
His Affair, Her Heartbreak
Chapter 3
My phone buzzed with a notification as I was sorting through financial documents in the study. I glanced down to see Chloe's name on my screen, my stomach instantly knotting with dread.
*Girls' night in the master suite! 8PM. Don't be late! xoxo*
The audacity of her message made my fingers tremble. Girls' night? In my bedroom—the one space Ryan and I had once considered sacred?
I checked the time: 7:55 PM. Part of me wanted to ignore her invitation, to deny her the satisfaction of my compliance. But curiosity—or perhaps masochism—propelled me up the stairs toward what had once been my sanctuary.
The bedroom door was slightly ajar, soft music drifting into the hallway. I hesitated, my hand hovering over the doorknob as I gathered my composure. With a deep breath, I pushed it open.
Chloe lounged across my bed—our bed—wearing silk pajamas, a glass of red wine dangling from her manicured fingers. She smiled when she saw me, but the expression didn't reach her eyes.
"There you are! I was beginning to think you were standing me up."
I forced myself to step inside, maintaining a careful distance from the bed. "What is this about, Chloe?"
"Just some quality time between us girls." She patted the mattress beside her. "I thought it was time we got to know each other better. After all, we're practically roommates now."
The word 'roommates' sliced through me like a blade. I remained standing, arms crossed protectively over my chest.
"I picked up something for you," she continued, gesturing toward my dresser. "Go on, take a look."
Reluctantly, I moved toward the mahogany dresser, pulling open my lingerie drawer. It was empty—completely cleared of the delicate pieces I'd collected over the years, many of them gifts from Ryan during happier times. In their place were gaudy, oversized lingerie sets with the tags still attached.
"I noticed your stuff was a bit... dated," Chloe said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "So I thought I'd help you update your collection. These are more Ryan's taste anyway."
I stared at the unfamiliar garments, each one a calculated insult. They weren't just replacements; they were message: You're being replaced. Even your most intimate possessions aren't yours anymore.
"Where are my things?" I asked, struggling to keep my voice steady.
Chloe shrugged, taking another sip of wine. "Donated, I think? Ryan said you wouldn't mind. It's all about fresh starts, right?"
My phone rang before I could respond, saving me from having to formulate a reply through the haze of humiliation. I glanced at the screen: Dr. Mercer, my father's specialist. My heart stuttered.
"I need to take this," I said, already backing toward the door.
Chloe waved dismissively. "We'll rain check our girl time."
I hurried into the hallway, closing the door behind me before answering. "Dr. Mercer? Is everything okay?"
His voice was grave. "Victoria, I'm afraid your father's condition has deteriorated significantly. The medication isn't working as we'd hoped."
My legs weakened, forcing me to lean against the wall for support. "What are our options?"
"There's a new treatment protocol—quite promising for cases like your father's. But it's experimental, not covered by insurance."
I closed my eyes, already knowing what was coming. "How much?"
"Two hundred thousand dollars."
The amount hung in the air between us. My mind raced through our finances—or rather, Ryan's finances. Despite a decade of managing his career, building his empire, I had no access to the fortune I'd helped create.
"I'll figure something out," I promised, though uncertainty gnawed at me. "How much time do we have?"
"The sooner we start, the better his chances. I'd say two weeks, maximum."
After ending the call, I stood motionless in the hallway, the weight of my father's mortality pressing down on me. I needed Ryan—not just his money, but his support. Despite everything, some naive part of me still believed he would be there when it truly mattered.
I found him in our home theater, sprawled across the custom leather sofa, scrolling through his phone. The blue light from the screen illuminated his face in the darkened room, casting sharp shadows across the features I'd once memorized with loving fingertips.
"Ryan," I said softly. "I need to talk to you."
He glanced up, irritation flashing across his face at the interruption. "Can it wait? I'm reviewing some script changes."
"It's my father," I pressed on. "He's worse. The doctor called—he needs a specialized treatment that costs two hundred thousand dollars."
Ryan set his phone down with a sigh, rubbing his temples as if I'd presented him with an inconvenient business problem rather than a family emergency.
"That's... unfortunate timing," he said, his tone maddeningly casual. "I've just committed most of our liquid assets to Chloe's indie film project. Her first producer credit—it's a big career move for her."
I stared at him, disbelief rendering me momentarily speechless. "This is my father's life we're talking about."
He reached for his wallet, extracting a checkbook with deliberate slowness. "I can give you fifty thousand now. It's all I can spare until some investments mature."
He scribbled the amount and tore out the check, holding it toward me like an offering. Fifty thousand. A quarter of what was needed. A fraction of what he'd just invested in Chloe's vanity project.
As I took the check, our fingers brushed, and I searched his face for any trace of the man who had once held me in a hospital bed, promising me forever. There was nothing there but cold detachment.
The check felt impossibly light in my hand—the price Ryan Mitchell had placed on my father's life. On my devotion. On our decade together.
And in that moment, I finally understood: some debts can never be repaid, and some betrayals cut too deep for forgiveness.
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