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Betrayed by design
Betrayed by design
Author: Morgan Rivers

Dutiful Wife

Author: Morgan Rivers
last update publish date: 2026-04-06 01:00:48

The crystal chandeliers of The Carlyle ballroom spilled light like liquid gold onto Manhattan’s elite. Sloane Blackwell stood at the edge of a glittering circle, posture flawless, expression serene; every inch the billionaire’s wife.

Her husband, Nathaniel, held the room. He always did.

His calm baritone outlined the Vance Foundation’s new pediatric wing, and the donors focused as if his words alone could cure disease. His smile was clean, polite and empty.

Sloane knew that smile well. She wore its twin.

Her own felt frail tonight, like porcelain stretched too thin. The emerald silk of her gown which was chosen by Nathaniel’s assistant to “match her eyes,” whispered against her skin. She wasn’t dressed for herself, she’s simply an accessory to complement the man who owned the room.

“Don’t you agree, darling?”

Nathaniel’s voice interrupted her thoughts as every gaze swung to her, waiting, assessing.

Her throat tightened. For a heartbeat, she couldn’t remember what he’d been discussing but her body knew the script.

“Absolutely,” she said, her voice had a practiced tone that no longer felt natural. “The playroom renderings were especially moving. Children deserve joy, even in recovery.” She smiled at the donors, warm and composed. “It gives the project heart.

A sharp, fleeting gleam of approval crossed Nathaniel’s eyes.

“You see?” Senator Hawthorne laughed. “The woman’s touch!”

“My wife has an excellent sense of timing,” Nathaniel said.

Not insight or compassion. Just timing, as if she were a Swiss clock wound to chime on the hour.

The word sank heavily into her chest as his hand briefly covered hers efficiently and impersonal, lasting exactly 2.3 seconds before he withdrew.

As conversation drifted to tax incentives, Sloane found herself drifting back into her memories.

Two years ago, her father’s hands had trembled around hers, his grip desperate. Richard Vance, once a titan, reduced to begging his daughter to save him.

“He’s a good man,” he’d whispered as his eyes reflected shame. This will save us and the company.”

What about saving me? The question had burned on her tongue, but she’d swallowed it.

She was twenty-eight, beautiful, educated, marketable. The perfect solution.

At the altar, Nathaniel slid the diamond onto her finger, precise and effortless. The kiss was quick and empty. “We’ll make it work,” he said softly.

Not I love you, Not I choose you. Just: We’ll make it work.

And they had, in the way two strangers sharing a house make it work with politeness, distance and careful planning that ensures you never accidentally touch in the hallway.

“Still with me?”

Nathaniel’s voice pulled her back. His gray eyes studied her with detached concern.

“Of course, It’s a beautiful evening.” She said.

“It’s effective,” he corrected. “The Miller account is secured and your statement about the playrooms helped. Mrs. Miller lost a grandchild to leukemia, emotional connection is important in these situations.”

“You should go round,” he said, already dismissing her. “Mrs. Van Der Woodsen is by the orchids. Actually, commit to nothing until I review the optics.”

She moved through the ballroom and as expected there’s laughter light, perfect manners, champagne glass that never runs out.

As an hour turned into another, Sloane from where she stood noticed Nathaniel at the bar with phone in his hand. Suddenly something in his posture changed; a small shift of his shoulders, a brief pause in his breathing, and his eyes widening.

His phone vibrated. “Can’t wait to see you tonight.”

Nathaniel Blackwell, the man who calculated every response, reacted with something that looked almost like hunger.

Sloane’s heart raced. In two years of marriage, she had never seen him respond to anything with pure instinct. This was different, this was want, raw and unconcealed.

He slipped the phone into his pocket as his eyes found hers across the room with a reassuring smile. All is well.

But that text hadn’t been business. Business made him calculate, this made him feel.

And she’d never influenced that look, not even once.

Without deciding, Sloane found herself moving through the crowd but Nathaniel was gone by the time she reached the bar, lost among a group of executives.

Her mind raced, putting the pieces together she’d never let herself to notice. Late nights blamed on mergers, business trips that stretched longer, the unfamiliar expensive, floral perfume.

“Mrs. Blackwell?”

A waiter handed her a folded note interrupting her thoughts.

*Need to leave early. Car will take you home, business emergency. -N*

Business emergency at 10 PM on Saturday night.

She looked up at the crowd and saw Nathaniel by the exit, talking on his phone with a serious, focused expression.

