It came back in pieces. Damian's eyes, threaded with something colder than rage. The sound of a whiskey glass shattering against the wall. His voice, a low snarl as he shoved her away.
"Don't touch me."
The words echoed in her skull, a pulse of fresh humiliation. She pressed her fingers to her temple, willing the memory to dissolve.
Then she heard it.
A sound from downstairs. Laughter. A man's low, easy chuckle-unfamiliar in its warmth-then a woman's reply, light and musical.
The man's voice was Damian's. She knew that. But the quality of it-the ease, the warmth-was something she had never once felt directed at her.
The woman's voice was not her own.
It wasn't Mrs. Haskin, their housekeeper.
Daphne knew that laugh.
Isabelle Reed.
The air in her lungs turned to glass.
She forced herself to her feet, her body screaming in protest. Leaning against the cool wall, she moved, barefoot and silent, toward the grand staircase. The marble steps were frigid against her soles, each one a small shock traveling up her spine.
The voices grew clearer.
"You remembered the cinnamon," Isabelle said, her voice carrying up the stairwell. "The way your grandmother used to make it."
"Some things are worth remembering." Damian's voice was warm. Pliable. A texture Daphne had never once felt directed at her.
"You spoil me." Isabelle laughed, a light, practiced sound. "What would your wife say?"
A pause. Daphne's heart seized.
"My wife," Damian said, his tone cooling, "knows her place."
"She must be very understanding."
"She has no choice."
Daphne reached the bottom of the stairs and hid behind a large porcelain vase, peering through the waxy leaves of a bird-of-paradise.
The winter sun streamed through the atrium's glass ceiling, illuminating the scene like a cruelty staged just for her.
Damian was there. Not in his usual severe suit, but a soft cashmere sweater that gentled the hard lines of his face. He looked relaxed. Almost happy. A version of him she had only ever glimpsed in old photographs-taken before her, before the marriage, before the resentment had calcified into the man she knew.
Across from him sat Isabelle Reed.
She wore a dress in cornflower blue. Damian's favorite color. Her dark hair fell in waves over her shoulders, and her smile was the easy, unbothered smile of a woman who had never needed to fight for anything.
On the table between them was a perfect breakfast. French toast dusted with powdered sugar. Smoked salmon arranged in delicate folds. Two steaming cups of coffee. A vase of fresh white roses.
A quiet, domestic tableau Daphne had spent five years trying-and failing-to create.
Her breath caught in her chest.
Damian picked up a knife. He cut a piece of a buttery croissant he'd just spread with cream and placed it on Isabelle's plate. The gesture was effortless.
Isabelle speared the piece with her fork and brought it to her lips, her smile unwavering.
"Delicious," she murmured.
They looked like they belonged to each other. Like this was their home and she was the intruder.
Damian's gaze lingered on Isabelle's mouth, a faint smile playing on his own lips. An expression of quiet, unguarded desire she had never once seen directed at her.
The room tilted. Daphne pressed a hand to her mouth, forcing down the burn in her throat.
She couldn't make a sound. She couldn't let them know she was here. Witnessing this would only give him more ammunition-he would find a way to blame her for this, too.
She watched as Damian picked up a napkin, leaning forward to dab a crumb from the corner of Isabelle's mouth. Isabelle leaned back just enough to avoid his touch, dabbing at her own lips. She said something low and teasing. Damian's hand froze mid-air before he pulled it back, a look of fond exasperation softening the same features that had been carved from stone the night before.
Her eyes fixed on his hands. Last night, they had left bruises. This morning, they reached out with a tenderness that made her chest ache with want.
And Isabelle had to do nothing to receive it.
Daphne's fingernails dug into her palms. The sharp sting was the only thing that felt real. Pain was becoming her only anchor to reality.
She wasn't his wife. She was a name on a contract. A placeholder.
As if sensing her, Isabelle's eyes flickered toward the vase. For a split second, her sweet smile faltered. It was replaced by a look of cool, unmistakable victory. A tiny, almost invisible smirk that said: I see you. And you are nothing.
She had been seen. And she was too broken to fight.
She didn't have the strength to confront them. It would only earn her more of Damian's venom.
With a final, shattering look, she turned. She retreated back up the stairs, each step a silent defeat.
She slipped into the master bedroom-the one they hadn't shared in four years-and softly closed the door. The sound of their laughter was gone, replaced by a crushing silence.
Her strength gave out.
She slid down the back of the door, her body collapsing onto the plush carpet. The sobs she had been holding back ripped through her, violent and silent, her entire body shaking.
Somewhere downstairs, the man she had loved for five years was having breakfast with another woman.
And he had never looked happier.