
The Halloween Betrayal
The Halloween Betrayal Chapter 1
The red satin of my Catwoman costume clung to my skin as I adjusted the mask one final time in the elevator mirror. My heart hammered against my ribs, a wild rhythm that matched the ascending floors. Twenty-eight, twenty-nine, thirty. The executive level.
I'd spent the entire day preparing for this moment. The costume was perfect—the same one I'd worn to that charity masquerade three years ago, where Michael first told me I was the most beautiful woman in the room. Where he'd whispered that he wanted to spend forever with me. The memory made my cheeks flush beneath the black mask.
The gift box felt warm in my trembling hands. Inside, nestled in tissue paper, were tiny white booties no bigger than my thumb, and the pregnancy test that had changed everything a week ago. Two pink lines. A miracle I'd been dying to share but wanted to make perfect.
The elevator chimed softly as it reached the thirtieth floor. Michael's domain.
I'd practiced this moment a dozen times in our bathroom mirror. "Michael, I have a Halloween surprise for you." Then I'd open the box, watch his face transform from confusion to wonder to pure joy. He'd sweep me into his arms, spin me around, maybe even cry. We'd been trying for two years.
The executive floor was eerily quiet, decorated with plastic spiders and orange streamers for tonight's party. My heels clicked against the marble as I made my way down the familiar hallway, past the conference rooms where I'd brought Michael lunch countless times, past Jessica's desk where she always smiled too sweetly when I visited.
Jessica. His secretary. Twenty-four, blonde, with legs that seemed to go on forever. I'd always felt a twinge of something—not jealousy exactly, but awareness—when I saw how she looked at my husband. But Michael had laughed when I mentioned it once. "Emma, sweetheart, you're being paranoid. She's just enthusiastic about her work."
I pushed the thought away. Tonight was about us. About our future.
Michael's office door was slightly ajar, warm light spilling into the hallway. I could hear voices inside—his deep laugh, another voice I couldn't quite place. Maybe he was on a conference call. I'd wait.
But as I approached, the sounds became clearer. A woman's voice, breathy and urgent. "Oh, Michael... right there..."
My steps faltered. The gift box suddenly felt heavy in my hands.
That wasn't a business call.
I should have turned around. Should have walked away, taken the elevator back down, pretended I'd never come up here. But something pulled me forward, some terrible need to know.
I pressed my eye to the crack in the door.
The world tilted.
Michael was bent over his mahogany desk, his shirt unbuttoned, his hands gripping the hips of a woman who was arched beneath him. Her blonde hair spilled across his papers, her red-painted nails clutching the edge of the desk.
Jessica.
But it was what she was wearing that made my blood turn to ice.
Black leather. Red satin trim. Cat ears. An identical Catwoman costume.
Identical to mine.
The realization hit me like a physical blow. This wasn't spontaneous. This wasn't an accident. They'd planned this. They knew I was coming early—I'd told Michael this morning I wanted to surprise him before the party. They'd planned for me to see this.
My hands went numb. The gift box slipped from my fingers, hitting the floor with a soft thud that seemed to echo through the hallway.
Michael's head snapped up. Our eyes met through the crack in the door, and for a moment, time stopped. I waited for shock, for shame, for some flicker of the man I'd married.
Instead, his face twisted with annoyance.
"What are you doing here?" His voice was flat, irritated, like I'd interrupted an important meeting instead of catching him cheating on me.
Jessica turned her head, and when she saw me, her lips curved into a smile that was pure venom. She didn't stop moving. If anything, she arched her back more, letting out a deliberate moan that seemed designed to cut through me.
"Michael," she purred, her eyes locked on mine, "don't stop."
I couldn't breathe. The hallway seemed to spin around me, the orange decorations blurring into streaks of color. This couldn't be happening. Not tonight. Not when I had such beautiful news to share.
I pushed the door open wider, stepping into the office on unsteady legs. The baby booties had scattered across the floor, along with the pregnancy test. The positive pregnancy test that was supposed to change everything.
Michael finally pulled away from Jessica, but he didn't rush to cover himself. He didn't apologize. He just stood there, adjusting his belt with the same casual efficiency he used to straighten his tie.
"Emma." My name sounded foreign in his mouth, like he was addressing a stranger. "You're early."
Jessica sat up on the desk, making no effort to fix her costume. The leather squeaked against the wood as she crossed her legs, studying me with predatory satisfaction.
"Oh my," she said, her voice dripping with false concern. "This is awkward. Though I have to say, Emma, great minds think alike." She gestured to our matching costumes. "Though I think I wear it better, don't you, Michael?"
Michael's gaze flicked between us, and I saw something that made my stomach drop. Calculation. He was weighing his options, deciding how to handle this inconvenience.
"We need to talk," I managed, my voice barely a whisper.
"Do we?" He buttoned his shirt with methodical precision. "I think the situation is fairly clear."
Jessica slid off the desk, her movements deliberately sensual. She bent to pick up one of the baby booties, holding it up to the light like it was some curious artifact.
"Oh, how sweet," she cooed. "Were you planning to tell him about the baby tonight? At the Halloween party?" She tossed the bootie back to the floor. "How... domestic."
The pregnancy test lay beside her foot. She looked down at it, then at me, and her smile turned razor-sharp.
"You know, Emma," she said, stepping closer, "some women think they can trap a man with a baby. But successful men like Michael... they have options."
Michael said nothing. He just watched, his face a mask of cold indifference, as his mistress destroyed me piece by piece.
The woman I'd been—the trusting wife, the hopeful mother-to-be—crumbled in that moment. Something else began to take her place, something harder and infinitely more dangerous.
But I didn't know that yet. Right then, I was just a woman in a ridiculous costume, watching her world collapse around baby booties and Halloween decorations.
The Halloween Betrayal of Contents
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