
Marrying His Mistress At Our Altar
Chapter 2
I couldn't breathe as I stared at that photo. The timestamp mocked me: 9:17 AM. While I had been sitting in that sterile government office, clutching my grandmother's ring and our carefully organized paperwork, Ethan had been making Olivia his wife.
My legs carried me home in a daze. Our apartment—his apartment, really, though I'd lived there for seven years—felt suddenly foreign. The minimalist furniture I'd selected, the artwork I'd carefully curated to match his taste rather than mine, the spotless kitchen where I'd taught myself to cook his favorite meals... all of it seemed to belong to someone else's life now.
I sat in darkness as evening fell, not bothering to turn on lights. The city glittered beyond the windows, indifferent to my collapse. When the lock finally clicked, I didn't turn around.
"You're sitting in the dark," Ethan observed, flipping on the recessed lighting. His tone was casual, as if this were any other Tuesday.
I turned slowly, my voice barely audible. "I waited for you. For seven hours."
He loosened his tie, dropping his keys in the crystal dish by the door—the one I'd bought in Venice on our fifth anniversary. "I had meetings all day."
"I saw the Instagram post, Ethan."
A flicker of annoyance crossed his face—not guilt, just irritation at being caught. "Olivia should have waited to post that."
"That's your response? That she should have waited to announce she's your wife?" My voice cracked on the last word.
He sighed, pouring himself a scotch from the bar cart. "It's not what you think, Victoria."
"What exactly should I think when I see my partner of ten years marrying another woman on the same day he told me to meet him for our own marriage license?"
"It's just a formality for her family," he said, swirling the amber liquid in his glass. "They're extremely conservative. They were threatening to cut her off if she continued living in New York unmarried. It's just a piece of paper."
I stared at him, unable to process the casual cruelty. "A piece of paper? The same piece of paper you've denied me for a decade?"
"This is different."
"How? How is it different?"
"It's a business arrangement. Her family has connections we need for the Midwest expansion." He took a sip of his scotch. "We can get our license next month. This doesn't change anything between us."
I stood up, my body vibrating with rage and hurt. "You left me waiting at the county clerk's office all day. You couldn't even text me?"
"I was busy," he said, his tone hardening. "This is exactly why I've hesitated about marriage, Victoria. You're being emotional about business logistics."
"Business logistics?" I repeated, my voice rising. "This is our relationship!"
"Lower your voice," he snapped. "You're overreacting. This is a simple solution to a complex problem. I thought you of all people would understand that."
"What I understand," I said, fighting to keep my voice steady, "is that you humiliated me today in a way I never thought possible."
He set down his glass with a sharp click. "If you're going to be dramatic about this, I'm going to bed. We can discuss it when you're thinking rationally."
I watched him walk toward our bedroom, his shoulders relaxed as if we'd just had a minor disagreement about dinner plans. The casual dismissal of my pain left me trembling.
I spent the night on the sofa, staring at the ceiling, replaying ten years of similar moments when my feelings had been dismissed, my needs postponed, my value measured only by my utility to him. By morning, something had hardened inside me.
The office was unusually quiet when I arrived. Sarah from Marketing gave me a quick, pitying smile before looking away. The receptionist couldn't meet my eyes. I walked the familiar path to my office, only to freeze at the sight of movers carrying a designer desk into the space adjacent to Ethan's corner office—the deputy's position that had been vacant for months.
Olivia emerged from Ethan's office, a clipboard in hand. She wore a cream blouse eerily similar to the one I'd worn yesterday, her diamond ring catching the light as she directed the movers.
She spotted me and her lips curved into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Victoria! Good morning. I was just getting settled in my new office."
On the door, freshly installed, gleamed a nameplate: OLIVIA WEST, DEPUTY DIRECTOR.
My name. The position I'd earned a dozen times over. All bestowed upon a woman who'd been with the company for six months.
"Congratulations," I managed, the word tasting like poison on my tongue.
"Thank you," she replied sweetly. "Ethan thought it would be best if I were closer to him now. For efficiency's sake."
Around us, colleagues busied themselves with sudden, urgent tasks, their discomfort palpable. No one would meet my gaze.
They all knew. Everyone knew.
I walked to my office on wooden legs, closed the door, and pressed my forehead against the cool glass. Ten years reduced to this: a spectacle of humiliation, orchestrated by the man I'd given everything to, and performed by the woman who now bore my name.
You may also like





