At Our Anniversary Dinner, His Mistress Announced Their Wedding-Ginny

The night my husband’s mistress announced their wedding at our anniversary dinner, I was wearing the pearl earrings my mother had given me on my wedding day.

They were small, modest, and nearly invisible beneath the chandelier light of the Grand Larkin Hotel ballroom.

That was exactly why Ethan Hayes hated them.

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He preferred diamonds.

Emeralds.

Anything that flashed loudly enough to tell the room he had married into taste, money, and influence.

But I wore the pearls anyway, because they belonged to Claire Whitmore before I became Claire Whitmore Hayes.

They belonged to the woman I had been before strangers started whispering that I was lucky.

Lucky to marry Ethan.

Lucky to stand beside him.

Lucky to be chosen by a powerful man who had “built” Hayes Logistics into the kind of company people discussed in low voices over expensive wine.

Luck is often what people call a woman’s work when they cannot bear to admit she made the room possible.

The ballroom was full that night.

White linens covered the tables.

Champagne moved from hand to hand in thin crystal flutes.

White lilies stood in the centerpieces, sweet enough to make the air feel heavy.

Near the tall windows overlooking downtown Chicago, the string quartet played as if every note had been polished before it left the bow.

Executives were there.

Investors.

Lawyers.

Socialites.

Old family friends who had watched our marriage from a safe distance and always seemed to know more than they said.

Ethan had invited everyone to celebrate our fifteenth wedding anniversary.

Fifteen years.

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