The Wife He Erased Took The Microphone And Shattered His Future-hothiyenvy_5

The Bellagio ballroom was built for people who wanted their lives to look untouchable.

Crystal chandeliers hung over the room in bright tiers, scattering gold across marble floors, white orchids, black tuxedos, and champagne glasses so thin they looked too delicate to hold anything honest.

Beyond the tall windows, the Las Vegas Strip burned against the desert night.

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Inside, the Nevada Children’s Foundation gala moved with the smooth rhythm of expensive planning.

A string quartet played near the stage.

Servers crossed the floor with silver trays.

Board members kissed cheeks, donors checked table numbers, and everyone smiled with the particular confidence of people who believed public kindness could polish private rot.

Rita Morales stood near the podium with a cream folder in her hand.

The folder was warm from her palm.

The paper edge had made a small crescent mark against her skin because she had been gripping it too hard since the elevator.

Her dress was ivory silk, simple and clean-lined, the kind of dress chosen by a woman who knew attention would already be dangerous.

Her dark hair was pinned low at the nape of her neck.

Her lipstick had not smudged.

That part felt almost insulting, because during the drive over she had bitten the inside of her cheek hard enough to taste blood.

At 7:18 p.m., the event coordinator handed her the final run-of-show.

At 7:22, Rita checked Cain’s speech one last time.

At 7:26, she tucked the revised copy behind the donor pledge ledger and the foundation registration documents.

Cain Santana was scheduled to accept the foundation’s community leadership award at 7:35.

Rita had written the speech he was supposed to give.

She had written about his childhood in North Las Vegas, his first construction loan, and the scholarships he claimed had changed his life.

She had written about the design programs for immigrant students and teenagers aging out of foster care.

She had written the paragraph where he was supposed to thank the woman who had “stood beside him from the beginning.”

That woman was her.

At least, that was what the program said.

Rita and Cain had been married for six years.

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