A Pregnant Wife Saw His Public Kiss. Then the Jet Message Came.-ruby - Chainityai

A Pregnant Wife Saw His Public Kiss. Then the Jet Message Came.-ruby

By the time Andrew Weston walked into the ballroom with his mistress on his arm, Emma Weston had already learned the difference between embarrassment and clarity.

Embarrassment makes you want to hide.

Clarity makes you notice everything.

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The marble floor beneath her heels was cold enough to travel through the thin soles of her shoes.

The champagne smelled sharp and expensive.

The chandeliers of the Manhattan Grand Hotel were so bright that every smile in the ballroom looked rehearsed, every diamond looked awake, every lie looked polished.

Emma stood near a marble column in a simple ivory gown with one hand resting over her pregnant belly.

She was six months along, and the baby had been quiet all evening.

Maybe the child was asleep.

Maybe Emma only wanted to believe that.

Across the room, Andrew Weston entered like a man arriving to applause that had not started yet.

His tuxedo fit perfectly.

His hair was perfect.

His smile was the same bright, controlled smile that had landed him magazine profiles, investor trust, and rooms full of people who mistook confidence for character.

Beside him was Lila Summers.

Twenty-three.

Red-haired.

Camera-ready.

Wrapped in a crimson dress that made the ballroom turn before anyone admitted they were looking.

She held Andrew’s arm with both hands, not like a guest, not like a colleague, and not like someone who had accidentally arrived too close to a married man.

She held him like a prize.

Emma felt the first small wave of nausea move through her, but she did not step back.

She did not scream.

She did not cross the room.

She did not give the room what it wanted.

Rooms like that always wanted a woman to break loudly enough that everyone else could feel innocent.

So Emma stayed still.

The Bright Horizons Charity Ball was supposed to be one of Andrew’s favorite nights of the year.

Donors, investors, senators’ wives, gossip columnists, gallery owners, board members, and people who had learned to speak in soft voices around money filled the ballroom.

There were auction cards on the tables.

There were tall white flowers in glass vases.

There were photographers waiting near the sponsor wall.

There was a small American flag on the registration table beside a stack of name badges, the kind of patriotic detail no one noticed unless they needed the room to feel official.

Emma noticed it because she had been noticing everything lately.

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