
My Husband Refused to Divorce After His Mistress Killed Mom
Chapter 2
The Warren Foundation Charity Auction occupied the entire ballroom of the Plaza. Crystal chandeliers threw fractured light across faces I'd known since prep school—people who'd once envied me, now watched me with something closer to pity.
I wore ivory. Killian's choice. He'd laid it out on the bed that morning without a word, the Chanel dress still wrapped in tissue paper, tags attached. A costume for tonight's performance.
He stood across the room with his father, Gordon Warren's hand heavy on his shoulder as they surveyed their kingdom. Neither looked at me. I'd learned not to expect it.
The auctioneer's voice cut through the champagne-soaked chatter. "Lot forty-seven. The Warren Sapphire—a rare Kashmir sapphire and diamond necklace, circa 1920, valued at eight hundred thousand dollars."
My breath caught. The necklace appeared on the screen behind the podium, sapphires the color of midnight water, surrounded by diamonds that could cut glass. Killian's grandmother had worn it in her wedding portrait. His mother had promised it to me the day we announced our engagement, her hands trembling as she'd clasped mine.
"It should go to someone who understands what love means," she'd said.
She'd died six months later. Killian had never mentioned the necklace again.
"Opening bid, two hundred thousand."
Paddles rose. The Astors. The Vanderbilts. Patricia Whitmore, who'd never forgiven me for winning Miss New York the year her daughter placed third.
Killian's paddle lifted. Casual. Bored.
"Five hundred thousand."
The room quieted. No one bid against a Warren at a Warren event. It was suicide, socially speaking.
"Going once—"
The ballroom doors opened. She walked in like she owned the place, all platinum hair and red lips and a dress cut low enough to make the society matrons clutch their pearls. Astrid Jordan. New money. No breeding. Exactly the kind of woman these people loved to hate.
Exactly the kind of woman Killian loved to use.
She caught his eye across the room. Smiled. My stomach turned to ice.
"Sold, to Mr. Killian Warren for five hundred thousand dollars."
Applause rippled through the crowd. Killian moved toward the stage to collect his prize. I stood frozen, watching him accept the velvet box from the auctioneer, watching him turn—
And walk straight past me.
He stopped in front of Astrid. The room held its breath.
"For you," he said, loud enough for everyone to hear. His fingers were steady as he lifted the necklace from its box, as he draped it around her throat, as he fastened the clasp with the kind of care he'd never shown me.
Astrid's hand flew to the sapphires. "Killian, it's beautiful. An early anniversary gift?" Her voice carried, sweet as poison. "You're too good to me."
She kissed his cheek. Left a perfect red mark.
The silence was deafening. Then the whispers started, a wave of sound that crashed over me from all sides. I felt every eye in the room, every pitying glance, every satisfied smirk from the women who'd always thought I'd married above my station.
I set down my champagne glass. My hand didn't shake. Years of pageant training, of smiling through wardrobe malfunctions and stumbled answers, had taught me how to keep my face blank even when everything inside me was screaming.
I walked out. Head high. Shoulders back. The ivory dress whispered against the marble floor.
No one followed me.
---
Two weeks later, I spent Killian's birthday cooking.
Stupid. Desperate. But I'd found the recipe in his mother's handwriting, tucked into a cookbook in the penthouse library. Braised short ribs with red wine reduction. "Killian's favorite," she'd written in the margin. "Makes him smile every time."
I wanted to see him smile. Wanted to remember why I'd said yes when he'd proposed on that rooftop, the city spread out beneath us like a promise.
The table was set. Candles lit. The ribs had been braising for hours, the apartment thick with the smell of wine and rosemary.
Killian came home at eleven. His tie was loose, his collar unbuttoned. He smelled like her—that cloying floral perfume Astrid wore, the one that made my eyes water.
He stopped in the doorway of the dining room. Looked at the table. At me. His jaw clenched.
"What is this?"
"Dinner. It's your birthday."
"I ate already."
The words hit like a slap. I swallowed. Tried again. "I made your favorite. Your mother's recipe—"
"My mother's recipe." He laughed, sharp and ugly. "You mean the same meal my father's whore used to make for him? The one she'd cook in our kitchen while my mother was at her book club?"
The room tilted. "That's not—your mother wrote—"
"You're losing your mind." He moved closer. I could see the calculation in his eyes, the cold pleasure he took in this. "If you think I'd eat anything prepared by your hands, anything that reminds me of what your family did to mine—"
His arm swept across the table. China shattered. Wine bled across the white tablecloth. The ribs hit the floor with a wet sound that made my stomach heave.
"Clean it up," he said. Then he walked away, leaving me standing in the wreckage.
I knelt on the hardwood. Picked up pieces of broken plate. My hands were shaking now, the careful control finally cracking. A shard of china bit into my palm. Blood welled, mixed with wine, dripped onto the floor.
I didn't cry. Couldn't. There was nothing left inside me to spill.
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