
Husband's Affair & Fashion Betrayal
Chapter 2
I couldn't sleep. The image of my destroyed studio kept flashing behind my eyelids—silk brocade torn like tissue paper, wine stains bleeding into delicate fabrics, unfamiliar perfume lingering in the air. Something about Xavier's explanation felt wrong. Too convenient. Too rehearsed.
At three in the morning, I slipped out of bed, careful not to wake Xavier. He'd been restless all night, his breathing uneven as if fighting invisible demons. In the darkness of our closet, I found his jacket from yesterday—the one he'd worn when I confronted him in the studio.
My fingers trembled as I reached into the inner pocket. Something crinkled—hospital wristbands. Three of them, tucked into a small plastic bag. I carried them to the bathroom, closing the door before turning on the light.
The first band was dated three months ago. The second, two weeks ago. The third—yesterday. None matched Xavier's story about an emergency last night.
"Kylie Wood," I whispered, reading the patient name. But the date didn't align with Xavier's timeline of events.
I returned to the bedroom and picked up Xavier's phone from the nightstand. He'd left it unlocked—a rare mistake. Or perhaps he thought I'd never look.
The photo gallery told a different story than his words. Intimate shots of Xavier and Kylie in my studio—during my Paris trip, according to the timestamps. Her head thrown back in laughter as he kissed her neck. His hands tangled in her hair as they lay across my custom drafting table.
My stomach lurched. I scrolled further, finding messages they thought they'd deleted:
"Meet me at S's studio at 8. Bring the camera."
"The blue sketchbook is in her private drawer. We need those designs."
"X says she'll be gone until Thursday. We have time."
I needed more evidence. At dawn, I called Marcus Chen, my executive assistant.
"I need you to recover some deleted messages," I said without preamble when he answered.
"Sloane? It's six AM."
"I know what time it is, Marcus. I need your skills."
Two hours later, Marcus sat at my kitchen island, his laptop open between us. Xavier had left for an early gallery meeting—or so he claimed.
"These weren't difficult to recover," Marcus said, frowning at his screen. "They didn't try very hard to hide them."
The messages painted a systematic conspiracy. Not just romantic exchanges, but coordinated theft of my work.
"Look at this thread from last month," Marcus pointed to the screen. "'Client wants the autumn sketches by Friday. Can you get access?'"
"That's Kylie," I said, my voice hollow.
"And this—" Marcus scrolled down. "'The timeline is accelerating. We need to move faster.' They're talking about your designs, Sloane."
My hands clenched into fists. "Keep digging."
By midnight, I had everything I needed. Xavier returned home just as I finished printing the evidence.
"We need to talk," I said, standing in our bedroom doorway.
He looked up, his practiced smile faltering when he saw my expression. "Sloane, it's late—"
"Now." I closed the door behind me.
I laid out the evidence on our bed—hospital bracelets, printed screenshots, financial records Marcus had uncovered showing transfers to Kylie's account.
"Explain," I said simply.
Xavier's face cycled through emotions—surprise, denial, calculation. "You went through my phone?"
"That's what you're concerned about?"
"I can explain everything—"
"Can you explain why you brought another woman into our home? Into my studio?"
His hand moved to his heart—that theatrical gesture I once found charming. "You've been so focused on your career, Sloane. I felt invisible."
"Invisible?" I picked up a photo of them kissing in my studio. "You made yourself quite visible in my private space."
"I needed someone who understood me," he said, his voice taking on that wounded tone he used when manipulating gallery owners. "Kylie appreciates my artistic soul in ways you never could."
"Artistic soul?" I laughed bitterly. "You mean the soul you used to steal my designs?"
His expression shifted—panic replacing practiced sadness. "That's different. I was trying to contribute to our partnership."
"By stealing my work?"
"By helping you realize your potential!" His voice rose defensively. "You're so protective of your sketches—I thought if I could just show you what they could become—"
"Stop lying." I held up the hospital bracelet dated three months ago. "This doesn't match your story about last night."
Xavier's eyes darted to the bracelet, then away. "I don't know what you're talking about."
I moved to his office, searching methodically through drawers until I found one that stuck. Inside was a manila envelope containing papers that made my blood run cold.
Genetic testing results. Medical documents listing Xavier as emergency contact for Kylie's son. Financial records showing months of support payments.
"He's your son," I whispered, holding up the paternity test results.
Xavier's face crumpled. "How did you—"
"When did you start lying to me, Xavier? Was any of it real?"
The silence stretched between us like a chasm. Outside, the first birds of dawn began to sing—a cruel reminder that morning would come, whether we wanted it to or not.
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