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The Company Retreat Affair Novel Cover

The Company Retreat Affair

I didn't know thirteen minutes could destroy fifteen years of marriage. Standing on that dance floor in Hawaii, Marcus's arms around me, I thought we were happy. The perfect power couple—marketing VP and CFO—everyone at Chen & Associates envied us. "Relationship goals!" they'd call out, snapping photos of us in matching yoga poses on the beach. But while I smiled for their cameras, my husband was texting his mistress. When I accidentally picked up his phone instead of mine, the AirDrop notification appeared instantly: "Marcus's iPhone received photos." I shouldn't have looked. Some boundaries can't be uncrossed. The images burned into my retinas—Marcus and Zoe, the new digital marketing hire, locked in an intimate kiss on the beach. The timestamp: thirty minutes ago. During his "bathroom break." I kept scrolling, horror building with each swipe. Hotel rooms I didn't recognize. Intimate dinners at restaurants we'd never visited together. Her hand on his chest. His lips on her neck. And then, the photo that made bile rise in my throat: Zoe asleep in OUR marital bed, her head on MY pillow, Marcus's hand visible as he captured his trophy. Seven years of marriage. Fifteen years of partnership. All of it lies. I stood frozen in that glittering ballroom, surrounded by colleagues who still believed in our perfect love story, holding irrefutable evidence of my husband's betrayal in hands that wouldn't stop shaking. The band was still playing our song.
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Chapter 1

The photo notification appeared at exactly 9:47 PM, just as the band struck up our song.

I didn't know it yet, but in thirteen minutes, my marriage would be over. In twenty, I'd understand that the man holding me on this dance floor had already chosen someone else. And in thirty, I'd be standing on a moonlit beach, watching fifteen years of my life crumble into sand.

But for now, Marcus's arms were still around me, and I was still naive enough to believe we were happy.

---

The Hawaiian sun had painted everything in golden hues that morning as I laced up my running shoes, the ocean breeze carrying the scent of plumeria through our resort suite's open balcony doors. Seven years of marriage, and Marcus still managed to look effortlessly handsome in his running gear, his dark hair catching the morning light in a way that reminded me why I'd fallen for him in the first place.

"Ready for our morning torture session?" he teased, stretching his hamstrings against the marble countertop.

I laughed, the sound genuine despite the underlying tension I'd been carrying about my presentation later. "Speak for yourself. I could run circles around you."

The familiar banter felt comfortable as we made our way down to the beach path, our practiced rhythm as natural as breathing. Our colleagues from Chen & Associates were scattered across the resort for our annual retreat, and I caught glimpses of familiar faces heading to breakfast or claiming poolside loungers. Marcus and I had built a reputation as the company's power couple—the marketing VP and CFO who somehow made it all look effortless.

But effortless was an illusion we'd perfected over time, I realized now. Like a swan gliding across water while its feet paddled frantically beneath the surface.

Our feet found their rhythm on the packed sand, the waves providing a steady soundtrack. Marcus's breathing was even beside me, but I noticed his Apple Watch buzzing repeatedly. Each vibration seemed to pull his attention away, his pace faltering slightly, his focus somewhere I couldn't follow.

"Popular morning," I commented, nodding toward his wrist.

"Work emergency brewing," he said, not meeting my eyes. The words came too quickly, too smoothly. "You know how it is."

I did know. We both lived tethered to our devices, slaves to the constant demands of corporate life. It was part of what made us such a formidable team—we understood each other's dedication. Or at least, that's what I'd told myself every time his phone pulled him away from a conversation, every time a "work emergency" interrupted our plans.

Looking back, I'd been so willfully blind. So desperate to believe in the narrative we'd constructed.

The couple's yoga class on the beach an hour later drew a small crowd of our colleagues. Marcus positioned his mat next to mine on the soft sand, his hand finding mine during partner poses with practiced ease. The gesture should have felt intimate, but there was something mechanical about it now—a performance rather than connection.

I caught Sarah from HR snapping a photo of us during a particularly photogenic warrior pose, our bodies perfectly aligned, our faces serene.

"Relationship goals!" she called out, and several others laughed in agreement.

Marcus squeezed my hand, flashing that charming smile that had first caught my attention at a company mixer eight years ago. But even as we moved through the poses, I noticed his phone face-up beside his mat, the screen lighting up with notifications he couldn't quite ignore. Each glow seemed to pull him further away from me, though I didn't understand why yet.

How many of those messages were from her? How many times had I smiled for photos while he texted his mistress?

By the pool afterward, we claimed two loungers under an umbrella. The scene was picture-perfect—Marcus reading a thriller while I reviewed my presentation notes, our fingers occasionally intertwining when one of us reached for our iced coffee. To anyone watching, we were the epitome of a successful couple enjoying a romantic getaway.

But I was beginning to notice the cracks in our perfect facade. The way his eyes never quite met mine. The distraction that clouded his features even in our quietest moments.

"Alex, Marcus!" Tom from accounting waved from the pool bar, his voice carrying that cheerful envy of someone watching a relationship they admired. "You two are making the rest of us look bad. Seven years and still acting like newlyweds."

Marcus looked up from his book, that easy grin spreading across his face with the smoothness of long practice. "What can I say? I married up."

The compliment should have warmed me. Instead, something cold settled in my chest. Maybe it was the way his eyes immediately returned to his phone screen, or how his thumb moved across it with the familiarity of someone typing a message that couldn't wait. Or maybe it was the hollow quality of his words—like he was reading from a script he'd memorized but no longer believed.

