
His Betrayal, His Regret, My New Alpha
Chapter 1
The first thing I notice is the sound. Not the chime of a text—God, I wish it was that innocent—but the brittle scrape of my own fingernails against the edge of the nightstand. Five white grooves in polished wood, proof I was here, alive, at the exact moment thirty years of trust cracked and caved.
Grant’s phone is still warm in my hand. The screen glows in the half-dark. I read the words again, my eyes burning: "damn if I wasn’t boarding the plane I would go back and get it." My T-shirt. The one I wore to bed, the one I folded, the one I thought was just laundry. Three decades of shared closet space, and suddenly, a stranger’s scent in the seams.
I don’t scream. That would be too easy—too loud, too quick. Instead, I walk. Slow, measured, as if my bones have turned to glass. The kitchen is dim, the only light the blue digital clock above the stove. 3:07 a.m. Everything inside me wants to break, so I reach for the bowl. Our wedding bowl. White porcelain, hand-painted, a gift from my mother the year before she died. It’s survived three moves, two children, and one kitchen fire. My hands tremble as I raise it over my head.
The crack is sharp, shattering. Louder than any scream could be. Splinters of porcelain scatter across the granite countertop, a constellation of ruin. I clutch the edge of the counter, breathing hard. The ache in my chest is sharp, but not as sharp as the pain blooming in my palm. I look down. Blood beads at the tip of my thumb where a shard has sliced through skin.
I press my thumb harder, digging the jagged edge deeper. I need the pain. I need to know this isn’t a nightmare I’ll wake from. The sting, the warmth trickling down my wrist—proof that I’m awake, that I still feel something. Anything.
Grant bursts into the kitchen, footsteps heavy, his tie askew and his hair flattened from sleep. He sees the wreckage, the blood, the wildness in my eyes. "Sloane, what the hell—"
I kneel, ignoring the glassy burn in my knees, and begin picking up the pieces, one by one. My fingers tremble, slick with red. Grant kneels beside me, reaching for my hand. I jerk away, clutching a porcelain fragment so tightly it bites deeper into my palm.
"Jesus, Sloane, stop. You’re bleeding—" He grabs my wrist, his grip firm but not cruel. I can smell airport coffee on his breath, see the fine lines at the corners of his mouth, the ones that deepen when he’s lying.
"Let go," I rasp, refusing to meet his eyes.
He sighs, the sound heavy, exhausted, as if I am the weight he’s tired of carrying. "You’re overreacting."
I look up then, really look. His right hand is twisting his wedding band, spinning it in a nervous, practiced motion. He only does that when he’s hiding something. My chest tightens.
"Am I?" My voice is low, raw. "Because I wouldn’t be jealous if you hadn’t already proven my suspicions are always right."
His jaw tightens. "So this is my punishment? Thirty years of loyalty erased by one text?"
The word loyalty snaps something in me. I stand, blood dripping onto the kitchen tile. "Ask her to call me."
"What?" He blinks, thrown off by the calm in my voice.
"Your coworker. The one who borrowed my shirt. If it’s all so innocent, she can apologize. To my face."
Grant’s lips thin. His hand is still twisting the ring. "You want me to humiliate myself at work because of some shirt? You’d ruin my job over this?"
A laugh bursts from me—bitter, sharp, nothing like joy. "Your job? That’s what you’re worried about? Not your wife, your marriage, or the fact that you’ve been lying to me for God knows how long?"
He stands, shoulders squared, all CEO authority now. "Sloane, we’ve built a life. Don’t torch it because you’re jealous of a T-shirt."
I shake my head, the world suddenly unsteady beneath my feet. "I’m torching nothing. But you—you’re the one holding the match."
He looks away, swallowing. "You always do this. You get a story in your head and refuse to let it go."
My hands are shaking so hard now I can barely grip the counter. I want to scream, to hurl every plate and glass in the kitchen at his feet. Instead, I close my eyes and let the silence settle between us, thick as wet cement.
He tries again, softer this time. "Sloane, don’t walk away. Not over this."
But my mind is already somewhere else, racing ahead, searching for escape. I grab my keys from the hook by the door, the metal cold against my bloody palm. Grant steps toward me, but I sidestep, keeping the island between us.
"Where are you going?" His voice cracks, the first real fracture I’ve heard.
"Anywhere you can’t find me."
I don’t wait for his reply. My feet move on autopilot, carrying me through the foyer, past the family photos, the souvenirs of a life I’m no longer sure was ever truly mine. The night air outside is sharp, slicing through my thin pajamas. I climb into the SUV, hands shaking as I fumble with the ignition. The dashboard glows, casting my face in ghostly blue. Blood stains the steering wheel, a red smear I can’t wipe away.
I drive. I don’t know where I’m going, only that I need to keep moving, to outrun the memory of Grant’s voice, his lies, the ache in my chest. The city lights fade behind me, replaced by the endless dark of the interstate. The GPS screen flickers, recalculating, until finally it settles on a destination I don’t remember choosing: Aspen.
Three hours pass. The world outside is a blur of headlights and snow, the roads growing slick, treacherous. A storm warning flashes on the dashboard—BLIZZARD CONDITIONS EXPECTED, TURN BACK IF POSSIBLE—but I keep going, foot pressed hard on the gas. The wind howls, rattling the windows, and visibility drops to nothing.
The tires skid, the SUV fishtails, and my heart lurches into my throat. I wrench the wheel, but the car slides, metal kissing ice, and then—impact. The guardrail shudders. For a moment, I see nothing but spinning white.
And then, through the swirling snow, a single light glows on the roadside. A cabin, its porch lamp burning steady against the storm. The outline of a figure stands in the doorway, silhouetted by golden light—waiting, as if they’ve known all along I’d be coming, lost and broken, in the middle of the night.
The engine sputters. My breath fogs in the freezing air. Outside, the storm rages, but for the first time in hours, I feel the faintest flicker of warmth—a promise that somewhere, in this blizzard of betrayal, I am not entirely alone.
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