Follow
Chapters
Share
Secrets Behind His Betrayal Novel Cover

Secrets Behind His Betrayal

The Whitmore Foundation charity gala glittered with wealth and ambition, a sea of designer gowns and calculated smiles. I smoothed down my ivory silk gown, feeling the familiar weight of eyes following my every move. Three years of standing beside Arthur through poverty and disgrace had made me an object of fascination in these circles. Tonight, they watched for a different reason—to witness my humiliation. I caught Arthur's reflection in one of the ballroom's gilded mirrors. He stood across the room, his tall frame commanding attention in a perfectly tailored tuxedo, deliberately angled toward Clementine Isolde. His childhood friend… … And the woman who had murdered my sister Iris. None of them knew that.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I stood on our penthouse balcony, my fingers gripping the railing until my knuckles turned white. Below, the moving trucks looked like toy vehicles, men in uniforms loading Arthur's possessions with mechanical efficiency. The autumn wind whipped my hair across my face, providing a convenient curtain for the tears I allowed to fall—tears the paparazzi stationed across the street would capture with their telephoto lenses. Another perfect shot of the abandoned woman, devastated by betrayal.

One of the movers carried Arthur's vintage record player—the one we'd found at a flea market during those three desperate years when the Alaric fortune had vanished. I remembered how we'd danced to crackling jazz in our tiny apartment, planning our revenge in whispered conversations between kisses. Now, that record player was heading to the penthouse Arthur had purchased for Clementine.

"Ms. Bennett?" Our housekeeper, Maria, appeared at the balcony door. "Would you like me to prepare some tea?"

"No, thank you," I replied, my voice appropriately hollow. "I'd prefer to be alone."

Maria's eyes held genuine sympathy. She'd witnessed everything—my devotion to Arthur through poverty, my tireless support as he rebuilt his empire, and now, his apparent abandonment. What she didn't know was that Arthur and I had carefully selected her years ago, knowing her connection to Eleanor Hartwell would eventually prove useful.

When night fell, I gathered our framed photographs—evidence of our supposed happiness—and arranged them before the fireplace. The flames cast dancing shadows across the living room as I methodically fed each picture to the fire, saving only one: Arthur and me at the beach house where we'd first discussed avenging Iris.

I pulled out my phone and typed: "Missing the white roses. The garden feels empty without them."

Arthur's response came seconds later: "They'll bloom again soon. More beautiful than before."

Our code. Everything was proceeding as planned.

Three days later, I sat alone at Meridian Club, deliberately selecting a table with high visibility. The maître d' had seated me with obvious discomfort—everyone knew about Arthur's betrayal by now, and my presence created an awkward energy in the exclusive restaurant.

"I'll have the herb-crusted salmon with lavender risotto," I told the waiter, ordering Iris's favorite dish. My private memorial.

The restaurant's hushed conversations suddenly dimmed, then swelled again with renewed intensity. I didn't need to look up to know who had entered. The distinctive scent of Clementine's perfume—always too heavy, too desperate to be noticed—reached me before she did.

"Table for two," her voice carried deliberately across the room. "Mr. Alaric will be joining me shortly to discuss wedding arrangements."

I kept my eyes on my menu, though I could feel her gaze burning into me. When she and her companion were seated—close enough for me to hear every word—I finally looked up.

The emerald necklace around her throat caught the light, sending green fire across the white tablecloth. Arthur's grandmother's necklace—a piece I had worn with reverence, knowing its significance to the Alaric legacy. Clementine's fingers kept touching it, drawing attention to her prize.

"Arthur insisted I wear it," she announced loudly to her companion, though her words were clearly meant for me. "He said it should be worn by the woman who will bear the next Alaric heir."

I took a slow sip of water, letting the ice clink against my teeth. In my mind, I saw Iris bleeding on her wedding day, her pregnant belly sliced open by Clementine's orders. The rage that rose in me was useful—it colored my cheeks and made my hand tremble slightly. To anyone watching, I appeared wounded by the reminder that I would never be Mrs. Alaric.

The following week brought a different kind of invasion. The first delivery arrived at dawn—exotic orchids in a hand-blown glass vase. The card read simply: "Beauty recognizes beauty. —Soren Isolde."

By midweek, my apartment resembled a florist's shop, interspersed with vintage champagne bottles and velvet jewelry boxes I refused to open. Each gift more expensive, more presumptuous than the last.

When he appeared at my dance studio during the children's ballet class I taught twice weekly, I knew he'd grown impatient with my lack of response. Soren Isolde leaned against the doorframe, watching with predatory intensity as I demonstrated a simple plié to a line of six-year-olds in pink tutus.

"Your grace is wasted on children," he said when the class ended, blocking my path to the changing room. "A woman who moves like you deserves a more... appreciative audience."

The little girls filed past us, some casting curious glances at the imposing man in the expensive suit.

"Mr. Isolde," I acknowledged, keeping my voice neutral. "This is hardly the place for a social call."

"You've ignored my gifts," he stepped closer, his cologne overwhelming in the small space. "And my calls. I'm beginning to think you're playing hard to get."

"I'm not playing anything," I replied, stepping back. "I'm simply not interested."

His smile didn't reach his eyes. "Arthur has moved on. You need protection now—a real man who appreciates what my brother clearly didn't."

As his fingers brushed my arm, I felt a cold certainty settle in my chest. Soren Isolde would be even easier to destroy than his sister. His arrogance made him blind to the trap closing around them both.

"Perhaps," I said softly, watching hope flare in his eyes, "we could discuss this somewhere more private."

The predator never suspects when he becomes the prey.

