
Husband's Design Betrayal
Chapter 1
The email notification chimed at 11:47 PM, cutting through the silence of my home studio like a blade. I didn't need to read it to know what it contained—the familiar weight of disappointment had become as predictable as breathing. Still, my fingers trembled as I clicked open the message from Morrison & Associates Design Competition.
'Dear Ms. O'Brien, after careful consideration, we regret to inform you that your submission does not meet our standards for originality and innovation...'
Ninety-nine. The number burned behind my eyelids as I stared at the harsh words glowing on my laptop screen. Five years of marriage, five years of promises from Colton that we would rebuild the O'Brien legacy together, and all I had to show for it was a collection of rejection letters that could paper our bedroom walls.
I pushed back from my drafting table, the wheels of my chair squeaking against the hardwood floor. Empty coffee cups formed a constellation around my workspace, testament to another sleepless night spent perfecting blueprints that would apparently never see the light of day. The architectural drawings spread across my desk looked back at me like disappointed children—clean lines, innovative angles, sustainable materials thoughtfully integrated. Where was the lack of originality they spoke of?
The rejection letter's words blurred as exhaustion finally crashed over me. 'Your design lacks the fresh perspective our clients demand.' Fresh perspective. I laughed bitterly, the sound echoing off the studio walls lined with my father's awards and my mother's architectural photography. The O'Brien name had once commanded respect in this industry. Now it seemed to carry the weight of failure like an anchor.
I closed the laptop and made my way upstairs, my feet heavy on each step. The house felt tomb-like in the darkness, too big for just Colton and me. He was still at his business dinner—another late night that had become routine. I used to wait up for him, eager to share my latest designs and hear about his day. Now I was grateful for the solitude.
Morning light filtered through our kitchen windows as I sat at the breakfast table, nursing my first cup of coffee and trying to summon the energy to start design number one hundred. Colton's laptop sat open beside his untouched breakfast plate—he must have left in a hurry again. The screen displayed his email inbox, and something made me pause.
My coffee cup froze halfway to my lips.
There, bold and unread in his inbox, was an email thread titled 'Latest O'Brien Designs - Meeting Schedule.' My heart hammered against my ribs as I leaned closer. The sender was Cassidy Black.
With shaking fingers, I clicked open the thread. The blood drained from my face as I read through months of correspondence between my husband and my former colleague. Email after email discussing 'the latest submissions,' meeting times, and Cassidy's grateful responses thanking Colton for his 'continued support.'
The world tilted sideways as I scrolled down to see attachments—my blueprints, my designs, my soul poured onto paper, all forwarded from Colton's email to Cassidy's. The timestamps showed a pattern going back months, maybe longer.
I clicked on Cassidy's most recent response: 'Colton, thank you again for everything. The Morrison competition submission is perfect—your wife's residential concept will win this time, I'm sure of it. As always, I'm grateful for your help in advancing my career.'
My wife's residential concept.
The coffee cup slipped from my numb fingers, shattering against the marble floor in an explosion of ceramic and brown liquid. The sound seemed to come from far away, muffled by the rushing in my ears.
Colton had been stealing my designs. For months—no, probably years—he had been taking my work and giving it to Cassidy Black. My former college roommate, my trusted friend, the woman who had cried on my shoulder when she struggled to find her creative voice.
I stared at the broken cup, coffee spreading across the pristine kitchen floor like a dark stain. Ninety-nine rejections suddenly made perfect sense. How could I win competitions when my own designs were being submitted by someone else? How could I succeed when my own husband was sabotaging me?
The front door opened, and Colton's familiar footsteps echoed in the hallway. I quickly closed the laptop, my mind reeling with the magnitude of his betrayal. Five years of marriage built on lies. Five years of supporting me, encouraging me, while secretly destroying my career.
'Rose? You're up early,' his voice called out, warm and loving as always.
I looked down at the shattered cup, the coffee still spreading across the floor, and felt something fundamental break inside me. When I looked up, I managed to arrange my features into the same trusting smile I'd worn for five years.
'Just clumsy this morning,' I called back, reaching for paper towels. 'How was your dinner?'
But as I knelt to clean up the mess, one thought burned clear and bright in my mind: tonight, when he was gone again, I would find out exactly how deep his betrayal ran.
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