
His Mistress Was My Sister in My Wedding Dress
Chapter 3
I sat at the far end of the ballroom, wedged between two catering staff who kept giving me pitying glances. The party was in full swing—champagne flowing, laughter echoing beneath the crystal chandeliers I'd spent weeks selecting. But I wasn't part of it anymore.
"Another glass of water, ma'am?" A young server whispered, sliding a glass toward me.
"No, thank you," I murmured, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears.
Across the room, Nicole twirled in my wedding dress—the vintage lace catching the light as she moved through the crowd. My mother's oldest friend, Margaret, clasped Nicole's hands and said something that made her beam.
"Isn't Linda just the most generous sister-in-law?" Margaret's voice carried across the room. "Letting you wear her wedding dress for the party!"
I watched Nicole's lips curve into a practiced smile. "Linda has always been so... accommodating."
Three hours ago, these same guests had been complimenting me on the beautiful party I'd organized, praising my devotion to David, marveling at how I'd created the perfect home for him to return to after building his empire.
Now they averted their eyes when they passed my table.
"Linda, darling." My mother appeared beside me, her smile brittle. "You really should move to a better seat. This looks... odd."
"Does it?" I asked quietly.
"Of course it does. You're David's wife." She glanced around nervously. "Though I must say, Nicole does make a lovely addition to the family. So vibrant."
Before I could respond, David tapped his glass, silencing the room. He stood on the small stage where the jazz quartet had been playing earlier, one arm wrapped possessively around Nicole's waist.
"Friends, colleagues, family," he began, his voice carrying effortlessly across the hushed room. "Thank you all for coming tonight. As you know, I wanted to celebrate my birthday with everyone who matters to me."
His eyes found mine across the room, cold and calculating.
"Some of you may have noticed that tonight marks a new chapter in my life." He squeezed Nicole closer. "A chapter I've been eager to begin."
Murmurs rippled through the crowd.
"I've made mistakes in my past," David continued, his gaze never leaving my face. "Marrying Linda was the biggest mistake of my life."
The room fell silent. Even the waiters stopped pouring champagne.
"But tonight, I'm correcting that error." He lifted Nicole's hand to his lips. "I'm filing for divorce next week. Linda and I will be officially separated by the end of the month."
He paused, letting the words sink in.
"And then, Nicole and I will be getting married. A fresh start for both of us."
Applause erupted around me. My mother clapped politely beside me, her eyes fixed on Nicole's diamond ring—larger than the one David had given me twelve years ago.
"To new beginnings," David toasted, raising his glass.
The crowd echoed his sentiment as glasses clinked.
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. The room spun around me as twelve years of memories shattered like the crystal vase I'd broken earlier.
I slipped away from the table, moving through the crowd like a ghost. No one tried to stop me. No one even noticed I was gone.
The balcony doors beckoned at the far end of the ballroom. I pushed through them and stepped into the cool night air, gulping it down like a drowning woman breaking the surface.
Below me, the city lights twinkled indifferently. I gripped the stone balustrade, my knuckles white against the dark stone.
Twelve years. Twelve years of cooking David's favorite meals, hosting his business dinners, ironing his shirts, organizing his calendar. Twelve years of fertility treatments that left me nauseated and bloated, desperate to give him the child he wanted. Twelve years of making myself smaller so he could feel bigger.
"Linda?"
I turned to find an elderly man standing in the doorway. Tall and distinguished, with silver hair and penetrating gray eyes that seemed to see right through me.
"Do I know you?" I asked, my voice steadier than I expected.
"My name is Arthur Harrison." He approached slowly, as if afraid I might bolt. "I'm an attorney with Harrison & Associates."
He extended a business card. I took it mechanically.
"I've been looking for you for some time," he said quietly. "May I speak with you privately?"
"There's nothing private about my humiliation," I replied bitterly. "You can say whatever you came to say."
Mr. Harrison glanced through the glass doors at the party continuing without us.
"Your biological father has died," he said simply.
Something cold settled in my chest. "I don't have a biological father. I was adopted."
"Yes, you were." He nodded gravely. "But he never relinquished his rights or responsibilities toward you."
The city lights blurred below us as Mr. Harrison's words sank in.
"He's left you everything in his will, Mrs. Miller. Everything."
I stared at him, unable to process what he was saying.
"Who was he?" I whispered.
"One of the wealthiest men in the country," Mr. Harrison replied. "And now, so are you."
Behind us, through the glass doors, I could see David raising another toast with Nicole in his arms, both of them laughing at some private joke.
Neither of them had any idea what was about to change.
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