

Chapter 1 of Wedding Defied by Ex
I stood in the shadow of a marble column, my fingers pressing into the cool stone as if it might absorb some of my pain. The grand ballroom of the Blackwood Tower glittered with crystal chandeliers and the diamonds of Manhattan's elite, but all eyes were fixed on the same tableau—my husband and his newest acquisition.
Alexander Blackwood, with his perfect posture and that practiced smile that never quite reached his glacial blue eyes, was sliding a delicate orchid corsage onto Victoria Sterling's slim wrist. Her laugh tinkled across the room like wind chimes, musical and light. The photographers surged forward, capturing the moment with rapid-fire clicks.
"To Victoria," Alexander's voice carried effortlessly across the room, commanding attention without effort. "Whose unique grace has brought new light into all our lives."
I flinched at the words. Five years of marriage, and he had never once spoken of me with such tenderness. My gaze fixed on Victoria's face—the high cheekbones, the almond-shaped eyes, the cascade of dark hair. She looked so much like Serena that my chest constricted with a double grief. My sister's ghost, wearing another woman's skin, accepting my husband's adoration.
I reached for the silver locket at my throat, the one piece of Serena I had left. Inside was a tiny photo of us as children, before death and betrayal had torn our world apart. Before I had made the fatal mistake of believing Alexander Blackwood could love anyone but her.
"Mrs. Blackwood." A waiter appeared at my elbow, offering champagne. "Would you care for a drink?"
I shook my head, watching as Alexander guided Victoria through the crowd toward a circle of investors. His hand rested possessively at the small of her back—a gesture he had never used with me in public. I was the wife who stood three steps behind, the convenient accessory to be displayed when protocol demanded and ignored when it didn't.
"Gentlemen," Alexander's voice carried across the ballroom as he introduced Victoria to the group of gray-haired men whose collective wealth could buy small countries. "I believe you've all met my wife."
For one disorienting moment, I thought he meant me. Then Victoria smiled and extended her hand, and I realized he hadn't even acknowledged my presence. I stood just steps away, invisible in plain sight.
"Victoria has shown extraordinary insight into our Asian market expansion," Alexander continued, his voice warm with pride. "Her background in international relations has been invaluable."
The knife twisted deeper. I had a degree in business from Columbia that had gathered dust since our wedding day. Alexander had made it clear from the beginning that my role was decorative, not functional.
I slipped away, unable to bear another moment of the charade. The ladies' lounge offered momentary sanctuary, its plush seating and soft lighting a stark contrast to the sharp edges of my reality. I sank onto a velvet bench, clutching my sister's locket so tightly the edges bit into my palm.
"Don't cry," I whispered to myself, blinking rapidly as I stared at my reflection in the ornate mirror. "Don't you dare cry."
The woman who stared back at me was a stranger—hollow-cheeked and pale, with eyes that had forgotten how to hope. When had I become this ghost? This shadow of Isabella Chen?
Three hours later, the limousine delivered us to our Fifth Avenue penthouse in silence. Alexander had barely acknowledged me all evening, departing separately with a dismissive wave in my direction. As I stepped into the marble foyer, my heels clicking against the floor, I noticed a large white box on the valet table.
Curiosity pulled me forward. Inside, nestled in tissue paper, lay a brilliant red silk evening gown. My heart stuttered until I checked the size—two sizes smaller than mine. Victoria's size.
The realization burned like acid. He had brought her gift to our home, not even bothering to hide his betrayal anymore.
I retreated to the solarium, my one sanctuary in this gilded prison. Moonlight spilled through the glass ceiling, illuminating my small desk where I kept my sketching materials hidden. Drawing was my last connection to the woman I used to be—the aspiring jewelry designer with dreams and ambitions.
I pulled a stack of cocktail napkins from my evening bag—the only paper I could discreetly take from the gala—and began to sketch. The lines flowed from my fingers: a pendant design inspired by broken chains, a bracelet of intertwined thorns. Beauty born from pain.
As the night deepened around me, I finally allowed the tears to come, falling onto the napkin and blurring the ink of my drawings. Tomorrow, I would once again be the perfect, silent Mrs. Blackwood. But tonight, alone in the moonlight, I could still remember the woman I had once been—and wonder if she was still somewhere inside me, waiting to break free.
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