Follow
Chapters
Share
From Betrayal to New Love Novel Cover

From Betrayal to New Love

I stared at the red lace lingerie dangling from my fingertips, my world suddenly silent except for the thundering of my heartbeat in my ears. Nine years. Nine years of my life devoted to Porter Reed, and here was the evidence of his betrayal, carelessly left in the pocket of his suit jacket as I prepared it for dry cleaning. The delicate fabric felt like it was burning my skin. It wasn't mine—I preferred simple cotton, practical and comfortable. This was the kind of lingerie designed to seduce, with its intricate patterns and barely-there construction. My stomach lurched as I imagined Porter's hands on another woman wearing this. "It could be a gift for me," I whispered to the empty apartment, the words hollow even to my own ears. Porter hadn't given me a gift in years, not since the silver bracelet on our third anniversary that his assistant had actually purchased. I sank onto the edge of our bed—his bed, really, in his apartment where I'd lived like a guest for nearly a decade.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The hospital coffee shop hummed with quiet conversations and the gentle clink of ceramic cups. I sat in the corner booth, picking at a sandwich I couldn't taste, when I saw them.

Porter and a woman I didn't recognize, their heads bent together over steaming lattes. Her auburn hair caught the afternoon light streaming through the windows, and when she laughed at something he said, the sound was musical, carefree. Everything I hadn't been in years.

My breath caught in my throat as Porter reached across the small table and took her hand. Not the casual touch of business associates or friends—this was intimate, tender. His thumb traced circles on her palm the way he used to do with mine, back when we were young and I still believed in forever.

"The venue coordinator said we could have the garden ceremony in October," the woman said, her voice carrying just enough for me to hear. "The roses will still be blooming then."

Porter lifted her hand to his lips, pressing a soft kiss to her knuckles. "Whatever makes you happy, Skyler. I want our wedding to be perfect."

Our wedding. The words hit me like a physical blow. I gripped the edge of the table, my knuckles white against the laminate surface. Nine years of waiting, of hoping, of convincing myself that someday he'd see me as more than convenient. And here he was, planning a future with someone else while I recovered from collapsing at his office.

Skyler leaned forward, her eyes bright with excitement. "I can't believe we're really doing this. After all these years apart, it feels like a dream."

"I never should have let you go the first time," Porter murmured, bringing her hand to his cheek. "I was young and stupid. But I'm not making that mistake again."

The red lace lingerie in my purse suddenly made perfect sense. This wasn't a casual affair—this was his first love, returned to claim what she'd always believed was hers. And I was just the placeholder who'd kept his bed warm while he waited for her to come back.

I watched them kiss, soft and sweet, full of promises I'd never received. The woman I'd spent nine years becoming—devoted, accommodating, invisible—crumbled in that moment. When they finally pulled apart, I saw Porter's face transformed by genuine happiness, an expression I realized I'd never seen directed at me.

They gathered their things, still holding hands, still lost in their bubble of perfect love. Porter never once glanced in my direction, never sensed my presence just twenty feet away. I might as well have been a ghost.

---

The resignation letter felt heavier than it should have as I placed it on Porter's desk. Two weeks' notice, professionally worded, giving no real explanation beyond "pursuing other opportunities." I'd spent hours crafting it, choosing each word carefully.

Porter read it twice before looking up at me, his face a mask of cold fury. "What is this supposed to be, Sophia? Some kind of tantrum because I haven't been paying enough attention to you?"

I stood straighter, my hands clasped behind my back to hide their trembling. "It's my resignation, Porter. I think we both know this arrangement has run its course."

"Arrangement?" His voice rose, sharp enough to cut. "Is that what you call nine years of your life? Nine years of everything I've given you?"

The irony of his words almost made me laugh. "What exactly have you given me, Porter? A job where I work sixteen-hour days? A relationship where I'm never quite good enough for your family? A future that apparently doesn't include me?"

He stood abruptly, circling the desk to tower over me. "You're being emotional. This is exactly why women can't handle business decisions. You're throwing away everything we've built together over some imagined slight."

"Imagined?" The word escaped before I could stop it. "I saw you with her, Porter. At the hospital coffee shop. Planning your wedding."

For a moment, his mask slipped, and I saw something that might have been shame flicker across his features. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

"Skyler is an old friend," he said smoothly. "If you're going to eavesdrop on private conversations, at least get your facts straight."

The gaslighting was so familiar, so practiced, that I almost believed him for a second. Almost let myself sink back into the comfortable delusion that I'd misunderstood, that there was still hope.

Instead, I reached into my purse and pulled out the red lace lingerie, placing it carefully on his desk between us.

"Your old friend forgot this in your jacket pocket," I said quietly.

Porter's face went white, then flushed red with anger. "You went through my things?"

"I was preparing your suit for dry cleaning. Just like I have for nine years." I met his eyes steadily. "I won't be doing that anymore."

"You'll never work in this industry again," he said, his voice low and threatening. "I'll make sure of that. No one will hire Porter Reed's vengeful ex-secretary."

"Then I guess I'll have to find a new industry." I turned toward the door, my legs surprisingly steady. "Goodbye, Porter."

---

The apartment was small but mine. Sunlight streamed through windows that faced east, promising new mornings, new beginnings. I stood in the empty living room, surrounded by boxes, and felt something I hadn't experienced in years: peace.

My phone buzzed with a text from Marcus Chen at Carson & Associates. *Looking forward to having you on the team, Sophia. Your references speak volumes about your capabilities.*

References Porter couldn't control. Clients who'd worked with me directly, who'd seen my value beyond my relationship with him. For the first time in years, I was being hired for my skills, not my proximity to power.

I opened the first box, pulling out the small potted plant from my old desk. Its leaves were still green, still reaching toward the light despite the neglect of recent weeks. Like me, it had survived.

