
My Sister Wanted Everything I Had—Including My Husband
Chapter 1
The elevator ascended with a soft hum, carrying me toward the twenty-third floor of the Grand Meridian Hotel. My heart fluttered with anticipation as I clutched the handle of my overnight bag. After three weeks of Ryan's business trip to Seattle, I'd decided to surprise him with an impromptu visit. The conference was ending tomorrow, but tonight would be ours alone.
The hallway stretched before me, plush carpet muffling my footsteps as I approached room 2317. I slipped the key card Ryan's assistant had arranged for me into the slot, watching the light flash green. The door swung open to reveal a spacious suite with floor-to-ceiling windows showcasing Seattle's glittering skyline.
Ryan's suitcase stood by the closet, his laptop open on the desk. The bed was rumpled but empty. I frowned, setting down my bag and removing my coat.
"Ryan?" I called softly.
That's when I heard it—a low murmur from behind the adjoining room's door, left slightly ajar. A familiar laugh followed, one that didn't belong to my husband but was equally recognizable. My blood turned to ice water in my veins.
I moved toward the door as if in a dream, my fingers trembling as they pushed against the polished wood. It swung open silently, revealing a scene that would forever be etched into my memory.
Ryan stood with his back to me, his shirt unbuttoned and hanging loose. His hands were tangled in long, auburn hair—Grace's hair. My sister's arms were wrapped around my husband's neck, her body pressed against his in unmistakable intimacy. Neither noticed me frozen in the doorway, a statue witnessing its own destruction.
Something shattered inside me—not with a crash, but with the quiet finality of snow settling on a grave. Three years of dismissals, of gaslighting, of Ryan's growing coldness suddenly crystallized into perfect clarity. The nights he'd come home late smelling of her perfume. The way Grace's eyes followed him across rooms. The subtle shift in how my family treated me after she arrived from Montana.
"I should have known," I whispered, my voice barely audible.
They sprang apart, Ryan's face transforming from desire to shock to something that might have been guilt if I didn't know better. Grace recovered first, her expression morphing from surprise to a fleeting smile so triumphant it chilled me.
"Isabella," Ryan started, taking a step toward me. "This isn't—"
I raised my hand, stopping him mid-sentence. The lies were over. I would not stand there and listen to him twist this into something I had caused, something I should forgive.
A knock at the door interrupted whatever he might have said next. A hotel security officer stood in the hallway, his expression professionally neutral.
"We received a noise complaint, sir," he explained, glancing between the three of us, quickly assessing the situation. Another security officer appeared behind him, clipboard in hand.
"Everything's fine," Ryan said smoothly, his businessman's mask sliding back into place. "Just a family disagreement."
Family. The word echoed hollowly in my mind as I watched Grace straighten her blouse, her eyes never leaving my face, studying my reaction like a scientist observing a specimen.
"Ma'am?" The second officer addressed me directly. "We'll need statements from everyone involved for our incident report."
I nodded, a strange calm settling over me. I signed where indicated, my handwriting unusually steady. The pen felt solid in my grip—perhaps the only solid thing in a world suddenly turned liquid and treacherous.
Without another word or glance at either of them, I walked out. In the elevator descending to the lobby, I caught my reflection in the mirrored wall—pale but composed, a woman I hardly recognized yet somehow knew had always existed beneath the surface.
On the flight back to New York, as city lights twinkled below like fallen stars, I removed my phone from airplane mode. My finger hovered over my contacts before selecting a name I hadn't called in years.
"Alexander Steinberg's office," a crisp voice answered.
"This is Isabella Montgomery," I said, my voice stronger than it had been in months. "I'd like to speak with Alexander, please. Tell him it's about Ryan Blackwell."
As I waited to be connected, I gazed out at the darkness beyond the window. Something new was taking shape within me—something forged in betrayal but tempered with resolve. This call wasn't just about revenge; it was my first step toward reclaiming myself.
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