You may also like

After His Mistress Called Me a Gold Digger, I Took Revenge Novel Cover
8.2
The 1946 vintage Macallan had possessed a satisfying, heavy density. When I purchased the two bottles earlier that afternoon from a private vault in Manhattan, I had traced the wax seals with my thumb, imagining the warmth it would bring to my first meeting with Lincoln’s parents. At eight thousand dollars a bottle, it was a quiet gesture of immense respect, wrapped discreetly in unmarked velvet bags. I had handed them to Lincoln in the foyer of my modest rented apartment. "Keep these safe," I had told him, suppressing the polished cadence of my upbringing to sound like the ordinary girl he thought I was. Now, standing in the suffocatingly warm dining room of the Bryants’ faux-Tudor home in Westchester, the air felt entirely wrong. My fingers drifted to my collarbone, a nervous habit I usually kept buried. Across the table, Reagan Miller swirled a glass of cheap Pinot Grigio. She wasn't supposed to be here. This was a private family dinner, a milestone for a newly engaged couple.
Faking My Death to Divorce You Novel Cover
8.8
Sophia Lane's three-year marriage to billionaire Julian Knight collapses in one devastating night when she discovers his affair—a betrayal that costs her both her marriage and her unborn child. Discarded and broken, she stages her own death and is reborn as Aria Montgomery. With a new face, a new identity, and a burning desire for vengeance, she returns to systematically destroy the man who ruined her. This is a story of resurrection and revenge, where love's remains become the foundation for a perfectly executed downfall.
Grace's Deadly Scheme Novel Cover
9.1
I stood frozen among the glittering crowd, champagne flute trembling in my hand as Grace Hoffman's voice carried across the marble floors of the charity gala. The chandelier light caught on her diamond earrings as she leaned in conspiratorially to a circle of socialites, her laughter like shattered glass in my ears. "Of course, the wedding will be at the Morrison estate in June," she announced, her red lips curving into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Elliott and I have been planning it for months. Some people will just have to learn their place in the new arrangement." The group tittered, and I knew exactly who "some people" meant. My chest constricted as twelve years of memories flashed before my eyes—Elliott and I at fourteen, sharing dreams on a park bench; holding his hand through his father's business collapse; the night we lost our first child in that terrible accident just as he was rebuilding the Morrison empire. I set down my glass before I could drop it and slipped away from the gala, the weight of betrayal crushing my lungs. The drive to Elliott's penthouse passed in a blur of city lights and unshed tears. By the time he returned home, I had been waiting in his study for hours, watching the city lights blur through unshed tears. The door clicked open, and Elliott loosened his tie as he entered, his expression shifting from surprise to irritation when he saw me.
My Husband Blocked the Ambulance That Could Save My Father Novel Cover
9.5
The Tiffany box in my hand felt heavy, a dense weight of expectation for a fifth anniversary that was supposed to fix everything. The penthouse was silent, the kind of expensive silence that only money can buy in Manhattan—thick, pressurized, and smelling faintly of sandalwood and cold air. I set my keys on the marble console, the click echoing too loudly in the foyer. "Graham?" My voice wavered. I cleared my throat, smoothing the silk of my dress. I needed to be perfect. Perfection was the only currency Graham accepted lately. A strange sound drifted from the study down the hall. Not the low hum of a business call, nor the clink of a scotch glass. It was a whimper.
The Amnesiac Billionaire's Fake Perfect Wife Novel Cover
9.0
For three years, Jessenia lived as the perfect, grieving fiancée of her missing billionaire boss, Harlan Schwartz, enjoying his massive trust fund and raising their son. Then, the hospital called. Harlan had been found alive. Jessenia was paralyzed with terror. Before his plane crashed, Harlan despised her. She was just a scheming assistant who got pregnant. He had thrown a massive check and an NDA at her, ordering her to disappear forever or he would destroy her life. But the doctors revealed Harlan had severe amnesia. He forgot the NDA, and he forgot his deep hatred for her. Jessenia seized the chance, using their son to convince him they were deeply in love. Harlan accepted the logical lie, but his body didn't. Every time she tried to touch him, his muscles turned to stone, physically recoiling from her in instinctual disgust. To make matters worse, Harlan brought back Kaylee, the innocent-looking island girl who saved him. "Cole never said he had a fiancée," Kaylee whispered, staring at Jessenia's massive diamond ring with calculating eyes. Kaylee quickly realized Jessenia had no legal marriage certificate and launched a vicious, silent war to usurp her position, constantly setting traps to expose Jessenia's fabricated romantic timeline. Every day is a terrifying tightrope walk. Harlan's sharp, analytical brain is already noticing the flaws in her fake photos and stories. If he remembers the truth, he won't just kick her out. He will take her son and throw her in prison for fraud. Jessenia must break his physical defenses and eliminate the island girl before her flawless circle of lies shatters completely.
Trapped Between The Billionaire Playboy & The Mafia Don Novel Cover
7.6
I was trained to seduce, to deceive, and to kill if I had to. Love was never part of the mission. My body became my weapon, the one thing no man could ever truly own. I couldn't give life so I learned to use sex as a tool to take whatever I wanted. As one of O.A.S.I.S.'s top operatives, I've faced warlords, dictators, and men who thought they ruled the world. None of them ever got under my skin until billionaire playboy, Zayne Beaumont, walked into my crosshairs. He's infuriatingly charming, dangerously beautiful, and the reason my pulse forgets its rhythm. But when his past comes for him in the form of Dominik D'Angelo, the ruthless Mafia Don who wants him dead, my world fractures in ways no training could prepare me for. Because Dominik doesn't just want revenge. He wants me. Now I'm trapped between two men. Both powerful, dangerous, and willing to burn the world to claim me. And I'm the prize neither of them intends to lose.