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From Betrayal to Rise Novel Cover

From Betrayal to Rise

The portfolio slipped from my fingers like autumn leaves, sketches and fabric samples scattering across the hardwood floor with a sound that seemed to echo through my entire world. There, in my living room—our living room—stood Quinn with his hand resting possessively on Haisley Lane's waist as she modeled my dress. My dress. The cocktail dress I'd spent three months perfecting, every bead placed with intention, every fold of silk cut to catch light like phoenix feathers rising from flame. The phoenix pattern I'd embroidered along the bodice seemed to mock me now, its wings spread across Haisley's curves as she turned slowly, deliberately, letting the fabric catch the afternoon light streaming through our windows. She moved with the practiced grace of someone accustomed to being admired, her blonde hair cascading over one shoulder in a way that made the dress's neckline look entirely different than I'd intended. "It suits you perfectly," Quinn said, his voice carrying that warm appreciation I'd once thought was reserved for me alone. His fingers traced the edge of the dress's sleeve, the same gentle touch he'd used when I'd shown him the finished design just days ago. "The color brings out your eyes." I stood frozen in the doorway, my keys still clutched in my hand, watching this tableau that felt like stepping into someone else's nightmare. The final fitting had gone so well—Mrs.
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Chapter 3

My phone had been buzzing incessantly since dawn, each notification a fresh stab to wounds that hadn't yet begun to heal. I'd turned it face-down on my nightstand hours ago, but the vibrations continued their relentless assault against the silence of my apartment.

By noon, curiosity finally won. I picked up the device with the same careful precision I used when handling delicate silk—as if it might shatter in my hands. The screen lit up with a cascade of notifications, all centered around a single Instagram post that made my blood turn to ice.

There was Haisley, radiant in my cocktail dress, posed against what looked like Quinn's penthouse balcony. The afternoon light caught the phoenix embroidery exactly as I'd designed it to, the golden threads seeming to dance across the silk. Her caption read: "Some things are just meant to be mine ✨ #Destiny #PerfectFit."

The comments section was a feeding frenzy. Heart emojis cascaded down the screen like digital applause. "Gorgeous!" "Stunning as always!" "That dress was made for you!" Quinn's friends—people who'd been invited to our wedding—were falling over themselves to praise her. Each comment felt like a small betrayal, a tiny knife twisted just so.

My wedding guests had found the post too. The messages flooding my phone ranged from genuine concern to barely concealed gossip-hunger. "Honey, are you okay?" mixed with "What's the real story here?" and "I heard there was drama—spill!"

I set the phone down with deliberate care, my hands steady despite the storm raging in my chest. The urge to respond, to defend myself, to scream the truth into the digital void was almost overwhelming. But something deeper held me back—a quiet dignity that refused to be dragged into the mud.

The knock at my door came like salvation. Sophia Chen stood in the hallway with coffee and the kind of fierce loyalty that made her the sister I'd chosen rather than inherited. Her dark eyes took in my appearance—the same clothes from yesterday, the shadows under my eyes—and she pushed past me without ceremony.

"I saw the post," she said, setting the coffee on my table with more force than necessary. "That absolute—"

"Don't." I held up a hand, surprising us both with the steadiness in my voice. "Don't give her that power."

Sophia's eyes flashed. "Legacy, she's publicly humiliating you. We need to fight back. Post your own photos, tell your side of the story. Show everyone what really happened."

I walked to my design table, where fresh sketches lay scattered like fallen leaves. My hands had been moving all morning without conscious direction, channeling pain into art the way I always did. Bold lines, dramatic silhouettes, designs that spoke of rising from ashes.

"Look at this," I said instead, pulling out the original sketch for the cocktail dress. Sophia leaned over my shoulder as I traced the phoenix pattern with my finger. "See the way the wings spread here? The way the feathers overlap?"

She nodded, following my movements.

"Now look closer." I pointed to the negative space between the phoenix's wings, the careful shading I'd added in the final design. "What do you see?"

Sophia's breath caught. "It's... is that a crow?"

"Hidden in the pattern," I confirmed. "I didn't even realize I was doing it. My subconscious knew what my heart refused to see. I designed betrayal into my own wedding dress."

The irony was so perfect it almost made me laugh. Almost.

"I'm not going to lower myself to their level," I continued, gathering the sketches with renewed purpose. "But I'm not going to stay silent either."

Later that afternoon, I found myself at Café Luna, the small coffee shop near my studio where I often came to think. The familiar hum of conversation and clinking cups usually soothed me, but today every sound felt amplified, every glance from other patrons loaded with potential recognition.

I was sketching in my corner booth when their voices cut through the ambient noise.

"Did you see that post from Haisley Lane?" The first voice belonged to a young woman with perfectly styled blonde hair and the kind of designer handbag that cost more than most people's rent.

"The dress? It's absolutely stunning," her companion replied, scrolling through her phone. "The craftsmanship is incredible. Look at this phoenix embroidery—whoever designed this really understands symbolism."

"I wonder who the mystery designer is. Haisley never tags the artists she wears."

"Typical. She wants all the credit for looking good."

I kept my head down, my pencil moving steadily across the page, but every word landed with crystalline clarity. These weren't Quinn's friends or wedding guests—these were fashion bloggers, people who understood the difference between wearing art and creating it.

"The phoenix pattern is so sophisticated," the first woman continued. "It's not just decoration—it's storytelling. There's something almost prophetic about it."

Prophetic. The word echoed in my mind as they gathered their things and left, still discussing the intricacies of my design. They saw what Haisley couldn't—that the dress was more than fabric and thread. It was a narrative, a piece of my soul made tangible.

I closed my sketchbook and smiled for the second time since my world had collapsed. I knew exactly what I needed to do.

Let my art speak for itself.

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