Victor Monroe never carried bags—not for anyone. Yet that morning, beneath the cold gleam of the airport terminal’s ceiling lights, he held Nadia’s delicate designer handbag over his arm. To him, it felt harmless.
A gesture of convenience, not devotion. But with each step across the polished marble floor, the echo changed, like a heartbeat skipping in a story he thought he controlled. Nadia walked beside him, effortless in a cream-colored dress that swayed softly as she adjusted her sunglasses.
Her smile was small and private—the kind a mistress wore when she believed she’d finally won. She wanted the world to see them together, to confirm what whispers had only guessed. Victor didn’t look at her.
He didn’t have to. The bag on his arm said enough. And while she wore the expression of someone arriving, he felt like someone leaving a page unfinished.
The luxury terminal buzzed around them—executives rushing past, sharp-suited staff checking passports, lounge music drifting into flight announcements. A private jet waited, but Nadia had insisted they walk through departures. She wanted to be seen.
Victor hadn’t objected. Why would he? For once, he felt in control of the story, riding the illusion that exposure made everything real.
Until he wasn’t. It happened in seconds. First, the hush.
Then, silence heavy enough to press down on the terminal. Conversations cut off mid-word. People froze.
Phones rose. Not for calls. For photos.
Victor followed their gaze instinctively. His heartbeat slowed to a thud. At the far end of the terminal stood Evelyn, his wife.
No makeup. Pale with exhaustion. Her eyes darker than he remembered.
But it wasn’t her face that shook him. Four small children clustered around her. Boys.
Identical. Each holding tightly to her skirt. His quadruplets.
Victor’s hand opened reflexively. Nadia’s handbag slipped, hitting the floor with a louder thud than it should have. His mouth moved, but no sound came.
The silence surrounding him turned solid, like glass about to shatter. Evelyn didn’t speak. Didn’t move.
She only stared—not at him, but through him. Her expression wasn’t anger. It was pity.
Flash. The first camera snapped. Then another.
And another. Passengers who once envied Victor Monroe now captured his downfall frame by frame. “Victor?” Nadia’s voice trembled.
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