Pregnant Wife Took Back The Firm Her Husband Tried To Give Away-kieutrinh

Adriana Vance knew the sound of applause could be cruel when it was given to the wrong person.

It rolled across the ballroom in bright waves while her husband stood under the chandelier lights with his hand at Serafina Dubois’s back.

Richard Sterling had chosen the largest room at the Astoria Grand for his firm’s annual gala because he liked witnesses.

Image

He liked crystal, cameras, investors, and the polished hush that came when people believed they were watching a brilliant man rise.

That night, they were watching a brilliant man steal.

Adriana sat near a marble column with one hand over her stomach and the other wrapped around a glass of sparkling water she had not touched.

Four months pregnant, she had dressed in gray because she had meant to survive the night invisibly.

Richard had asked her to stay home with a tenderness that did not reach his eyes.

“Rest for the baby,” he had said that morning, while fixing his cuff links in the mirror.

The baby had been his excuse, not his concern.

He wanted the room free of his wife while he crowned his mistress in public.

Serafina stood beside him in a crimson gown, laughing at something one of the investors said, her diamond bracelet flashing every time Richard leaned close.

She had been his star architect for two years and his affair for almost as long.

Adriana had learned the truth slowly, which was almost worse than finding it all at once.

It began with late nights, private jokes, and the quick lowering of voices when she entered a room.

Then came the private investigator’s folder, the hotel receipts, the photographs, and the sick little click of the world locking into place.

She had cried in silence for months because she was ashamed of being made pitiful.

She had not yet understood that shame belonged to the person doing the harm.

Richard lifted his glass and thanked the room for believing in Sterling Designs.

He spoke about vision, loyalty, discipline, and the kind of future that required courage.

Then he turned to Serafina and called her the future of the firm.

The applause grew louder.

Adriana felt her baby move beneath her palm, a soft flutter in a room full of hard people.

She thought of the inheritance her father had left her, the money Richard had called temporary help when the firm was young and hungry.

He never mentioned that money in interviews.

He preferred to talk about grit, talent, and sleepless nights, as if foundation stones laid by a wife became invisible once the building rose high enough.

She was still sitting there when Chloe found her.

Chloe had once worked beside Adriana at a small gallery where the paint smelled of turpentine and nobody pretended ambition was noble just because it wore a tuxedo.

They had drifted after Adriana married Richard.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *