
Fire Reveals Husband's Betrayal
Chapter 1
I twisted the gold band on my finger as I studied the merger agreement spread across my desk. The Harrington-Cole deal was worth fifty million, and every comma mattered. My office on the forty-second floor offered a panoramic view of Manhattan that I barely noticed anymore, the city sprawl becoming mere background to the contracts that demanded my attention.
The soft knock at my door was followed by Chloe's familiar silhouette, my assistant's smile warm as she placed a steaming cup of coffee at the corner of my desk.
"Just how you like it—black with a hint of cinnamon," she said, tucking a strand of auburn hair behind her ear. "And congratulations on the Williams case. The partners are still talking about how you dismantled the opposition's argument."
I allowed myself a small smile. "Thanks, Chloe. Though I suspect they're more pleased about the billable hours than my legal acrobatics."
"Don't sell yourself short, Victoria. Everyone knows you're the best closer in the firm." She lingered for a moment. "Anything else you need?"
"Just hold my calls for the next hour. I need to finalize this before the partners' meeting."
As she closed the door behind her, my phone buzzed. I glanced down at the screen, warmth spreading through my chest at Michael's message:
*Happy anniversary eve, beautiful. Can't wait to celebrate tomorrow night. Three years married, ten years together, and I fall more in love with you every day. Reservations at Le Bernardin at 8. Wear that blue dress I love.*
I ran my thumb over his words, a smile tugging at my lips. Ten years since we'd met in law school, our relationship outlasting most of our classmates' marriages. Michael Sterling—my constant, my rock amid the chaos of corporate law. I twisted my wedding ring again, this time not from concentration but from a surge of contentment.
Three years ago, we'd exchanged vows in the garden of a Hamptons estate, surrounded by two hundred of Manhattan's elite. Eleanor Vance had called us "the perfect power couple" in her toast, and the label had stuck in our social circle. Sometimes the weight of that perfection felt heavy, but nights like tomorrow—just us, candlelight, and reminiscing—reminded me why it was all worthwhile.
I returned to the merger documents with renewed focus, mentally planning what I'd wear tomorrow night. The blue dress he mentioned hugged my curves in all the right places, and I knew exactly which lingerie would surprise him after dinner.
The afternoon slipped away in a blur of legal jargon and conference calls. At four-thirty, Chloe reminded me of my five o'clock consultation—a new client seeking representation for a divorce.
"Ryan Parker," she said, handing me a slim folder. "Tech entrepreneur, wife apparently had an affair. He specifically requested you."
I nodded, scanning the preliminary notes. Divorces weren't my specialty, but the firm occasionally took high-profile cases, and Parker's company was valued at over a billion dollars. The partner handling family law was out of town, so the consultation had fallen to me.
At precisely five, Chloe ushered in a tall man with broad shoulders and tired eyes. Ryan Parker looked nothing like the typical tech genius—no hoodie or sneakers, just an impeccably tailored suit and a firm handshake.
"Ms. Shaw, thank you for seeing me. Your reputation precedes you."
"Please, call me Victoria. Have a seat and tell me what brings you here."
He settled into the chair across from me, his posture rigid despite the casual invitation. "I need to divorce my wife. I've recently discovered she's been... unfaithful."
The pain in his voice was raw, unmasked. I'd seen it before—that particular blend of betrayal and humiliation that came with infidelity.
"I'm sorry to hear that," I said, my voice softening. "Do you have evidence of the affair?"
He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a sealed envelope. "My security team gathered these. I haven't been able to look at them again."
I took the envelope, noting the slight tremor in his hand as he passed it to me. "May I?"
He nodded, looking away as I broke the seal.
The first photo showed a woman in a clingy red dress, her back to the camera as she embraced a man in what appeared to be a hotel corridor. The second showed the same couple in profile, locked in a passionate kiss. I flipped to the third photo and felt the blood drain from my face.
The man's profile was unmistakable—the sharp jawline, the distinctive way he cradled a woman's face when he kissed her. I'd felt those hands on my own skin countless times.
It was Michael. My husband. My perfect, loving husband of three years.
My hand trembled as I stared at the evidence of his betrayal, the gold band on my finger suddenly feeling like a shackle rather than a symbol of love.
"Ms. Shaw? Are you alright?" Ryan's concerned voice seemed to come from miles away.
I forced myself to look up, my professional mask slipping into place even as my world collapsed around me. "Would you excuse me for a moment? I need to... check something with my assistant."
I didn't wait for his response before walking—not running, never running—to the executive restroom down the hall, the photos clutched in my hand like a venomous snake I couldn't release.
You may also like





