
Seducing My Sister's Husband after Betrayal
Chapter 4
The Sterling family dinner had always been a formal affair. Tonight was no different, except for everything that had changed inside me.
I sat across from Caleb Whitmore, my sister's husband, studying him with new eyes. He was handsome in that understated way of old money—sandy hair swept back from a strong forehead, jaw cleanly shaved, shoulders broad beneath his tailored jacket.
My mother droned on about the hospital fundraiser while Aiden nodded politely, playing the attentive son-in-law. Lucia sat beside Caleb, barely touching her food, her fingers occasionally straying to her chest where her failing heart struggled beneath designer silk.
I slipped off my right heel under the table, my decision made.
"The cardiac wing needs complete renovation," my mother was saying. "The equipment is practically prehistoric."
I extended my leg carefully, finding Caleb's ankle with my toes. His conversation with my father faltered mid-sentence as I traced a slow path up his calf.
His eyes widened almost imperceptibly, darting to my face. I took a deliberate sip of wine, holding his gaze over the rim of my glass. A flush crept up his neck.
"Don't you agree, Sophia?" My mother's voice cut through the moment.
"Absolutely," I replied smoothly, having no idea what I was agreeing to. Under the table, I pressed my foot more firmly against Caleb's leg. "Some things desperately need... attention."
Caleb reached for his water glass, nearly knocking it over. I watched his Adam's apple bob as he swallowed hard.
"Are you feeling well, darling?" Lucia asked him, her hand resting possessively on his arm. "You look flushed."
"Just the wine," he murmured, his voice rougher than usual.
Across the table, Aiden was engaged in conversation with my father, oblivious to my game. The man who planned to cut out my heart hadn't even noticed I was playing one.
Dinner progressed with excruciating slowness. With each course, I grew bolder—trailing my toes higher, withdrawing when Caleb's breathing changed, then returning when he least expected it. By dessert, the tension between us was a living thing, coiling around the table like invisible smoke.
"The night is beautiful," I announced as coffee was served. "I think I'll step out to see the stars."
"I'll join you," Caleb said immediately, earning a surprised look from Lucia. "I could use some fresh air."
In the moonlight, the flowers looked silvered and otherworldly. I walked ahead of Caleb, aware of his eyes on me, the sway of my hips deliberate in my fitted dress.
"What are you doing, Sophia?" he asked when we were safely out of earshot, his voice low and strained.
I turned to face him, "What does it look like I'm doing?"
"Playing a dangerous game." He stepped closer, close enough that I could smell his cologne—sandalwood and something darker. "Why?"
I let vulnerability seep into my expression, a calculated show of weakness. "Do you know what it's like to be lonely in your own marriage? To be nothing more than... furniture in someone's life?"
Something shifted in his eyes—recognition, understanding. "Yes," he said simply. "I do."
"I see the way you look at me, Caleb. I've always seen it." I moved closer, until the heat of his body warmed mine. "You married the wrong sister, didn't you?"
His breath caught. "Sophia..."
"Tell me I'm wrong." I challenged, tilting my face up to his. "Tell me you haven't thought about it."
Caleb's hands clenched at his sides, knuckles white with restraint. "It wouldn't be... appropriate."
"Appropriate," I echoed with a bitter laugh. "Is that what matters? While my husband and your wife—"
"What about them?" His eyes sharpened, focusing on mine with sudden intensity.
I hesitated, realizing I'd nearly revealed too much. "They're inside, discussing hospital donations," I finished smoothly. "While we're out here, finally being honest."
Caleb reached out, his fingers grazing my cheek with a tenderness that startled me. "I've regretted my choice since the day I made it," he admitted, his voice barely above a whisper. "When I saw you at the engagement party... God, Sophia. You were radiant. And I was already promised to Lucia."
"It's not too late," I whispered, stepping into his space completely, my body flush against his. "We can take back what should have been ours."
His resistance crumbled like sand. When his lips found mine, the kiss wasn't gentle or tentative—it was hungry, desperate, years of restraint dissolving in an instant. His hands tangled in my hair, pulling me closer as we stumbled backward through the roses, their thorns catching at my dress, at his sleeve.
The stone bench was cold against my back as he pressed me down, his weight a delicious pressure pinning me in place.
"We shouldn't," he murmured against my throat, even as his hands traced the curve of my waist, the outline of my breast.
"They already are," I whispered back, the half-truth tasting like victory on my tongue. "Why shouldn't we?"
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