
The Billionaire's Rejected Wife
Chapter 3
My house too, I wanted to scream. I'd lived here for three years, had decorated every room, had made it a home. But the words died in my throat as I looked at the faces surrounding me—faces twisted with cruel anticipation, hungry for my complete destruction.
My house too, I wanted to scream. I'd lived here for three years, had decorated every room, had made it a home. But the words died in my throat as I looked at the faces surrounding me—faces twisted with cruel anticipation, hungry for my complete destruction.
I signed my name with shaking fingers, each letter feeling like a nail in my own coffin. The moment the ink dried, Adrian snatched the papers from my hands.
"Security!" he called out, and my blood turned to ice.
Two large men in black suits emerged from the service elevator—they'd been waiting, I realized with dawning horror. This entire evening had been orchestrated, planned down to the last humiliating detail.
"Remove her belongings from the premises," Adrian commanded, his voice carrying the authority of a man who'd never been denied anything. "All of it. Now."
The guests began murmuring excitedly, pressing closer to the floor-to-ceiling windows that offered a perfect view of the street below. I watched in numb disbelief as the security guards disappeared into what had been our bedroom.
Minutes later, the first of my possessions came flying out of the penthouse windows.
My clothes—the designer dresses Adrian had bought me for charity galas, the casual outfits I'd worn on our weekend trips, the silk nightgowns that had once made him look at me with desire—all of them tumbling through the night air like broken birds. The rain had started, a steady downpour that soaked everything the moment it hit the pavement.
"Oh my God," someone gasped near the window. "They're throwing out everything!"
My jewelry box came next, spilling its contents across the wet asphalt. The pearl necklace from our first anniversary. The diamond earrings he'd given me last Christmas. The simple gold locket that held a photo of my foster parents—the only family I'd ever known before Adrian.
Then came my books. Hundreds of them, my beloved collection that I'd built over years of careful saving and hunting through used bookstores. They hit the ground with wet thuds, their pages already beginning to curl and disintegrate in the rain.
"The photo albums!" I cried out, lunging toward the window as I saw my memories scattering in the wind. Pictures of our wedding day, our honeymoon in Tuscany, quiet moments I'd treasured—all of them mixing with the rainwater and city grime.
Adrian caught my arm, his grip bruising. "You have five minutes to collect whatever you can carry," he said coldly. "After that, the building's security will escort you off the property."
Vivian appeared at his other side, her hand still resting protectively on her stomach. "Don't be too sentimental, Sophia," she said with mock concern. "It's just stuff. You can always start over... somewhere else."
The elevator doors opened with a cheerful ding that felt obscene in the circumstances. I stumbled inside, my wine-stained dress clinging to my skin, my face still burning from Adrian's slap. As the doors closed, I caught a glimpse of the party continuing behind me—guests already turning back to their conversations, their champagne, their entertainment.
I was yesterday's news before I'd even left the building.
The lobby was a blur of marble and mirrors that reflected my destruction from every angle. The doorman, who'd greeted me warmly every day for three years, wouldn't meet my eyes as I pushed through the revolving door and into the storm.
The rain hit me like a physical assault, instantly soaking through my ruined dress and plastering my hair to my skull. The street was chaos—my belongings scattered across the asphalt, some already being picked through by curious passersby who'd gathered to witness the spectacle.
I fell to my knees on the wet pavement, frantically trying to gather what I could. My hands closed around the gold locket, the chain broken but the photo inside still intact. A few books that weren't completely ruined. A sweater that had belonged to my foster mother.
"Holy shit, is that Sophia Vance?"
"The wife who got dumped at her own party?"
"This is going viral for sure."
Phones appeared around me like vultures, their screens glowing in the darkness. I could hear the artificial click of camera shutters, the ping of notifications as my humiliation spread across social media in real time.
"Please," I whispered, looking up at the circle of faces. "Please don't—"
But they kept filming, kept laughing, kept treating my pain like free entertainment. I clutched my few salvaged possessions to my chest and tried to stand, my legs shaking with exhaustion and shock.
That's when I remembered the credit cards.
I pulled out my wallet with trembling fingers, water streaming down my face. The Platinum American Express that Adrian had given me on our wedding day. The Visa I'd used for groceries and household expenses. Surely he wouldn't have—
The hotel clerk's sympathetic smile faded as she ran the first card.
"I'm sorry, ma'am, but this card has been declined."
My heart sank, but I tried the second one. Then the third. Each rejection felt like another slap across my already burning cheek.
"All of your cards appear to be frozen or canceled," the clerk said gently. "Do you have another form of payment?"
I opened my purse with numb fingers, counting the crumpled bills inside. Two hundred dollars. That was all I had left of my entire life.
"I'm sorry," I whispered, backing away from the desk. "I'm so sorry."
The lobby of the boutique hotel suddenly felt suffocating, its warm lighting and elegant decor mocking my bedraggled appearance. I stumbled back out into the rain, my mind blank with panic.
Where could I go? What was I supposed to do?
My phone buzzed with a text message, and I saw Emma's name on the screen.
*"OMG babe! Saw what happened online. You poor thing! Come to my place right now. I have wine and tissues and we'll figure this out together. Address: 1247 Oak Street, Apt 4B. You're going to be okay! ❤️"*
Tears of gratitude mixed with the rain on my cheeks. Emma. My best friend. The one person who'd stood by me through everything, who'd listened to me cry about my fertility struggles, who'd promised to be there no matter what.
I clutched my phone like a lifeline and hailed a taxi, using precious dollars from my dwindling cash to pay for the ride across town. As the city lights blurred past the rain-streaked windows, I allowed myself a moment of hope.
Maybe this nightmare was almost over. Maybe Emma's friendship would be the one thing Adrian couldn't destroy.
I had no idea that my best friend was already composing her next Instagram post: *"When your girl needs you most! Sometimes being a loyal friend means opening your home to someone who's lost everything. #RideOrDie #TrueFriendship #SophiaVanceScandal"*
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