The Night Bailey Found The Affair And Took Down His Perfect Empire-kieutrinh

The elevator opened with a soft mechanical sigh, and Bailey Bishop knew before she stepped out that the penthouse was no longer only her husband’s apartment.

It smelled wrong.

Not dirty.

Image

Not unfamiliar.

Worse.

It smelled expensive in a way that tried to hide what had happened there, champagne layered over candle wax, steam from a recent shower drifting under a hallway door, the faint perfume of a woman who had not expected to be interrupted.

Bailey stood with one hand on the brass rail.

Behind her, the elevator doors waited.

In front of her, the Manhattan skyline glittered through the glass like a room full of people pretending not to see.

For ten years, she had walked into rooms beside Marcus Thorne and watched people turn toward him first.

They called him brilliant.

They called him visionary.

They called him the man who would make clean energy feel inevitable, a billionaire founder with a careful smile and a habit of touching Bailey’s lower back whenever photographers were nearby.

On magazine covers, he looked warm.

At podiums, he looked noble.

At charity dinners, he looked like a husband who adored the quiet woman beside him.

Bailey had learned early in their marriage that public affection could be as staged as a ribbon cutting.

A hand on the back.

A temple kiss.

A laugh at the right table.

All of it could be done with no more feeling than signing a receipt.

That night, there were receipts everywhere.

Two crystal glasses sat on the marble bar.

One was clean except for a little ring of champagne.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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