
His Mistress Was My Sister in My Wedding Dress
Chapter 2
I returned to the ballroom in a daze, my body moving on autopilot while my mind remained trapped in that hotel suite, replaying the scene like a horror film I couldn't shut off. The servers bustled around me, arranging place cards and lighting candles as if this were any normal evening. As if my world hadn't just imploded.
"Mrs. Miller, where should we put the birthday cake?" one of them asked, their voice sounding distant despite standing right beside me.
"Center of the head table," I replied mechanically, smoothing down my skirt with trembling hands. "Mr. Miller likes everything perfectly symmetrical."
I checked my watch. Guests would arrive in thirty minutes. The jazz quartet was setting up in the corner, their saxophone cases gleaming under the chandelier light. Everything was perfect—just as David expected.
The first guests filtered in: David's business associates in expensive suits, their wives draped in designer dresses and diamonds. I forced myself to smile, to play the perfect hostess.
"Linda, darling!" Eleanor's voice cut through the ambient chatter as she entered with Robert, my adoptive father, at her side. "The room looks lovely."
I embraced her, inhaling her familiar Chanel No. 5 perfume—the scent of criticism and conditional love.
"Why do you look so peaked?" she asked immediately, her eyes narrowing as she examined my face. "You're white as a sheet. Are you ill?"
"I'm fine, Mother," I lied, the words scraping my throat like broken glass.
Robert nodded absently, already scanning the room for important connections. "Where's David? I need to discuss the Henderson account with him."
"I'm sure he'll be here soon," I said, glancing toward the entrance.
More guests arrived—David's college friends, our neighbors, his golf partners. I greeted each one with practiced warmth, accepting birthday wishes for my husband while my insides twisted into knots.
Finally, David appeared at the entrance, Nicole clinging to his arm like a trophy. She wore a red dress that hugged her nineteen-year-old body, her blonde hair cascading over bare shoulders. Around her neck gleamed my mother's diamond pendant—the one David had given me on our fifth anniversary.
"There you are," David said casually when he reached me. "Everything looks nice." He didn't meet my eyes.
"David," I whispered, "what are you doing?"
He smiled, the same charming smile that had won me over in college. "Getting ready to celebrate." He turned to the room. "Everyone, if I could have your attention please!"
The crowd quieted, faces turning expectantly toward my husband. The jazz quartet stopped playing.
"Thank you all for coming tonight," David began, his voice carrying across the room. "As many of you know, today is my birthday—a time to reflect on the past and look forward to the future."
Nicole's fingers tightened possessively around his arm.
"And speaking of the future," he continued, his gaze sweeping the room before landing on me, "I have an announcement to make."
My heart stuttered in my chest.
"I'll be leaving Linda," he declared, as casually as if announcing a business trip. "Nicole and I are starting a new chapter together."
Gasps rippled through the crowd. Someone dropped a glass.
"A man needs a woman who can give him children and a future," David said, his voice hardening as he looked directly at me. "Nicole can give me both those things."
Nicole stepped forward, her smile triumphant. Around her wrist sparkled my tennis bracelet—the one David had given me when we renewed our vows three years ago.
"I'm so happy to be starting this journey with David," she purred, her eyes locked on mine with cruel satisfaction.
Eleanor stepped forward then, her face a mask of maternal concern that didn't reach her eyes.
"We support David in this decision," she announced to the stunned crowd. "Nicole is young and fertile—she can give our family the grandson we've always needed."
Robert nodded solemnly beside her. "It's a practical arrangement," he added, as if discussing a business merger rather than my marriage.
The room erupted into whispers. I stood frozen as guests began to separate into distinct groups—those who approached David and Nicole with congratulations, and those who hung back, uncertain where to align themselves.
David's business partner slapped him on the back. "Always knew you were a smart man, Miller. Congratulations!"
One by one, people who had smiled at me earlier now avoided my gaze. The room that had felt so perfect moments ago now seemed cavernous and cold.
"Mrs. Collins," a server whispered urgently in my ear. "Where would you like me to seat Mr. Miller's... friend?"
Before I could respond, Nicole detached herself from David's side and strode toward the head table.
"This seat is fine," she declared, settling herself into what had been designated as my chair. "David and I should be together."
She picked up my place card and tossed it aside like garbage.
"Everyone, please sit!" she called out, gesturing grandly as if she'd been planning this party all along. "Let's celebrate David's birthday properly!"
Guests hesitantly moved toward their seats, most gravitating toward tables near David and Nicole. Only a few elderly relatives—my mother's old friends—remained near me.
As I stood there, abandoned in the middle of my own husband's birthday party, something cold and hard crystallized in my chest. The pain was still there, raw and bleeding, but alongside it grew something else entirely—something I'd never felt before.
Power.
You may also like





