
The Company Retreat Affair
Chapter 3
The hotel bar was mercifully dim, tucked away from the main ballroom where the sounds of celebration continued to drift through the walls like mockery. I'd found a corner booth where the shadows could hide the tremor in my hands as I gripped my martini glass, the gin doing nothing to numb the sharp edges of betrayal cutting through my chest.
I stared at the olive floating in my drink, trying to focus on something—anything—other than the images burned into my retinas. Marcus and Zoe. Her head on my pillow. Seven years reduced to deleted browser history and hidden photo albums.
"Alex? Why aren't you at the party?"
I looked up to find Lisa approaching, her emerald cocktail dress a stark contrast to her concerned expression. Lisa Martinez from our PR department had been my closest friend at the company for the past three years, the only person who could read my poker face during board meetings.
"I needed air," I managed, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears.
Lisa slid into the booth across from me, her dark eyes scanning my face with the precision of someone trained to read between the lines. "Bullshit. You look like someone just told you the company's going under. What happened?"
The concern in her voice broke something loose inside me. I felt my carefully constructed composure cracking like ice under pressure.
"Marcus is having an affair."
The words hung in the air between us, stark and brutal. Lisa's mouth fell open, her hand freezing halfway to her wine glass.
"What? No. Alex, that's—Marcus? No way. You guys are perfect. Everyone says so. You're like the company's golden couple."
A bitter laugh escaped my throat, harsh and unfamiliar. "Apparently not."
Lisa leaned forward, her voice dropping to an urgent whisper. "Are you sure? Maybe it's just—"
"I saw the photos, Lisa. On his phone. Them together. In our bed." My voice cracked on the last word, and I took a shaky sip of my martini to steady myself.
"That bastard." Lisa's face transformed, anger flashing in her eyes. "And Zoe? She's like twenty-five!"
"Twenty-six. I checked her employee file once." The admission felt pathetic, but I'd needed to know. Had needed to understand what Marcus saw in her that he couldn't find in me.
Lisa's hand reached across the table to cover mine. "Alex, I'm so sorry. What are you going to do?"
"I don't know." The helplessness in my own voice surprised me. I was Alexandra Chen, VP of Marketing, the woman who could navigate million-dollar campaigns and hostile takeovers. But faced with my husband's betrayal, I felt completely lost. "I can't leave until tomorrow. The flights—"
"Fuck the flights. I can't face him. Can't face anyone. They all think we're this perfect power couple, and now—" I gestured vaguely toward the ballroom where the party continued without us.
Lisa squeezed my hand. "Stay in my room tonight. I'll handle Marcus if he comes looking for you."
Gratitude flooded through me, warm and unexpected. "Thank you. I just—I need time to think. To figure out what comes next."
We sat in silence for a moment, the weight of my shattered marriage settling between us like a third person at the table. Finally, Lisa signaled the bartender for another round.
"We're going to get through this," she said firmly. "You're stronger than you know."
I wanted to believe her, but right now, I felt like I was drowning.
Later, in Lisa's room, I lay staring at the ceiling while she showered. The space felt foreign—different layout, different view, everything a reminder that my world had shifted off its axis. I'd changed into the spare pajamas Lisa had offered, my cocktail dress hanging in her closet like a costume from a play I no longer wanted to be in.
Unable to sleep, I reached for my phone, muscle memory making me check the company group chat we used for events like this. The notification showed dozens of new messages and photos from the party.
I shouldn't have looked. I knew I shouldn't have looked.
But I scrolled anyway, each image a fresh knife twist in my chest.
There was Tom's selfie with the band in the background. Sarah and her husband dancing. The dessert table that looked like something from a magazine spread.
And then I saw it.
A group photo of our department, everyone clustered together with champagne glasses raised. Marcus stood on one side, his smile bright and carefree. Zoe was on the other side, carefully positioned with several people between them.
But their body language told a different story.
The way Marcus's gaze found her across the group, even while posing with his arm around Tom's shoulders. The way Zoe's smile seemed directed at something—someone—just outside the camera frame. The subtle lean of her body, angled toward him despite the distance.
I scrolled to the next photo. Another group shot, this one from a different angle. Again, they were careful not to stand together, maintaining the pretense of professional distance. But I could see it now—the electric current that seemed to run between them, invisible to everyone else but blazing obvious to me.
How long had this been going on? How many company events had I attended, oblivious to the silent communication happening right under my nose?
My finger swiped to the next image, and my stomach dropped. It was a candid shot someone had taken of the dance floor. In the background, barely visible, I could see myself dancing with Marcus. We looked happy, lost in each other, the perfect picture of marital bliss.
But now I knew the truth. Even as he held me, even as he murmured sweet words in my ear, part of him had been thinking about her. Planning their next stolen moment.
The comments under the photos were full of heart emojis and jokes about "relationship goals." Our colleagues saw what they wanted to see—the successful power couple living their best life.
But this was public humiliation on a scale I hadn't even considered. Everyone would know, eventually. The whispers would start, the sideways glances, the careful conversations that stopped when I entered a room.
My professional reputation, built carefully over years of hard work and strategic networking, would become collateral damage in Marcus's midlife crisis. I'd become the woman who couldn't keep her husband happy, the cautionary tale whispered about in corporate bathrooms.
I set the phone aside, my hands shaking. Tomorrow, I'd have to face them all. Tomorrow, I'd have to figure out how to rebuild everything Marcus had just destroyed.
But tonight, in the darkness of Lisa's guest room, I allowed myself to fall apart.
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