
From Marriage to Empire
Chapter 1
I couldn't sleep. Again. The third night this week Alexander hadn't come home before midnight. His excuses were always the same—late meetings, client dinners, unexpected conference calls with Tokyo. I'd smile, nod, and pretend I believed him.
Tonight, I decided to check the security footage. Not because I suspected anything—or perhaps because I'd been suspecting everything but couldn't bear to confirm it. My fingers trembled slightly as I navigated through the penthouse security system on my laptop. The living room, kitchen, hallway... all empty. Then I clicked on the master bedroom camera.
The screen flickered to life, and my world collapsed.
There they were. Alexander and Vanessa. My husband and my half-sister, locked in an embrace that left nothing to interpretation. His hands tangled in her hair—the same gesture he'd used with me just yesterday morning. Her body pressed against his with the familiarity of longtime lovers.
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. Could only watch as the betrayal unfolded before my eyes in high definition.
"What about Victoria?" Vanessa's voice came through the speakers, breathless but clear. She didn't sound concerned—she sounded thrilled to be saying my name in my bed.
Alexander laughed. The sound cut through me like a blade of ice. "Your sister is nothing more than entertainment."
Entertainment.
Three years of marriage. The child—twins—growing inside me. Our vows. Our home. Our life.
Entertainment.
The laptop slipped from my fingers onto the plush carpet. I didn't notice when it hit the floor. My hands moved instinctively to my stomach, to the small swell where our children grew, unaware that their father considered their mother nothing more than a passing amusement.
I don't remember how long I sat there, frozen in that moment of absolute clarity. The penthouse remained silent save for the soft hum of the air conditioning and the occasional distant honk of a taxi seventeen floors below. Manhattan continued its relentless pace while my world had stopped spinning entirely.
Hours must have passed. The sky outside the floor-to-ceiling windows gradually lightened from pitch black to the deep blue of early morning. I hadn't moved. Hadn't cried. Hadn't screamed. The numbness was a blessing I clung to desperately.
The sound of the elevator announced his arrival. I heard Alexander's footsteps in the foyer, the casual toss of his keys into the crystal bowl on the entryway table—a wedding gift from his mother.
I rose from the chair, my body moving mechanically. The laptop was in my hands again, though I didn't remember picking it up. My reflection in the hallway mirror showed a woman I barely recognized—pale, composed, with eyes that held nothing but ice.
"Victoria?" Alexander called out, surprise evident in his voice. "You're up early."
I found him in the grand foyer, loosening his tie. He looked immaculate as always—not a hair out of place, his custom Tom Ford suit still crisp despite the hour. The perfect picture of success and respectability. The perfect lie.
"Where were you?" My voice was steady, foreign to my own ears.
"Working late. The Singapore merger is—"
"Don't." The word cut through his practiced excuse. "Don't lie to me anymore."
His expression shifted, almost imperceptibly—a slight narrowing of the eyes, a tightening around the mouth. I'd never interrupted him before.
I turned the laptop toward him, the frozen image of him and my sister displayed on the screen. His face drained of color.
"Entertainment," I said softly. "That's what you called me."
"Victoria, I can explain—"
"No." The word was final. Absolute. "You can't."
My wedding ring made no sound as I placed it on the marble console table. My hand didn't shake. The twins fluttered inside me, unaware that their world was fracturing.
"Victoria, think about what you're doing," Alexander said, his voice taking on that commanding tone he used in boardrooms. "You're pregnant. With my children. The Harrison heirs."
I looked at him—really looked at him—perhaps for the first time. The man I'd loved, or thought I had loved, was a stranger wearing a familiar face.
"Goodbye, Alexander."
I walked past him to the elevator, my back straight, my steps measured. I didn't take a single thing from the penthouse. Not my clothes, not my jewelry, not even a photograph.
Behind me, I heard him call my name, his voice rising with each repetition. I didn't turn around. The elevator doors closed on the sound of something shattering against the wall—his control, perhaps, or what remained of our marriage.
As the elevator descended, I placed my hand on my stomach and whispered a promise to my unborn children. "We deserve better than entertainment."
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