Her Fiancé Cheated At The Gala, But The Stranger Knew His Debt-thuyhien

“Can you kiss me?”

Valerie Morgan said it before she even saw the man’s face.

The ballroom smelled like white roses, expensive cologne, and champagne that had been sitting too long under the lights.

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Somewhere behind her, a string quartet kept playing something soft and tasteful, the kind of music rich people used when they wanted cruelty to look elegant.

More than two hundred people filled the Grandview Hotel ballroom that night.

Donors.

Investors.

Board members.

Women in floor-length dresses who kissed both cheeks and remembered every scandal.

Men in tailored suits who checked stock alerts under the table and called it charity.

The Morgan-Hale Foundation Gala had been Valerie’s work from beginning to end.

She had chosen the menu.

She had approved the flower arch.

She had fought with the hotel coordinator for three days over the lighting because Daniel said the stage needed to make him look warm but powerful.

She had written the speech he was supposed to give at 9:10 p.m.

That was the part that made her feel stupid now.

She had sat at their kitchen island two nights earlier, barefoot, tired, with a paper coffee cup from the hotel still beside her laptop, writing words about loyalty, stewardship, public trust, and family values for a man who had been lying to her in the next room.

Daniel Hale was supposed to be standing beside her that night.

He was her fiancé.

He was the polished son of a powerful wine-distribution family.

He had the kind of smile people trusted before they understood they were being sold something.

For eighteen months, Valerie had built her life around him.

She had sat through business dinners where men asked Daniel questions and then looked at her only when dessert arrived.

She had listened to his mother explain which china pattern would be appropriate for their wedding registry.

She had let his family place her name on foundation materials when it helped them appear more grounded, more modern, more human.

She had even worn the ivory gown Daniel chose, though she had wanted pale blue.

“Ivory looks cleaner in photos,” he had told her.

Clean.

That was Daniel’s favorite word.

Clean lines.

Clean story.

Clean couple.

But eighteen minutes before Valerie grabbed the sleeve of the man in the black suit, she had seen Daniel in the service hallway behind the kitchen.

The hallway had smelled like garlic butter, wet tile, and dish soap.

A line cook had just pushed through the swinging door with a tray of lamb bites.

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