
New Love After Humiliation
Chapter 1
The Metropolitan Arts Foundation Gala was supposed to be my debut into Clayton's world, but instead, it became my public execution.
I'd spent the entire day preparing—three hours at the salon where the stylist barely concealed her confusion over my 'simple' request for elegant but understated hair, another hour selecting from the handful of dresses Clayton's assistant had deemed 'appropriate' for me. The navy blue dress was beautiful, I thought, with its modest neckline and flowing fabric. I'd practiced conversations in the mirror, rehearsed responses to questions about Clayton's business, about my own interests, about anything that might come up.
None of it mattered.
The moment we stepped into the grand ballroom, with its soaring ceilings and crystal chandeliers casting rainbow prisms across marble floors, Clayton's hand dropped from my lower back. He moved toward a cluster of men in identical black tuxedos, their wives glittering like precious stones beside them, and I was left standing alone near a towering marble column, suddenly conscious of every breath, every heartbeat.
That's when they approached—three women whose designer gowns probably cost more than my family's monthly rent. Victoria Ashford led the pack, her silver dress catching the light like armor, her smile sharp enough to cut glass.
"Clayton, darling, where did you find this one?" Her eyes performed a clinical assessment, starting from my simple updo and traveling down to my modest heels. I felt each second of her examination like a physical weight.
The brunette beside her—someone's wife, though I'd never learned her name—tilted her head with theatrical concern. "The Metropolitan is supporting literacy tonight. Does she even know what literacy means?" Their laughter tinkled like breaking crystal.
The third woman, a redhead dripping in diamonds, reached out and touched my dress fabric between two fingers, as if examining something distasteful. "Is this... off the rack?"
Heat flooded my cheeks. I opened my mouth to respond, to defend myself, to say anything, but no words came. Fifteen feet away, Clayton stood with his back to me, his jaw tight as he stared at his phone screen. Our eyes met for one devastating moment across the crowded room, and I silently begged him—please, just this once, protect me.
He turned back to his conversation.
The women's laughter followed me for the rest of the evening, echoing off marble walls and settling into my bones like a permanent ache.
That night, I lay in our guest bedroom—we'd maintained separate rooms since our wedding night—replaying every cutting word, wondering what impossible standard I needed to meet to earn even basic protection from my own husband.
Three days later, everything changed again.
I was arranging white orchids in the penthouse living room, one of the few domestic activities Clayton permitted me, when I heard his key in the door. It was barely three o'clock—he never came home before seven.
He entered with a woman whose presence seemed to expand and fill every corner of our home.
Evie Wood was stunning in that effortless way that made me suddenly, painfully aware of my bare face and simple cotton dress. Her dark hair fell in perfect waves, her red lips curved in a smile that somehow managed to be both warm and calculating.
"Amaris, this is Evie Wood," Clayton said, and something in his voice had shifted—become lighter, more alive than I'd heard in two years of marriage. "She's just returned from heading our Paris office and will be spearheading the European expansion."
Evie extended a manicured hand, her grip firm and brief. "So you're the one who took my place," she said, that smile never wavering. "How... unexpected."
That evening, Clayton insisted Evie join us for dinner—a dinner I hadn't been informed would be happening. I hastily prepared pasta primavera, my hands shaking as I tried to create something worthy of our sophisticated guest.
As I served the meal, they slipped seamlessly into Spanish, their conversation flowing like water around rocks I couldn't navigate. "¿Recuerdas aquel desastre en Barcelona?" Evie laughed, touching Clayton's arm. Clayton responded with something about "las recomendaciones terribles de vino de Michel," and they both erupted in genuine, unguarded laughter.
I sat with my fork suspended over untouched pasta, watching my husband transform into someone I'd never seen—animated, engaged, alive. They shared inside jokes about people I'd never met, places I'd never been, a world I'd never be invited to enter.
When I quietly excused myself, citing a headache, neither of them paused their conversation. Neither even glanced in my direction.
I stood in the doorway for thirty seconds, invisible, before retreating to my room.
That weekend, unable to bear another suffocating day in the penthouse, I found myself at the animal shelter. In the back corner sat a three-year-old orange tabby named Whiskers—overlooked because he wasn't a kitten, wasn't exotic, wasn't special. Just like me.
I adopted him without asking Clayton's permission. My first act of defiance.
When Clayton discovered Whiskers that evening, his face twisted with visible distaste. "You brought an animal into my home without consulting me?" His voice could have frozen water. "It sheds. It will damage the furniture. This is unacceptable."
But Evie, lounging on our sofa with a glass of wine, laughed delightedly. "Oh, let her keep her pet, Clayton. Every lonely housewife needs something to nurture."
The condescension in her tone was a blade wrapped in silk, but Clayton acquiesced with a dismissive wave.
That night, I held Whiskers close, crying into his soft fur—the only source of unconditional affection in my life. His steady purring was a lifeline, and I whispered promises into the darkness that I'd never abandon him, that we'd take care of each other.
At least one relationship in this house would be built on love.
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