But she’d seen his face when that text arrived. That hadn’t been crisis, that had been anticipation.

She watched her husband walk through the golden doors and felt a deep change stir in her chest.

For two years, she had been the dutiful wife, the perfect accessory. She had accepted the coldness, the distance, the performance.

But she couldn’t accept being so thoroughly dismissed while he rushed to someone who made him feel. Her phone was in her hand before she completely realized the decision.

Michael, I need a favor. Do you still have access to surveillance resources?

Michael Chen, her father’s former head of security. One of the few people who’d known her before she became a Blackwell.

Always. What do you need?

My husband’s location tonight and I need it to stay quiet.

Three dots appeared, disappeared and appeared again.

Give me twenty minutes.

Sloane lowered the phone, pulse racing. Around her, Manhattan’s elite celebrated, the chandeliers blazed and she stood in the middle of everything, feeling like she was leaving her old self behind.

Her phone buzzed. An address: 347 Riverside Drive, Apartment 12B.

She stared at the screen, it’s the opposite side of the city from their penthouse.

A second message; The apartment is leased under a corporate shell. Vance Industries subsidiary lease started eight months ago.

Eight months.

The ballroom tilted, Sloane held the bar for balance.

Eight months of careful lies delivered with that same calm, reasonable tone he used for quarterly projections.

A third message; Sloane… are you sure you want to do this?

She should say no. Should delete the messages, go home, take a sleeping pill, wake up tomorrow in her gilded cage and pretend she’d never seen that look on his face.

But her fingers were already moving.

Send me everything you have on that apartment. And Michael? Have a car meet me at the service entrance in five minutes.

She hit send before fear could take over anger.

The auction concluded to big applause, the Vance Foundation fully funded. Another flawless evening, another flawless performance.

But as Sloane walked toward the service exit, her emerald silk whispering with each step, she felt something she hadn’t felt in two years.

Not hope, hope was too gentle.

This was sharper, colder; Purpose.

Whatever she found at 347 Riverside Drive would destroy the the delicate facade of her marriage, she was counting on it.

The service door clicked shut behind her and her phone lit up  one final time. A photo, grainy security footage of Nathaniel entering apartment 12B twenty minutes ago.

And the woman who opened the door, her face a blur of shadow and familiarity, but felt in her bones she knew. “Who could that be?”.​​

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  • Betrayed by design   Reluctant Partners

    She called Elena first who arrived twelve minutes later, in a cream blouse and wide-leg trousers and her blonde hair pinned at the nape of her neck, she took one look at Damon standing on the far side of Sloane’s office and didn’t say a word.Coming from Elena, that said a lot.“He stays,” Before Elena could respond, Sloane said, … “For now.”Elena put her portfolio on the side table and sat down across from Sloane, crossed her legs and looked at Damon. Her face was calm, but she didn’t look impressed.“Elena,” Damon said.“Damon,” Elena said, giving him a look that said she wasn’t convinced.Sloane spread the contents of the folder across her desk. “Here’s the situation,” she said in a steady, businesslike tone. “Damon has proof linking Marcus to Nathaniel’s holding company. We also have a witness who understands how the company operates, we need to contact that witness without Nathaniel finding out and we have to move before the board meeting at the end of the month.”Elena leaned

  • Betrayed by design   Damon Returns

    Sloane Blackwell stood at her window of her quiet office with a cup of tea, watching the city thirty floors below move without her. She was still wearing her charcoal blazer, and her dark locs were pinned up. The day had been full of meetings and phone calls. She had also spoken with her lawyer, who warned her about a legal motion Marcus Hale’s team was preparing.She had assured Harrison that she wasn’t afraid, but she kept her exhaustion to herself.There was a soft and hesitant knock on the door, which was unusual. Most people who came to see Sloane were board members, lawyers, and executives who are always confident and direct.She turned toward the door.“Come in.”The door opened and Damon Cross walked through it, he looked the same and completely different at the same time.The sleeves of his navy shirt were rolled up to his elbows. For Damon Cross, who was always neatly dressed in professional settings, it stood out.Sloane did not move from where she was standing.“You have

