
Husband's Lies, Wife's Wrath
Chapter 2
I stood in the lobby of Peters Corporation, the security guards' hands firm on my arms as they escorted me toward the exit. The weight of humiliation pressed down on me, but I refused to give them the satisfaction of seeing me break. As they pushed open the glass doors, I turned back one last time, catching Grayson's eye across the marble expanse. For a moment—just a moment—I thought I saw something flicker in his gaze. Regret? Guilt? Whatever it was, it vanished as Anaya slipped her arm through his, her victorious smile cutting me to the bone.
The doors closed behind me with a final, decisive click.
"This isn't over," I whispered to myself, the cold morning air stinging my cheeks.
---
Night had fallen by the time I returned to Peters Corporation. The security shift had changed, and the night guard—an older man who'd always been kind to me—looked away as I slipped past him toward the executive elevator. He'd known me for years; perhaps some loyalties ran deeper than corporate restructuring.
The familiar weight of my wedding ring pressed against my finger as I rode the elevator to the top floor. Five years of marriage, of building this company from nothing, of loving a man who could apparently discard me without a second thought. The elevator doors opened to the darkened executive floor, only Grayson's office still illuminated at the end of the hall.
I didn't knock. I simply pushed open the door and stepped inside.
Grayson looked up from his desk, his expression shifting from surprise to annoyance. "Isabella. Security should have—"
"Should have what? Prevented your wife from seeing you?" My voice was steadier than I felt, my hands clutching my purse where I'd stashed our wedding photos. "What game are you playing, Grayson?"
He stood slowly, his tall frame casting a long shadow across the office. "This isn't a game. It's business."
"Business?" I laughed, the sound hollow even to my own ears. "Is that what you call publicly humiliating me? Having me thrown out of the company I helped build?"
"You need to accept that things have changed." His voice was cold, detached—the voice he used for difficult business negotiations. But I wasn't a business deal; I was his wife.
I pulled out the wedding photos, spreading them across his immaculate desk. "Has this changed? Our vows? The promises we made?"
He glanced at the photos without touching them, his jaw tightening. "The past is the past, Isabella."
"The past? It was five years ago!" My voice rose despite my efforts to remain calm. "I gave up everything for you—my family connections, my inheritance, my career—to help you build this company. And now you're acting like I'm some delusional stranger?"
A flicker of something—guilt?—crossed his face before his expression hardened again. "Anaya saved my life."
Those four words hit me like a physical blow. The infamous "rescue" story. I'd heard whispers about it from office gossip—how Anaya had supposedly pulled Grayson from his burning car after an accident. An accident I'd never been told about.
"What are you talking about? When did this happen? Why didn't you tell me?"
"It doesn't matter now." He gathered the wedding photos and handed them back to me. "What matters is that I've made my choice. Anaya understands me in ways you never could."
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband's face. "And what about our marriage? Our life together?"
"Things change, Isabella." He turned away, looking out at the city lights. "People change."
I felt a subtle shift in the air and glanced toward the door. It was slightly ajar, and I caught a glimpse of cream-colored fabric—Anaya, listening to every word. The realization that this was all a performance for her benefit made bile rise in my throat.
"You'll regret this," I said quietly, gathering the photos. "When you realize what you've thrown away, it will be too late."
He didn't turn around, didn't acknowledge my words. I walked out, head held high, passing Anaya in the hallway. She didn't even try to hide the fact that she'd been eavesdropping, her smile smug as she slipped into Grayson's office behind me.
Through the closing door, I heard her voice, soft and concerned: "Oh, Grayson, are you okay? Did she threaten you again?"
And then his response, the final betrayal: "It's fine. You're all that matters now."
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