"Another work emergency?" I asked, trying to keep my tone light even as suspicion began its slow crawl up my spine.

He nodded absently, his fingers still moving across the screen. "Crisis with the Morrison account. You know how demanding they can be."

I did know the Morrison account—intimately, since marketing and finance worked closely on their campaigns. But I hadn't received any urgent messages about them today. No frantic emails, no crisis calls, nothing that would require this level of immediate attention.

The lie settled between us like a third person on his lounger, invisible but undeniably present.

The afternoon blurred past in a haze of presentation prep and networking, my mind caught between professional responsibilities and the growing unease I couldn't quite name. The gala dinner that evening was the retreat's main event, held in the resort's grand ballroom with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the ocean. I'd chosen my dress carefully—a midnight blue number that hugged my curves and made my eyes pop. It was the kind of dress that reminded everyone why Marcus Chen had been smart to put a ring on my finger.

Or at least, it used to be.

When I emerged from the bathroom, Marcus was adjusting his tie in the mirror, looking devastatingly handsome in his tailored black suit. For a moment, I saw the man I'd married—confident, successful, mine.

"You look beautiful," he said, his eyes meeting mine in the reflection.

The words were right, his tone warm, but something felt hollow about the moment. Like we were actors playing our parts rather than a husband genuinely admiring his wife. The compliment hung in the air between us, pretty and meaningless as confetti.

The ballroom buzzed with conversation and clinking glasses when we arrived. Our colleagues had cleaned up well, the usual office casual replaced with cocktail attire and genuine smiles. Marcus's hand rested on the small of my back as we navigated through clusters of conversation, the perfect picture of corporate couple success.

His touch felt different tonight. Obligatory. Like he was checking off a box on some invisible list of husbandly duties.

When the band started playing, he led me to the dance floor without hesitation. His arms encircled me with practiced ease, our bodies moving together to the slow jazz melody with the synchronization of years. Around us, other couples swayed, but I could feel eyes on us—the admiring glances of colleagues who saw what they wanted to see.

The perfect couple. The relationship goals. The proof that you could have it all.

"We should do this more often," Marcus murmured against my ear, his breath warm on my neck.

"Dance?"

"All of it. Take time for us."

The sentiment was sweet, exactly what a loving husband should say. But even as he spoke, I felt his body tense slightly, his attention fracturing. Over his shoulder, I could see his phone's screen glowing on our table, another notification lighting up the display like a beacon calling him home.

To her. Though I didn't know that yet.

After the third song, nature called, and I excused myself to the ladies' room. The hallway leading to the restrooms was quieter, lined with local artwork and the gentle sound of the ocean through open windows. I touched up my lipstick and checked my reflection, noting the slight tension around my eyes that even the most expensive concealer couldn't quite hide.

Something was wrong. I'd been feeling it for months—that subtle shift in the atmosphere between us, like the air pressure changing before a storm. But every time I tried to pin it down, Marcus would smile or kiss me or say something that made me question my own instincts.

Gaslighting, I would learn later. The slow erosion of trust in your own perception.

Returning to our table, I reached for my phone to check messages, but my fingers closed around the wrong device. Marcus and I had identical iPhone models—a practical decision that had led to mix-ups before. Usually, I caught the mistake immediately, but tonight, distracted by the wine and the evening's festivities and that persistent sense of wrongness, I was halfway across the ballroom before I realized.

I should have put it back. Should have returned it to the table and grabbed my own phone without a second thought.

But curiosity—or maybe some subconscious knowledge I wasn't ready to acknowledge—made me pause.

We knew each other's passcodes. Another symbol of our transparent marriage, our complete trust, our "no secrets" policy that I'd believed in so completely. My thumb moved across the screen automatically, unlocking the device with the muscle memory of countless innocent mix-ups.

The AirDrop notification appeared immediately: "Marcus's iPhone received photos."

My heart stuttered, a physical sensation like missing a step on a staircase. Photos? From whom? At this time of night?

I shouldn't look. I knew I shouldn't look. Whatever boundary I was about to cross couldn't be uncrossed.

But my finger was already moving, tapping the notification before rational thought could intervene.

The world tilted on its axis.

The most recent image filled the screen: Marcus and Zoe, the new hire from our digital marketing team, locked in an intimate kiss on the beach. The timestamp read thirty minutes ago—exactly when Marcus had excused himself for his "bathroom break."

The ballroom's noise became distant, muffled, like I was underwater. My hands trembled as I scrolled through the photo library, each swipe revealing another piece of my shattered reality. Hotel rooms I didn't recognize. Intimate dinners at restaurants we'd never been to together. Her hand on his chest. His lips on her neck. Their bodies intertwined in ways that spoke of familiarity, of practice, of time.

So much time.

How long? How many months had this been going on while I smiled for cameras and played the devoted wife?

And then, the image that made bile rise in my throat: Zoe asleep in our marital bed, her head resting on my pillow, Marcus's hand visible in the frame as he captured the moment. My pillow. My bed. My husband.

The phone began to slip from my numb fingers, but I caught it at the last second. The ballroom's laughter and music became a distant roar as my world collapsed around me, each photo a bomb detonating in the carefully constructed life I'd thought we were building together.

Seven years of marriage. Fifteen years of partnership. Countless promises of forever.

All of it lies.

I stood there in the middle of the glittering ballroom, surrounded by colleagues who still believed in our perfect love story, holding the evidence of my husband's betrayal in hands that wouldn't stop shaking.

The band was still playing our song.

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