at every single concert for the past ten shows.
"Remi," Lane's voice carried across the stadium, warm and achingly familiar—the tone he used to reserve for me. "Come here, beautiful."
The crowd erupted. Cameras swiveled, capturing Remi's practiced surprise, her delicate hand pressed to her chest as if she couldn't believe her luck. She descended the stairs with perfect grace, and Lane met her at the stage edge, extending his hand like a prince greeting his princess.
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The stadium screen—massive and unforgiving—split between Lane and Remi's reunion and a close-up of my face. My expression must have betrayed everything: the shock, the devastation, the humiliation of being overlooked in front of the world.
"Look at that," the commentator's voice boomed through the speakers with barely concealed amusement. "Someone in the VIP section doesn't look too happy. Guess not everyone's a fan of this romance!"
Laughter rippled through the crowd. Lane pulled Remi into his arms, and she wrapped herself around him like she belonged there. Like I didn't exist.
"I have an announcement," Lane said, his lips close to the microphone, his eyes locked on Remi's face. The music swelled beneath his words, dramatic and cinematic. "Ten shows. Ten chances. And every single time, I chose you, Remi. Because you're the one."
My stomach lurched. No. No, he wouldn't—
"Soon," Lane continued, his voice thick with emotion that I'd begged for and never received, "I'm going to put a ring on this woman's finger."
The stadium exploded. Confetti cannons fired, raining silver and gold over the stage. Remi threw her arms around Lane's neck, and he spun her in a circle while eighty thousand people celebrated their love story.
And I stood there, frozen in the VIP box, watching my marriage end on a jumbotron.
Someone nearby whispered, "Isn't that his wife up there? Poor thing." But the comment was drowned out by the applause, by the music, by the sound of my heart finally breaking after years of slow cracks.
I didn't remember leaving the box. Didn't remember pushing past security or stumbling down the concrete corridors beneath the stadium. My vision blurred—from tears or rage, I couldn't tell. Maybe both.
In my purse, folded carefully and carried for three weeks, were divorce papers. I'd told myself I was being dramatic, that Lane's favoritism toward Remi was just publicity, that our marriage still meant something.
I'd been lying to myself.
The bass from Lane's encore performance thundered through the walls as I headed toward his dressing room, my heels clicking against polished floor. Security recognized me—they always did—and stepped aside without question.
This time, Lane wouldn't dismiss me. This time, I wouldn't let him.
You may also like





