
Unmasking the Husband
Chapter 1
The crystal chandeliers cast golden light across the ballroom as I adjusted my emerald evening gown, the silk cool against my skin. Eight years of attending these charity galas, and I still felt like I was playing dress-up in someone else's life. The anniversary celebration of Evans Enterprises buzzed around me—champagne glasses clinking, designer heels clicking against marble floors, the low hum of business deals disguised as small talk.
I spotted Silas near the bar, his tall frame commanding attention even in a room full of New York's elite. He wore his success like armor—the perfectly tailored tuxedo, the confident tilt of his head, the way people gravitated toward him seeking approval or investment. This was his world now, the empire he'd built from nothing.
A woman's laugh cut through the ambient noise, bright and flirtatious. My eyes found the source—a stunning brunette in a red dress that hugged every curve, her manicured hand resting on Silas's arm. Chana Hoffman. I recognized her from the society pages, always photographed at the most exclusive clubs, always with the most powerful men.
Something twisted in my chest as I watched them together. The way she leaned into him, how his fingers traced the rim of his whiskey glass while she spoke. It wasn't the first time I'd seen him with other women at these events, but something about this felt different. More intimate.
I moved closer, weaving through clusters of guests, my heels silent on the thick carpet. The scent of expensive perfume and cigar smoke filled my nostrils as conversations blurred into background noise.
"—told him the merger would be worth at least fifty million," Chana was saying, her voice honey-sweet with just enough breathiness to be seductive.
Silas chuckled, a sound I once found comforting but now felt foreign. "You understand business better than most of my board members."
I stopped three feet away, close enough to hear every word, close enough to see the way Chana's fingers played with something at her throat. My breath caught.
There, nestled against her décolletage, was a small silver charm on a thin chain. Tarnished. Cheap. Familiar.
The protection charm I'd given Silas during our first winter together, when we shared a studio apartment with broken heating and lived on ramen noodles. I'd saved for weeks to buy it from a street vendor, convinced it would keep him safe during those long nights when he worked construction jobs to pay for business school.
"It's not much," I'd whispered as I fastened it around his neck, "but I want you to have something from me when you're out there chasing your dreams."
He'd kissed me then, tasting like coffee and hope. "I'll never take it off," he'd promised.
Now it hung around another woman's neck like a trophy.
The room tilted. The champagne in my glass trembled as my hand shook. Eight years of marriage, of standing by his side as he climbed from nothing to everything, of believing in us even when the distance between us grew wider each year.
Chana noticed me first, her smile faltering as she followed my gaze to the necklace. Her fingers instinctively covered it, but it was too late.
Silas turned, his expression shifting from surprise to something colder, more calculating. "Lainey."
"That's mine," I said quietly, my voice barely audible over the orchestra playing in the corner.
Chana's laugh was nervous now. "Oh, this old thing? Silas gave it to me for good luck. Said it was special."
Special. The word hit me like a physical blow.
I looked at my husband—really looked at him. The boy who'd held me during thunderstorms was gone, replaced by this stranger in expensive clothes who could give away pieces of our history without a second thought.
"Excuse me," I managed, setting my champagne glass on a nearby table with shaking hands.
I walked away on unsteady legs, past the smiling faces and polite conversation, past the life I'd helped him build. The bathroom door closed behind me with a soft click, and I gripped the marble countertop, staring at my reflection.
The woman looking back at me wore diamonds and designer silk, but her eyes were hollow. When had I become so empty? When had I stopped mattering?
My phone buzzed. A text from Silas: *We need to talk when we get home.*
I deleted it without responding. Some conversations couldn't wait for the safety of our penthouse walls.
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