
Fiancé's Betrayal Unveiled: A Second Chance at Love
Chapter 2
Two weeks had passed since I'd walked away from Victor, two weeks of blessed silence broken only by the occasional concerned call from my mother. I thought I'd seen the last of both him and Noor, thought I could finally begin healing from the wounds they'd inflicted. How naive I'd been.
The Richardson family estate glowed with warm light as I approached the front entrance, my heels clicking against the marble steps. Mother had insisted on this dinner—a small gathering to "lift my spirits," she'd said. I'd reluctantly agreed, craving the comfort of family after the emotional upheaval of ending my engagement.
But as I stepped into the foyer, my blood turned to ice. Victor's familiar laugh echoed from the dining room, followed by a softer, more delicate sound that made my stomach clench. Noor's voice, sweet as poisoned honey, drifted through the air.
"Margaret, you're too kind. This wine is absolutely divine."
I stood frozen in the doorway of the dining room, watching the scene unfold like a nightmare. Victor sat at our family table, looking perfectly at ease in his charcoal suit, while Noor perched beside him in a flowing black dress that screamed calculated vulnerability. My mother, ever the gracious hostess, was pouring wine and making pleasant conversation as if nothing had changed.
Then I saw it.
The breath left my lungs in a sharp exhale. Around Noor's slender neck hung my grandfather's necklace—the sapphire and diamond heirloom that had been passed down through four generations of Richardson women. The deep blue stone caught the chandelier light, winking at me like a malevolent eye.
Noor's gaze found mine across the room, and her lips curved into the faintest smile. Her fingers rose to touch the necklace, a gesture so possessive and deliberate that it felt like a slap. She knew exactly what she was doing.
"Gwen, darling!" Mother's voice cut through my shock. "Come join us. Victor and Noor stopped by to return some of your things, and I insisted they stay for dinner."
Return my things? My eyes never left the necklace as I moved woodenly into the room. That piece had never left my jewelry box in Victor's apartment—I'd been too afraid to wear it regularly, too protective of its delicate antique setting.
"Hello, Gwen." Victor's voice was carefully neutral, but I caught the challenge in his eyes. "You look well."
I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. The necklace seemed to pulse against Noor's throat like a second heartbeat, mocking me with its presence.
"The necklace is stunning," Noor said, her voice dripping false innocence. "Victor told me it belonged to your grandfather. Such exquisite craftsmanship—they don't make pieces like this anymore."
My hands clenched into fists at my sides. "No," I said quietly. "They don't."
Dinner passed in a blur of forced conversation and barely contained rage. Every time Noor moved, the necklace caught the light, reminding me of its theft. She touched it constantly—adjusting it, stroking the sapphire, making sure I couldn't forget its presence around her throat.
When Mother excused herself to check on dessert, I saw my chance.
"Powder room," I murmured, rising from the table. "Excuse me."
I waited in the marble-appointed powder room, my reflection staring back at me from the ornate mirror. My face was pale, my eyes bright with unshed tears of fury. The familiar weight that should have rested against my collarbone felt like a phantom limb—present in memory, absent in reality.
Footsteps approached, and Noor appeared in the doorway, closing the door softly behind her. In the intimate space, the necklace seemed even more obscene against her skin.
"You're upset," she said, moving to the mirror to check her lipstick. "I can tell."
"Take it off." My voice was deadly quiet.
Noor's reflection met mine in the mirror, her dark eyes glittering. "Take what off?"
"My grandfather's necklace. Take it off. Now."
She turned to face me, one hand rising to cup the sapphire protectively. "This? Victor gave it to me. A comfort gift, he called it. To help me through my grief."
The lie hit me like a physical blow. "That necklace has never left my jewelry box. You stole it."
"Stole?" Noor's voice turned sharp, her mask slipping. "I didn't steal anything. Victor gave it to me because he knows I appreciate beautiful things. Because he knows I deserve them."
I stepped closer, my hands shaking with rage. "That necklace belongs to my family. It's been passed down for generations. You have no right—"
"I have every right!" Noor's composure cracked completely. "Victor loves me, not you. He always has. You were just a convenient distraction, a pretty face with a trust fund. But I'm the one he turns to when he needs comfort. I'm the one who understands his pain."
I reached for the necklace, my fingers brushing the familiar sapphire. "Give it back."
Noor's hand shot out, gripping my wrist with surprising strength. Her nails dug into my skin as she hissed, "You don't deserve Victor's love. You never did. You're cold, selfish, demanding. I've always been the better choice."
We struggled, her grip tightening as I tried to reach the clasp. The delicate antique setting, weakened by age and never meant for such rough handling, gave way with a soft snap.
The necklace scattered across the marble floor in a cascade of sapphires and diamonds, the sound of breaking metal echoing like a death knell in the small space. We both dropped to our knees, reaching for the pieces, when the door burst open.
Victor stood in the doorway, his face a mask of fury as he took in the scene—Noor on the floor, tears streaming down her face, and me kneeling beside the broken remains of my family's legacy.
"What the hell did you do?" His voice was ice and fire combined.
Noor's sobs filled the silence. "She attacked me, Victor. She grabbed me and tried to rip the necklace off. I was just trying to protect myself."
I looked up at him, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Victor, she stole—"
The slap came without warning, sharp and brutal across my left cheek. The sound echoed off the marble walls like a gunshot. Pain exploded across my face, followed immediately by a deeper, more devastating ache in my chest.
"You spoiled brat," Victor snarled, his hand still raised. "Attacking a grieving woman over a piece of jewelry. I always knew you were selfish, but this—"
Noor threw herself into his arms, her sobs becoming more dramatic. "She said terrible things, Victor. She said I didn't deserve anything beautiful, that I was nothing but a burden. I was so scared."
I remained on the floor, my cheek burning, staring up at the man I'd once planned to marry. The man who had just struck me to defend the woman who'd stolen from me. The broken pieces of my grandfather's necklace lay scattered around my knees like the shattered remains of everything I'd once believed about love.
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