The next evening, I waited until Colton's car disappeared around the corner before slipping into his study. My hands trembled as I switched on the small desk lamp, casting shadows that seemed to dance mockingly across the mahogany walls lined with his business awards. How many of those achievements were built on my stolen dreams?
I pulled out my phone and began photographing everything—contracts, email printouts, correspondence files. Each click of the camera shutter felt like a small act of rebellion against five years of systematic deception. In the bottom drawer of his filing cabinet, I found a folder labeled 'C. Black - Projects.' My breath caught as I opened it to reveal copies of my own sketches, annotated in Colton's handwriting with notes like 'promising concept' and 'needs refinement for Cassidy's style.'
My fingers traced over a design I'd poured three sleepless nights into—a sustainable housing complex with integrated green spaces. Colton had written 'Perfect for Morrison competition' across the top. The same Morrison competition that had just rejected me for lack of originality.
I photographed every page, my anger crystallizing into cold determination. When I heard his key in the front door, I quickly returned everything to its place and slipped the tiny recording device I'd purchased that afternoon into my cardigan pocket. The wire felt foreign against my skin, but I needed his confession in his own words.
'Rose? I'm home,' his voice carried up the stairs, warm and loving as always.
'Coming, darling,' I called back, my voice steady despite the hurricane raging inside me. As I descended the stairs, I arranged my face into the same trusting expression I'd perfected over five years of marriage built on lies.
Two days later, I sat across from Eleanor Hayes in her downtown law office, using the false name Sarah Mitchell. The intellectual property lawyer was sharp-eyed and efficient, her silver hair pulled back in a severe bun that somehow made her seem both grandmother and shark.
'Ms. Mitchell, these portfolios are impressive,' she said, flipping through printed copies of my designs. 'You're certain you want to sell all copyrights to these architectural concepts?'
'Completely certain.' I kept my voice level, professional. 'I have no further use for them.'
The contracts were thick, filled with legal terminology that normally would have overwhelmed me. But desperation had sharpened my focus. Each signature transferred ownership of my life's work to various companies—some in California, others across the country. The combined sum was substantial enough to fund whatever came next.
'The transfers will be completed within forty-eight hours,' Eleanor assured me as I signed the final document. 'The buyer companies have agreed to your stipulation about public ownership records being available immediately.'
I nodded, thinking of how those records would soon become very important. 'Thank you, Ms. Hayes. You've been most helpful.'
That afternoon, I opened three separate bank accounts under my maiden name, each at different institutions. The money would be safely transferred before Colton even realized what was happening. As I walked out of the third bank, I felt lighter somehow, as if I'd shed invisible chains I hadn't realized were binding me.
Friday came with unseasonable warmth, and I decided to surprise Colton with lunch at his office. Of course, it wasn't really a surprise visit—I'd carefully timed it for when I knew he'd be meeting with Cassidy. The security guard in the lobby recognized me and waved me through with a smile.
'Mrs. Turner! Mr. Turner will be so pleased to see you.'
I took the elevator to the fifteenth floor, my heart hammering with each ascending number. The hallway stretched before me like a gauntlet, leading to the truth I'd been avoiding for five years.
Colton's assistant wasn't at her desk, probably at lunch herself. I approached his office quietly, the sound of voices filtering through the partially open door stopping me cold.
'—really think this residential design will take the prize,' Colton's voice carried clearly. 'Rose outdid herself with the sustainability features.'
I pressed myself against the wall beside his door, peering through the crack. There he was, my husband of five years, leaning across his desk toward Cassidy Black. My latest blueprints were spread between them like a feast, and Cassidy was examining them with the hungry eyes of a scavenger.
'The integrated solar collection system is brilliant,' Cassidy murmured, making notes in the margins of my work. 'She always did have an eye for environmental innovation.'
Colton pointed to a section I'd spent weeks perfecting. 'This courtyard design will photograph beautifully for the submission portfolio. Make sure you emphasize the community gathering aspects in your presentation.'
Your presentation. The words hit me like physical blows. I watched through the narrow opening as they discussed my work with the casual indifference of commodity traders, reducing my passion to mere business transaction. Cassidy tucked the blueprints into her leather portfolio with practiced efficiency, as if she'd done this dozens of times before.
'Same time next week?' she asked, standing to leave.
'Of course. Rose should have the commercial district concept finished by then.'
I stepped back from the door, my legs trembling. They had a schedule. A routine. This wasn't a one-time betrayal—it was a systematic theft that had been going on for years, planned and executed with cold precision.
As Cassidy's heels clicked past me toward the elevator, I remained frozen against the wall. She didn't even glance in my direction, too focused on the portfolio containing my stolen dreams.
The bathroom mirror reflected a stranger back at me—hollow cheeks, dark circles beneath eyes that had once sparkled with ambition. I opened the medicine cabinet, my fingers trembling as they closed around the small amber bottle I'd hidden behind Colton's shaving cream. The fertility suppressants rattled like dice in my palm, each pill a tiny surrender to a marriage I was only beginning to understand.