As I placed it on the windowsill of my new home, I realized I was smiling.

You may also like

A Substitute Wife's Billion-Dollar Revenge Novel Cover
8.6
Elena Miller spent three years trying to be the wife Adrian Blackwood didn't know he had. She was the one who saved his company from a lawsuit no one knew about. The one who took a car to the hip so he wouldn't. The one who picked up his blood pressure medication every month for three years and placed it on his nightstand without a word. She was eight weeks pregnant the night he made her kneel in his garden, in the pouring rain, picking up the broken pieces of a necklace another woman had given him. When he was done with her, he handed her a dirty handkerchief and told her to throw it away. By the next morning, she'd lost the baby on his kitchen floor while he checked on the woman he'd been waiting twelve years for. By the end of the week, she'd signed the divorce papers with two words in the settlement column: "Net zero." She walked out of his life with nothing. She came back owning everything. Because Elena Miller was a name she'd borrowed. Her real name is Elena Vance, and the little girl who saved his life in a snowstorm twelve years ago — the one he's owed his every breath to ever since — wasn't the woman he kept in his bed for the past decade. It was the woman he kept on her knees.
After His Mistress Killed Our Child, I Became a Ghost Novel Cover
8.0
The crystal flute felt heavy in my hand, a cold, condensation-slicked weight that promised celebration but reeked of impending doom. The Meyer Foundation’s annual gala was a sea of black ties and diamond chokers, a shark tank masquerading as a ballroom. Standing at the epicenter was Josephine Ray, the Chairwoman, draped in emerald silk that matched the predatory glint in her eyes. "To the future heir," Josephine purred, raising her glass. Her smile was a razor blade wrapped in velvet. She stepped closer, invading my personal space with the scent of tuberose and old money. "Drink up, Madison. For the dynasty." I hesitated. My husband, Lucien Meyer, stood at my shoulder, his hand resting on the small of my back not in affection, but in possession. His grip was firm, a silent command.
Declared Insane, I Came Back to Bury Him Novel Cover
9.1
Three years ago, Julian Sterling had me declared insane. He forged a doctor's signature, shipped me to a sedation clinic in Zurich, and told the world I was too fragile to survive his mother's death. He was right about one thing — Margaret Sterling was dead. He just forgot to mention he'd hidden her heart medication in his private safe while she asked for it. What Julian never knew: Margaret had already changed her will. She left the controlling share of the Sterling Empire — and the emerald ring that unlocked every offshore trust — to me. So I waited. I studied every move he made from that white room. I memorized his habits, his escort agency, his blind spots. And on the night he ordered a blonde who wouldn't ask questions, I made sure he got exactly what he paid for — a microphone in his collar and eighty-nine journalists outside his door. He thought he was confessing to a stranger. He was confessing to the woman his mother called her real heir. By the time he recognized my face, the board had already voted, the police had the pharmacy records, and his wife was standing beside me in crimson. He had three years to enjoy his stolen empire. I only needed one night to take it back. But as the handcuffs clicked shut, a photo slipped from my coat — and Julian finally saw the truth his mother had written on the back. Is revenge enough when the man you destroyed was the only family you had left?
Exposing Xander's Scheme: The Rejected Proposal Novel Cover
8.5
The Manhattan Grand Hotel ballroom glittered with crystal chandeliers and the polished smiles of my former classmates. Eight years had passed since I'd last stood in a room like this, but I was no longer the same desperate girl who once begged for scraps of affection. I smoothed the fabric of my navy dress—simple but elegant, nothing like the desperate-to-impress outfits I used to wear. My wedding ring caught the light as I reached for a glass of champagne, the platinum band a quiet reminder of everything I'd built since fleeing this city. "Julia Palmer," a woman with perfectly highlighted hair squealed, air-kissing both my cheeks. "I heard you moved to London! How exotic." "Hello, Melissa," I said, smiling politely. "London was wonderful." "And now you're back! Did you ever think you'd return to Manhattan?" I took a sip of champagne, using the moment to gather my thoughts. "Life has a way of bringing you full circle." "What have you been doing all these years?
From Slave to Heiress Novel Cover
8.7
I stood frozen, champagne flute trembling in my hand as the large projection screen displayed Black Corporation's official social media announcement. The elegant anniversary party around me—our third wedding anniversary—suddenly felt like a cruel stage set for my public execution. The post showed my husband, Houston Black, tenderly kissing a woman's swollen belly. The caption read: "Black Corporation is pleased to announce that the Black family will soon welcome its heir. CEO Houston Black and Mrs. Black are expecting their first child together." Except the woman in the photo wasn't me. It was Camryn Jenkins. The crystal chandelier light seemed to dim as whispers erupted around the ballroom. I felt dozens of eyes shifting between the screen and my flat stomach, putting the pieces together. My heart condition flared painfully in my chest, each beat like a hammer against fragile glass.
Husband's Fall, Wife's Rise Novel Cover
8.5
The late afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows of Ryan's office, casting long shadows across the polished marble floors. I stood in the doorway of the executive lounge, watching my husband of five years as he guided Isabella across the room with his hand resting possessively on the small of her back. The intimacy of the gesture made my stomach twist, but I forced myself to remain still, invisible in the shadows as I had become accustomed to being in recent months. Ryan reached into the inner pocket of his tailored suit jacket and produced a small velvet box. When he opened it, a golden key gleamed in the sunlight. Isabella's perfectly manicured hand flew to her mouth, her eyes widening with theatrical surprise. "Welcome to your new home, Mrs. Mitchell," Ryan announced, his voice carrying that smooth, practiced charm he reserved for board meetings and important clients—never for me anymore. Isabella took the key with trembling fingers, her red lips curving into a triumphant smile. "The penthouse on Fifth Avenue?