
Lawyer Wife's Vengeance
Chapter 1
The courthouse steps felt like a victory podium beneath my heels as I descended them, the weight of a three-week trial finally lifting from my shoulders. The Harrington case had consumed my every waking hour, but the verdict—a unanimous decision in my client's favor—made the sleepless nights worth it.
The autumn air carried a crisp bite that matched my mood: sharp, clear, triumphant. I scanned the crowd for Darren's face, expecting to see my husband waiting with that proud smile he reserved for my professional victories.
"Brooke!"
I spotted him near the fountain, waving. My lips curved upward automatically, but the smile froze when I noticed he wasn't alone. A young woman stood beside him, her glossy dark hair catching the afternoon light. She couldn't have been more than twenty-five, her designer outfit screaming of privilege and wealth.
But it wasn't her youth or beauty that made my blood run cold. It was what she held in her perfectly manicured hands: a birthday cake, complete with lit candles flickering in the breeze.
"Darling, congratulations!" Darren called, oblivious to the way my body had gone rigid. "Come meet Alanna. She's our new intern at Rodriguez Enterprises."
The world tilted beneath me. Alanna. The name echoed in my head like a death knell as I approached, each step requiring monumental effort.
"Alanna Webb," the young woman said, extending her free hand while balancing the cake in the other. Her smile was practiced, perfect. "I've heard so much about you, Mrs. Rodriguez. Your husband speaks very highly of your legal prowess."
Webb. The surname slammed into me like a physical blow. I knew before Darren spoke, before he confirmed what I already sensed with sickening certainty.
"Alanna is Cecelia Webb's daughter," Darren said, his tone casual as if mentioning an interesting coincidence rather than invoking the name of the woman who destroyed my mother's life. "She's incredibly talented in corporate strategy. I thought we'd celebrate your win with a little surprise."
The cake between us—chocolate with vanilla frosting, my favorite as a child—blurred as memories crashed over me. Another cake, twenty years ago. My eighth birthday. My father bringing home a woman who wasn't my mother. The screaming. And later that night, the terrible silence followed by the sound I would never forget: my mother's body hitting the pavement twelve stories below our apartment balcony.
"Brooke?" Darren's voice seemed to come from far away. "Are you alright?"
"I need to go," I managed, my voice a stranger's. Without another word, I turned and fled, ignoring Darren calling my name.
I made it to my car before the trembling overtook me. My fingers fumbled with the keys as tears blurred my vision. The promise—the one sacred promise Darren had made when we married—shattered like glass in my mind.
"I'll never celebrate your birthday," he'd sworn, holding me as I told him about my mother. "I understand, Brooke. I would never bring that pain back to you."
Yet there he stood, with a birthday cake and Cecelia Webb's daughter, on the courthouse steps for everyone to see.
* * *
The house was dark when Darren finally came home. I sat in the living room, Jackson safely asleep upstairs, a glass of untouched wine before me.
"Brooke?" His voice carried uncertainty as he flipped on the light. "What happened today? You just disappeared."
"A birthday cake," I said, my voice hollow. "You brought me a birthday cake."
He sighed, loosening his tie. "It wasn't for your birthday. It was to celebrate your win. The candles were symbolic."
"With Cecelia Webb's daughter holding it." The words tasted like poison.
"That's what this is about?" Darren dropped his briefcase on the counter with more force than necessary. "Alanna is an exceptional graduate. Her last name shouldn't matter."
"You promised me, Darren." I stood, hands trembling. "You promised you'd never—"
"This is irrational, Brooke." His tone shifted to the one he used with difficult clients. "What happened to your mother was tragic, but it was twenty years ago. Alanna was probably not even born yet. She has nothing to do with what her mother did."
"You brought the daughter of the woman who destroyed my family into our lives without even consulting me."
"She's an intern, not a family member." Darren ran his hand through his hair in frustration. "You're overreacting. This is business, not personal."
"Everything about this is personal," I whispered.
He shook his head. "I can't walk on eggshells forever about your past, Brooke. At some point, you need to move on."
The casual dismissal of my trauma cut deeper than any argument. I turned away, unwilling to let him see how deeply his words wounded me.
That night, I couldn't sleep. While Darren snored softly beside me, I slipped out of bed and went to my home office. If Alanna Webb was working at Rodriguez Enterprises, there would be records. Employment files. Background checks.
What I found sent ice through my veins.
Darren hadn't just hired Alanna. He'd personally overseen her orientation and training—on September 15th. The anniversary of my mother's death. The day he'd claimed to be tied up with "unavoidable meetings" when I called needing him.
I stared at the computer screen, the date burning into my retinas. Twenty years after watching my mother fall to her death, my husband had chosen to spend that sacred day of mourning with Cecelia Webb's daughter instead of supporting me.
Something irreparable broke inside me then, quiet as a whisper but final as a death sentence.
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