
Hell, It's Our Anniversary!
Chapter 3
The crystal chandeliers cast a golden glow over the ballroom as I stood at the edge of the stage, watching the crowd of Manhattan's elite mingle beneath them. Two hundred guests—all here to celebrate five years of what they believed was a perfect marriage. The irony wasn't lost on me.
I smoothed down the crimson silk of my gown, the color of blood, of power, of revenge. The fabric whispered against my skin like a promise.
"Are you ready, Mrs. Blackwood?" The event coordinator approached, clipboard in hand. "It's time for the anniversary toast."
I nodded, my face a mask of serene confidence. "I'm ready. And please—make sure the video is cued up exactly when I signal."
"Of course." She disappeared into the crowd, leaving me to take one last look around the room.
Alexander stood near the bar, champagne flute in hand, his perfect smile gleaming as he charmed a group of investors. He hadn't noticed me yet. Good.
Chloe was by the dessert table, laughing too loudly at something my sister Eleanor had said. The diamond tennis bracelet—my anniversary gift to Alexander—glinted on her wrist.
"Mrs. Blackwood?" A server appeared at my elbow with a tray of champagne. "Would you like to begin the toast?"
I took a glass, feeling the cool condensation against my fingers. "Yes. It's time."
The room quieted as I ascended the three steps to the small stage. A microphone stood ready, its stand polished to a mirror shine.
"Ladies and gentlemen," I began, my voice carrying effortlessly across the hushed ballroom. "Thank you all for coming tonight to celebrate what should have been a special milestone."
Confused murmurs rippled through the crowd. I caught Alexander's frown from across the room.
"Five years of marriage is a momentous occasion," I continued. "A time for reflection. For truth." I paused, letting my gaze sweep over the sea of faces. "And for gifts."
I raised my champagne glass slightly. "I've prepared a special anniversary surprise for my husband tonight."
Alexander's expression shifted from confusion to wariness. He knew me too well.
"Please direct your attention to the screen behind me."
The massive LED display that had been showing soft romantic photos of Alexander and me throughout the evening went dark for a moment. Then an image appeared.
Alexander and Chloe in our bedroom.
The room collectively inhaled.
"Oh my God," someone whispered.
The video was crystal clear—high definition, perfectly framed. Chloe straddling Alexander on our marital bed, my wedding dress hiked around her waist.
"God, she was so naive," Chloe's voice rang out through the speakers, "thinking you actually loved her."
I watched the crowd's expressions transform from confusion to shock to horror. Isabella Rossi's hand flew to her mouth. My sister Eleanor turned pale as a sheet.
"Tell me more about how boring she is," Chloe panted in the video. "I want details."
Alexander's hands gripped her hips. "Seraphina's so proper. Always the same position. Always so... controlled."
The wedding video played on the TV in the background of my recording, our real wedding day silently unfolding while they mocked it.
"The insurance policy is worth five million," Alexander's voice continued casually. "We'll make it look like a break-in gone wrong."
Gasps echoed through the ballroom. Someone dropped a glass, the crash shattering the horrified silence.
"Alexander!" Chloe's voice in the video turned urgent. "Someone's here!"
The camera caught Alexander turning toward the door—toward where I had been standing when I recorded this earlier today.
The footage cut to black.
I hadn't moved from the microphone. My heart hammered against my ribs, but my face remained composed as I watched Alexander push through the crowd, his face contorted with panic.
"Turn it off!" he shouted, lunging for the stage. "Turn it off!"
Security guards—men I'd hired specifically for this moment—blocked his path.
"Baby, I can explain!" Alexander's voice cracked as he finally reached the stage, grabbing for the microphone. "This isn't what it looks like!"
The crowd had gone completely silent. Two hundred pairs of eyes watched as Manhattan's golden boy crumbled before them.
"Everyone out of here!" Chloe's voice shrieked from the back of the room. She was trying to slip out through the service entrance, but my sister Eleanor blocked her path.
"Is that my sister's bracelet?" Eleanor asked, her voice trembling as she pointed to the diamond tennis bracelet on Chloe's wrist.
Chloe yanked her arm away and pushed past Eleanor, fleeing through the kitchen doors.
I stepped forward, taking the microphone back from Alexander's shaking hands.
"Let me fix this," he begged, his eyes wild with desperation. "Please, Seraphina. It's not—"
I reached for a glass of red wine from the tray beside the stage and poured it slowly over his head.
The dark liquid cascaded down his face, staining his white shirt crimson.
"This," I said into the microphone, my voice steady as ice, "is my anniversary gift to myself."
I set the empty glass down carefully.
"The truth."
The ballroom remained silent, two hundred witnesses to Alexander's humiliation.
"Save your explanations," I continued, "for someone who still cares."
Alexander stood frozen, wine dripping from his chin, his perfect image shattered beyond repair.
Arthur Vance pushed through the crowd, his face thunderous as he approached the stage.
"Alexander," he said, his voice carrying the weight of decades of power and influence. "You are no longer welcome in this family."
He turned to address the room. "The Vance family will be cutting all financial ties with Alexander Blackwood effective immediately."
The room erupted in whispers as Arthur continued, "His actions are unconscionable and do not reflect our family values."
Isabella Rossi stepped forward from the crowd, her expression cold as she removed a business card from her clutch.
"Blackwood Enterprises can consider our contract terminated," she announced, dropping the card onto the stage floor. "I don't do business with men who can't honor their commitments—to their wives or their partners."
Other business leaders nodded in agreement, several already pulling out phones to call their lawyers.
Alexander's empire was crumbling before his eyes.
I watched him sink to his knees on the stage, wine still dripping from his ruined suit, as the life he'd built disintegrated around him.
And for the first time since I'd walked in on him with Chloe, I smiled.
This was just the beginning.
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