It had been three weeks since I'd overheard his phone call. I'd been sketching in the garden when his voice drifted through the open office window, sharp with frustration.
'Pregnancy would complicate everything right now, Marcus. The timing couldn't be worse.' A pause, then: 'Five years of planning can't be derailed by something so... predictable.'
I'd dropped my pencil, the lead snapping against the patio stones. Five years of planning. The same five years of our marriage. The same five years I'd been failing competition after competition while believing he supported my dreams.
Now, as I swallowed another pill dry, I told myself I was being considerate. If children would burden him, I would spare us both that complication. The irony wasn't lost on me—even my womb had become another sacrifice on the altar of our dying marriage.
'Rose? You ready?' Colton's voice echoed up the stairs, warm with artificial cheer.
Our fifth wedding anniversary. I'd almost forgotten until he'd surprised me with dinner reservations at Le Bernardin, the same restaurant where he'd proposed. The gesture should have moved me. Instead, it felt like theater.
I descended the stairs in the navy dress he'd bought me last Christmas—another gift that felt more like a costume than clothing. Colton waited by the door, handsome as ever in his charcoal suit, but something in his expression flickered when he saw me. Disappointment? Relief? I couldn't read him anymore.
'You look beautiful,' he said, but his eyes were already moving past me toward his phone.
Dinner unfolded like a carefully choreographed performance. Colton ordered wine, made small talk about his latest business acquisition, asked polite questions about my work that felt rehearsed. I played my part, smiling at appropriate moments, pretending the salmon wasn't ash in my mouth.
Then came the roses.
The waiter approached with a dozen blood-red blooms, their petals perfect and gleaming under the restaurant's soft lighting. Other diners turned to look, some smiling at the romantic gesture. I accepted the bouquet with practiced grace, inhaling their cloying sweetness.
'They're beautiful, Colton, but—' I hesitated, not wanting to seem ungrateful. 'You know I've always preferred white lilies.'
His fork paused halfway to his mouth, confusion flickering across his features. 'What?'
'White lilies,' I repeated softly. 'They were in my bouquet at our wedding. I've mentioned it before—they remind me of my mother's garden.'
Something dark crossed his expression—irritation, maybe even anger. 'Rose, these are classic anniversary flowers. Red roses are traditional.'
I touched one of the velvet petals, its perfection somehow obscene. 'Of course. They're lovely.'
But as I lifted the bouquet closer, I noticed the small card tucked between the stems. In Colton's familiar handwriting: 'To my inspiration.'
My inspiration. The words should have warmed me, but they felt hollow, borrowed. Like everything else in our marriage, they belonged to someone else first.
The gallery opening three days later was torture disguised as celebration. Cassidy Black's name blazed in elegant script across the entrance: 'Visionary Spaces: The Architecture of Tomorrow.' I'd received an invitation—whether from cruel irony or Cassidy's twisted sense of humor, I couldn't say.
I moved through the crowd like a ghost, champagne untouched in my hand, watching strangers admire scale models of buildings born from my sleepless nights. The sustainable housing complex I'd designed after the Morrison rejection gleamed under gallery spotlights, its miniature solar panels catching the light like tiny mirrors.
'Cassidy's integration of environmental consciousness with aesthetic beauty is revolutionary,' a critic was saying to his companion. 'She's redefined what sustainable architecture can achieve.'
I pressed closer to the model, my heart hammering. Every detail was perfect—the courtyard I'd redesigned seventeen times, the water collection system I'd spent weeks perfecting, even the community garden spaces where I'd imagined children playing.
'The genius lies in the seamless blend of function and form,' another voice chimed in. 'Most eco-friendly designs sacrifice beauty for sustainability, but Cassidy has proven they can coexist.'
Cassidy materialized beside the display like she'd been summoned, radiant in emerald silk that made her red hair gleam like fire. 'Thank you so much. This project is particularly close to my heart—it represents everything I believe architecture should be.'
Close to her heart. I gripped my champagne flute until my knuckles turned white.
Then I saw him. Colton emerged from the crowd, his hand settling possessively on Cassidy's lower back as he joined the admiring circle. Pride radiated from him like heat, the same pride I'd once imagined he felt for me.
'Ladies and gentlemen,' his voice carried across the gathered crowd, 'I'd like you to meet the most talented architect of our generation. Cassidy Black is going to change how we think about the spaces we inhabit.'
The applause was thunderous. Cassidy beamed, accepting congratulations and praise for work that had cost me everything—my sleep, my sanity, my sense of self. I watched my husband's face as he gazed at her, and for the first time in five years, I saw him truly smile.
In that moment, standing in a room full of strangers celebrating my stolen dreams, I finally understood. The roses weren't a mistake. The fertility pills weren't protection. The five years of systematic failures weren't coincidence.
I was not his wife. I was his victim.
And tonight, that was going to change.