
Husband's Cruel Betrayal
Chapter 3
The crystal chandeliers of the Washington Towers ballroom cast a honey-gold glow across the crowd gathered for my twenty-fifth birthday celebration. Sterling had insisted on hosting it, despite my protests. 'A milestone deserves recognition,' he'd said with that smile that never reached his eyes. Now I understood why he'd been so insistent.
I sat at the head table in a dress he'd selected—pale blue silk that made me look washed out, too tight across my still-healing ankle. The champagne in my glass remained untouched. I'd learned not to drink anything Sterling offered.
'Ladies and gentlemen,' Sterling's voice carried across the room as he stood, champagne flute raised. 'Tonight we celebrate my wife.'
The crowd quieted. I felt their eyes on me—Manhattan's elite who'd witnessed my fall from grace over five years, who whispered about the girl who abandoned her friend in a fire, whose parents killed themselves in shame.
'Sophie has always been... fascinating,' Sterling continued, his voice honeyed with false affection. 'So many sides to her that few get to see.'
He nodded to someone at the back of the room. The lights dimmed, and the massive screen behind us flickered to life.
At first, I didn't understand what I was seeing. Then recognition hit like a physical blow.
Private photos. Intimate moments I thought were between Sterling and me in the early days of our marriage, before I understood what he truly was. Photos I'd deleted years ago from my phone.
Gasps rippled through the crowd. Someone laughed—a sharp, cruel sound that was quickly joined by others.
'As you can see,' Sterling's voice cut through the growing murmurs, 'my wife has quite the... artistic side.'
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The images kept changing, each more humiliating than the last. Sterling's hand rested on my shoulder, his fingers digging in when I tried to stand.
'This is what happens,' he whispered, bending close to my ear, 'when you try to leave me.'
Across the table, Nova held her phone up, recording my reaction with the same satisfied smile she'd worn in the wine cellar. The red light on her camera matched the recording light on Sterling's phone as he captured my public humiliation from another angle.
I finally managed to stand, my damaged ankle screaming in protest as I pushed away from the table. The crowd's laughter followed me as I limped toward the exit, dignity in tatters, shame burning through me like acid.
---
'Did you enjoy the show?' Nova asked, leaning against the doorframe of my bedroom later that night. The party continued below, the sounds of celebration a mockery after my departure.
'What do you want from me?' My voice sounded hollow even to my own ears. 'You won. You're alive. Sterling hates me. What more could you possibly want?'
Nova stepped inside, closing the door behind her. For the first time, I noticed she wore long sleeves despite the warmth of the penthouse. She moved toward me with deliberate steps, then rolled up her right sleeve.
'Look,' she commanded.
Scars covered her arm—burn scars, puckered and pink against her olive skin.
'I did this to myself,' she said, her voice oddly flat. 'Burned myself just enough to be convincing, but not enough to cause permanent damage. The fire was real. The trap was real.'
'I tried to save you,' I whispered, the memory of smoke and screams still vivid after five years. 'I tried to reach you—'
'And I made sure you couldn't.' Nova's smile was cold. 'Every time you called my name, I moved deeper into the house. Every time you reached for me, I made sure to stay just out of reach. I planned every detail, Sophie.'
The truth crashed over me in waves. 'You wanted everyone to think I left you to die.'
'I wanted Sterling to hate you.' She traced a finger along one of her scars. 'I just didn't expect him to marry you as part of his revenge. That was... inspired.'
I stared at the woman I'd once called my best friend, trying to understand the depth of her hatred. 'Why?'
Nova's laugh was brittle. 'Because he loved you. Even when we were teenagers, it was always you he watched. Not me. Never me.'
The door opened before I could respond. Sterling stood there, his expression unreadable as he looked between us.
'Time for the next act,' he said, holding up a stack of documents. 'We have some paperwork to sign.'
Nova stepped back, her confession complete, as Sterling advanced with the papers that would strip away the last remnants of my independence.
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