  • Betrayed by design   Unexpected Ally

    Sloane sat at her desk with the documents neatly arranged in front of her and her third cup of coffee growing cold beside her. She was working on the timeline Harriet needed by morning which required her full attention and making it easy to lose track of time and forget about everything else, it was one of the few things in her life that still felt uncomplicated.A call came on a Sunday evening and Sloane recognized the number immediately, but she hesitated for a second before answering.“Mr. Grey,” she said.“Sloane.” Harrison Grey’s voice came through the line. He was the longest-serving member of the Vance Industries board, seventy-four years old and the one person in the entire composition of the company’s governance structure whose name she had not marked with a question or a worry when she’d gone through the list because she did not know where he stood.You could never tell what Harrison Grey was thinking. His respect had to be earned, his support wasn’t guaranteed, and he rarel

  • Betrayed by design   The Tabloid War

    Sloane was in the middle of a call with Harriet when Claire showed up at the office door. She held up her tablet and whispered, “This is important.”Sloane held up one finger.Harriet was outlining the legal process for challenging the board vote and Sloane followed every word, but she couldn’t ignore Claire’s expression. It was obvious that whatever she was reading on the tablet was a big deal.“Harriet,” Sloane said, when there was a small break in the conversation. “Let me call you back in five minutes.”“Everything all right?” Harriet asked.“I’ll find out in five minutes.”She hung up and looked at Claire. “Show me.”Claire walked over to the desk and placed the tablet in front of her.The headline was boldly written:UNSTABLE HEIRESS ABANDONS DUTIES FOR BODYGUARD FLING — EXCLUSIVE PHOTOS INSIDE.Two photographs were attached below, Sloane looked at them quietly for a few seconds.The first photo was taken from a distance and looked slightly blurry, showing a man and a woman stan

  • Betrayed by design   Board Maneuvers

    Sloane saw the story on her phone first on a Wednesday morning. A notification from a financial news app she had set up years ago alerted her to any mention of Vance Industries or her name. She was standing barefoot in the penthouse kitchen, still wearing the clothes she had slept in. The coffee was brewing while the morning light slowly filled the city outside.She tapped the notification and read the headline. Then she placed her phone face-down on the counter, poured herself a cup of coffee, and read it again. This time, she leaned against the counter and stood quietly.People close to Vance Industries have expressed concerns about the COO’s recent behavior. They cited poor decision-making, frequent absences, and actions that several people connected to the board described as disruptive.She took a few more sips of coffee, turned her phone face down, and headed to her room to get dressed.Claire was already at her desk when Sloane walked out forty minutes later, she’d seen it too.

  • Betrayed by design   Lila’s Doubt

    The restaurant was everything Lila used to dream about, she hadn’t grown up thinking about fancy place. But later in her twenties, while eating takeout with Sloane in a small apartment, she sometimes imagine elegant dinners with a man who truly wants her. Now she was living that picture and she was miserable. Nathaniel sat across from her, eating quietly and taking his time. He was the type of man who liked everything under control. His dark hair was starting to gray at the sides, and he had the kind of looks and confidence that naturally drew attention which Lila had spent years drawn to.Tonight, though, he barely looked at her and it felt as if he had already moved on but only going through the motions out of habit.“You seem quiet,” Lila said. Nathaniel looked up quickly, just a quick acknowledgement that someone has spoken. “I’m thinking,” he said. “About?” “Work.” He returned to his plate. “Nothing you need to be involved in.” Lila picked up her wine glass and held it in h

  • Betrayed by design   Playing the Part

    Sloane stood in front of the mirror in the master bathroom with one hand resting against the marble counter. The ivory dress was fitted at the waist and fell cleanly to just below the knee. Her hair was up in a smooth, low knot at the back of her neck, small pearl earrings and a single thin bracele

  • Betrayed by design   Financial Forensics

    The accountant’s name was Gerald Fitch, a wiry man in his late fifties with reading glasses balanced at the very end of his nose with a kind of face that was easy to forget in a crowd. Gerald Fitch had spent thirty years finding things in numbers that other people had tried very hard to hide, and h

  • Betrayed by design   The First Move

    Sloane called Emily into the office at exactly nine o’clock on Wednesday morning, not privately. She did it in front of everyone.The executive floor of Vance Industries was already humming by then. Keyboards clicking, phones murmuring, the smell of fresh coffee drifting from the small kitchen at t

  • Betrayed by design   Marcus Hale

    Damon sat alone in the back corner where nobody bothered him with a glass of water in front of him. The restaurant was quiet for a Thursday evening. His phone buzzed once, he stared at the name on the screen for thirty seconds before he finally answered.“Cross.” Said the voice on the other end. “

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