For the album's first page, she wanted something official, something real. A certified copy of their marriage certificate. It felt symbolic, a reaffirmation of the vows they took under the grand ceilings of City Hall.
The thought filled her with a pleasant, quiet joy as she left the boutique. The doorman hailed a cab, and the city blurred past in a symphony of yellow and gray.
The City Clerk's office was a stark contrast to the opulence she'd just left. It was all beige walls and the low hum of bureaucracy. Chloe didn't mind. This place held the memory of the best day of her life.
She approached the counter, her movements graceful and poised.
"Hi, I'd like to request a certified copy of a marriage certificate."
The clerk, a woman with tired eyes and a name tag that read 'Brenda', slid a form towards her. "Names and date of marriage."
Chloe filled in the details neatly. Francisco Sterling. Chloe Sterling. She wrote the date, her heart giving a little flutter as she remembered the crisp autumn day.
Brenda typed the information into her computer. The rhythmic clacking of the keys was the only sound for a long moment. Then, it stopped.
Silence stretched.
Brenda frowned, her brow furrowed in concentration. She typed again, slower this time. The frown deepened.
An uneasy feeling began to prickle at the back of Chloe's neck. "Is there a problem?"
"Just a moment," Brenda murmured, her eyes glued to the screen. She clicked her mouse a few more times, her lips pursed. The air in the room suddenly felt thick, heavy.
Finally, Brenda looked up. Her expression was a strange mix of confusion and pity that made Chloe's stomach clench.
"Ma'am, I can't find any record of a marriage between a Chloe Sterling and a Francisco Sterling."
Chloe's smile faltered. "Oh, there must be a mistake. It was five years ago. October twelfth." She offered the date as if it were a magic key.
Brenda shook her head, her gaze unwavering. "I've checked every variation. There's nothing here." She turned the monitor slightly towards Chloe. The screen was stark, the search fields empty of results. "According to our official records, ma'am, your marital status is 'unmarried'."
The word hit her like a physical blow.
Unmarried.
It didn't make sense. The world tilted on its axis. Her breath caught in her throat, a sharp, painful gasp. Her fingertips, resting on the cool laminate counter, turned to ice.
"That's... that's impossible," she whispered, her voice a reedy thread of sound.
Brenda's pitying look intensified. "I'm sorry, ma'am. There's no record."
Chloe stumbled away from the counter, the clerk's words echoing in the sudden, roaring silence of her mind. She walked out of the municipal building and into the cacophony of New York City, but the sounds were muffled, distant, as if coming from behind a thick wall of glass.
Her hand trembled as she pulled out her phone to call Francisco. It went straight to voicemail. His smooth, recorded voice was a cruel mockery.
She got into her car, her movements stiff and robotic. She drove without thinking, without direction, the city lights smearing into a meaningless blur of color. Her mind was a frantic storm of confusion. A mistake. It had to be a system error. A clerical oversight.
There had to be a rational explanation.
Eventually, she found herself parked across the street from The Olympian Club, Francisco's preferred private haunt. His black Mercedes was parked near the entrance.
A group of men spilled out of the club's oak doors, laughing. She recognized them. Mark, Robert. Francisco's closest friends. His business partners. They clapped each other on the back, their voices loud and careless.
A cold dread, sharp and specific, pierced through her confusion. It was a premonition, a dark whisper in her soul.
She slipped out of her car, her heels silent on the pavement. A side entrance, usually reserved for staff, was slightly ajar. Driven by an instinct she didn't understand, she pushed it open and slipped inside, into a dimly lit service corridor.
She followed the low murmur of their voices, her heart hammering against her ribs. They led her to a private VIP room, the door left carelessly open by a few inches.
She pressed herself against the cold wall, listening.
Robert's voice, thick with expensive whiskey, rose above the others. "To Francisco! The man is a genius. Five years, and he's still got that girl from Seacrest Bay wrapped around his finger with a fake marriage certificate."
Laughter erupted. A raw, ugly sound.
Mark chimed in, his tone slick with amusement. "Five years and not even a kid to show for it. If it were me, I'd have been bored ages ago. But now that Kasey's back with the boy, the real show is about to begin."
"That certificate was a work of art, though," Robert added, his voice slurring slightly. "Chloe probably thinks she's Mrs. Sterling for life. She'll likely go to her grave believing it."
Each word was a blade, expertly carving away the foundations of her life.
The blood drained from her face. Her entire body began to tremble, a violent, uncontrollable shudder. She clamped a hand over her mouth, biting down hard on her knuckles to stifle the scream that was clawing its way up her throat.
Kathy is Eleanor Sterling's goddaughter. Eleanor Sterling is Francisco Sterling's mother.
The woman Eleanor had introduced to the household years ago with such pride: "My dear goddaughter, her mother was my dearest friend." Chloe had welcomed her like family. She had never suspected.
The puzzle pieces of the last five years slammed into place with brutal clarity. The family lawyer who always deflected her questions about the prenuptial agreement. The way she was kept away from the core financials of Sterling Corp. The condescending smiles of Francisco's mother. The way Kasey was always welcomed, always present, always treated like a daughter-while Chloe was merely tolerated.
Her marriage. Her love. Her life.
It was all a joke. A meticulously crafted, five-year-long joke.
The initial shock wave of pain and humiliation receded, leaving behind an unnerving calm. A chilling, absolute cold spread through her veins, freezing the tears before they could fall.
She didn't storm into the room. She didn't scream or cry.
Slowly, deliberately, she straightened up, pulling herself away from the wall. She wiped at the corner of her eyes, though they were dry. Her reflection in the polished brass of a wall sconce was a pale, haunted mask.
Then, something shifted in her expression. The shattered vulnerability hardened into something sharp and dangerous. A faint, almost imperceptible smile touched the corner of her lips. It was a chilling, bitter curve that held no warmth, no humor. Only ice.
She turned and walked away, her steps measured and silent.
Back in the sanctuary of her car, her gaze fell upon the Patek Philippe box on the passenger seat. The elegant packaging, once a symbol of her love, now seemed like a prop in a cruel comedy.
She started the engine.
And in the cold, quiet fury of her mind, a plan for revenge began to bloom, its roots nourished by five years of lies. They had played her for a fool. Now, they would all pay.