I wasn’t on the guest list.
I didn’t need to be. Legally, as his wife and as the woman whose money had funded the initial shares in Apex, I had more right to be there than half the tuxedos who’d sent in RSVPs engraved on card stock.
I rented a dress that cost more than a month of our rent used to. Crimson, fitted, with a low back that showed off the bruises around my shoulder blades that had not yet faded. I pinned my hair up in a sleek twist that revealed just enough of the bandage at my nape to look accidental.
The ballroom was a glittering sea of chandeliers and sequins when I walked in. Waiters moved like chess pieces between tables, carrying trays of champagne. A string quartet played something elegant near the stage.
For a moment, I hesitated at the entrance, fingers tightening around the small clutch that held my phone and a tube of lipstick. Every insecurity I’d buried over eight years tried to crawl to the surface all at once.
But then I heard his laugh.
I would have recognized it anywhere. Warm, charming, the sound he’d used to get discounts from landlords and free desserts from waiters.
He stood near the stage, a champagne flute in hand, surrounded by men in suits and women in glittering dresses. His tuxedo was perfectly tailored, his posture relaxed. On his arm, draped like a prize, was Genevieve in a white gown that shimmered under the chandeliers.
White.
I almost applauded the audacity.
The diamond necklace around her throat—my necklace in every way that mattered—caught the light every time she moved her head. It spilled over her collarbones in a cascade of ice.
A murmur rose around me as people began to notice my presence. Some looked curious, some uncomfortable, some delighted in that quiet way people do when they smell drama in the air.
I met Steven’s eyes from across the room.
His smile vanished mid-sentence. The color drained from his face so fast I almost worried he’d faint.
“Sunny,” he hissed under his breath when I reached them. His hand shot out for my elbow, his fingers biting into the fabric of my dress. “What the hell are you doing here? You look ridiculous. Go home.”
“Hello, Steven,” I said, my voice pitched just loud enough that the people nearest us could hear. “Hello, Genevieve.”
She blinked, clearly not expecting me to sound so composed.
“I just came to see the necklace,” I added, tilting my head. “It really is beautiful.”