
From Wife to Leading Lady
Chapter 1
The Metropolitan Museum's grand hall sparkled under crystal chandeliers, but the glittering facade couldn't mask the hollow ache spreading through my chest. I'd excused myself from the charity gala's main ballroom, seeking refuge in the quieter Egyptian wing where ancient artifacts stood as silent witnesses to countless human dramas.
That's when I saw them.
Max and Vivienne Hall stood in a secluded alcove between two towering sarcophagi, their bodies angled toward each other in a way that spoke of intimacy I hadn't seen from my husband in years. Her hand rested on his forearm—not the casual touch of old friends, but something deeper, more possessive. His head was bent toward hers, close enough that I could see the soft smile playing at the corners of his mouth, the same expression he'd once reserved for me.
My breath caught in my throat. The champagne flute in my hand trembled as I watched Vivienne laugh at something he whispered, her fingers trailing down his arm in a gesture so familiar it made my stomach lurch. This wasn't business. This wasn't friendship. This was the kind of connection I'd been desperately trying to rebuild with my own husband for months.
I pressed myself against the cool marble wall, hidden behind a display case, my heart hammering against my ribs. Five years of marriage, five years of trying to be the perfect wife, and here was Max sharing the kind of moment with another woman that he'd been denying me.
The next morning arrived gray and bitter, matching my mood perfectly. I found Max in his study, already dressed in his charcoal suit, scrolling through emails with the detached efficiency that had become his default mode around me.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.
He didn't look up from his phone. "Can it wait? I have a meeting with the Singapore investors in an hour."
"No, it can't wait." I stepped into the room, closing the door behind me. "I saw you last night. With Vivienne."
That got his attention. His fingers stilled on the screen, and slowly, he raised his eyes to meet mine. For a moment, I thought I saw something flicker there—guilt, perhaps, or recognition. But it vanished so quickly I might have imagined it.
"What exactly do you think you saw, Reagan?" His tone was measured, almost patronizing.
"I saw my husband having an intimate conversation with his ex-fiancée in a dark corner while his wife was across the room playing the dutiful society wife." The words came out sharper than I'd intended, but I didn't care anymore.
Max set down his phone with deliberate calm. "Vivienne was asking for advice about her family's investment portfolio. Her father's been having some health issues, and she's taking on more responsibility. It was business, nothing more."
"Business?" I laughed, but there was no humor in it. "Since when do business conversations require standing that close? Since when do they involve touching and whispering?"
"You're being paranoid, Reagan." He stood, straightening his tie with practiced indifference. "And frankly, it's not attractive. Vivienne and I have known each other since childhood. We're friends. If you can't handle that, perhaps you should examine your own insecurities."
The casual cruelty of his words hit me like a physical blow. Insecurities? After five years of his mother's constant criticism, his growing distance, his broken promises about our wedding ceremony that never came—he was calling me insecure?
"Don't," I whispered, my voice breaking despite my efforts to stay strong. "Don't make this about my failings when you're the one who—"
"Who what?" He stepped closer, his voice dropping to that dangerous quiet that meant he was losing patience. "Who works eighteen-hour days to provide for this family? Who maintains the relationships necessary for our business to thrive? You have everything you could possibly want, Reagan. A beautiful home, financial security, social standing. What more do you need?"
Everything, I wanted to scream. I need everything you used to give me and more. But the words died in my throat as he brushed past me toward the door.
"I don't have time for this jealousy, Reagan. We'll discuss it when I get home tonight."
But we both knew we wouldn't. We never did anymore.
Two days later, I was organizing Max's study—a task I'd taken on to feel useful, to have some purpose in this house that never quite felt like home. His desk was its usual chaos of contracts, business cards, and receipts that needed filing. I'd learned to navigate his system over the years, sorting everything into neat piles.
That's when I found it.
A receipt from Cartier, dated just three weeks ago. My hands shook as I read the description: one sapphire whale pendant, eighteen-karat white gold chain. The price made my breath catch—more than most people made in a month.
I remembered that pendant. I'd admired it in the Cartier window during one of our rare shopping trips together, running my fingers along the glass as I traced its elegant curves. "It's beautiful," I'd whispered, imagining how the deep blue stone would catch the light.
Max had barely glanced at it. "Too extravagant," he'd said dismissively. "And unnecessary. You have plenty of jewelry already."
But apparently, it wasn't too extravagant for Vivienne.
I sank into his leather chair, the receipt crumpling in my trembling fingers. The evidence was right there in black and white—proof that while he denied me even the smallest gesture of affection, he was lavishing expensive gifts on another woman. The same woman he claimed was just seeking business advice.
The study walls seemed to close in around me as five years of doubt, of second-guessing myself, of believing his explanations and dismissals, finally crystallized into one devastating truth: I had been living a lie. My marriage was a performance, and I was the only one who didn't know the show was over.
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