My Husband Brought His Mistress To My Gala, Then My USB Spoke-lequyen994 - Chainityai

My Husband Brought His Mistress To My Gala, Then My USB Spoke-lequyen994

My name was still glowing on the screen when my husband walked in with another woman.

Senior Vice President of Brand Strategy shone behind me in clean white letters, and for a few seconds I let myself believe the applause belonged to the woman I had fought to become.

Then Ethan Wolfe entered the ballroom with Clara Vaughn on his arm.

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Not beside him, not near him, but on his arm.

Clara wore silver, Ethan wore the tux I had picked up from the tailor, and his hand rested on her lower back as if the room had already been told a new story about us.

I was thirty-two, newly promoted, and standing in front of executives, attorneys, agency partners, and board members who knew how to stare without looking rude.

Rich people do not gasp when a marriage breaks open in public.

They sip.

Ava, my assistant, appeared beside me with her face pale under the chandelier light.

“Izzy,” she whispered, “do you want to step out?”

I watched Ethan bend and kiss Clara’s temple beneath the glow of my new title.

“No,” I said. “I want to remember everything.”

The applause had faded by then, or maybe my ears had decided I did not need it anymore.

I had given Horizon North Media seven years of my life.

I had rescued dying campaigns, kept impossible clients from walking, coached managers through disasters, and sat in rooms where men repeated my ideas louder.

When the promotion finally came, Ethan smiled for half a second and asked whether I had remembered the dry cleaning.

That was how the end began, not with a confession, but with a thousand tiny refusals to celebrate me.

At home, Ethan called me paranoid.

He called me Isabel when he wanted distance.

He said I was turning success into suspicion, and for a few days I let the old version of him argue with the woman in my stomach who already knew.

The night I checked his phone, the shower was running and our bedroom looked painfully ordinary.

The messages were bad.

The screenshot was worse.

Clara had sent Ethan a confidential Horizon pitch deck for Northstar Living, the biggest client relaunch my team had built that year.

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