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After His Affair with Her, I Planned My Revenge Novel Cover

After His Affair with Her, I Planned My Revenge

The earring rolled somewhere I couldn't see. It was a pearl drop my mother had given me before she died. I was on my hands and knees in our bedroom on a Tuesday afternoon, still in the cream silk blouse I'd worn to pitch a skincare brand in Tribeca. My phone said 2:47. The client meeting had ended early. I'd come home humming. I swept my hand under the dresser. My fingers found something cold and rectangular. Not the earring. A voice recorder.
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Chapter 1

The earring rolled somewhere I couldn't see.

It was a pearl drop my mother had given me before she died. I was on my hands and knees in our bedroom on a Tuesday afternoon, still in the cream silk blouse I'd worn to pitch a skincare brand in Tribeca. My phone said 2:47. The client meeting had ended early. I'd come home humming.

I swept my hand under the dresser. My fingers found something cold and rectangular. Not the earring.

A voice recorder. Silver. Damian's.

He used these for what he called "shower ideas." He'd press record and pace the room, talking to himself about color palettes and tag lines. Half our pillow talk for six years had been him saying, "Wait, hold that thought," and reaching for one of these.

I smiled a little. Sat back on my heels. Pressed play.

There was breathing first. Then a laugh I didn't recognize. Young. Wet. Then Damian's voice, low, in a register he had not used with me in a long time.

"Take it off."

I didn't move.

A giggle. "Here? On her side?"

"Especially on her side."

The second voice was Sabrina's.

I knew it the way you know your own name. Sabrina Castro. Eleanor's daughter. The girl I'd taken to lunch at Balthazar two months ago and helped with her résumé. The girl who called me Miss Gabby when she was nine and hugged my waist.

The recording kept going. The mattress made a sound I had heard a thousand times. The headboard, the one I picked out in a showroom in SoHo, knocked against the wall in a rhythm I recognized from my own marriage.

I sat on the edge of the bed.

I listened all the way through.

Then I pressed rewind, and I listened again.

The second time, I checked the date stamp on the file. October 14th. I had been in Chicago that night, pitching the Hermès account in a hotel suite at the Peninsula. I had FaceTimed Damian at eleven. He'd told me he missed me. He'd been in this room. She had been in this room.

When the recording ended a second time, I stood up. My legs worked. That surprised me.

I walked into the bathroom. Turned the cold tap. Cupped water in my hands and pressed it to my face. Did it again. Did it a third time. Water ran down my wrists and into my sleeves and I didn't care.

I looked up.

The woman in the mirror had mascara smudged under one eye. Her mouth was open a little. Her chest was rising too fast.

I watched her.

I watched her until her breathing slowed. Until her shoulders came down. Until her mouth closed and stayed closed.

When I stepped back from the sink, something had moved out of me, and something else had moved in. I couldn't have named it then. I can name it now.

The wife went somewhere quiet to sit down.

The strategist picked up her keys.

***

Damian came home at seven, smelling like the gym and the cologne I bought him for Christmas.

"Hey, baby." He kissed the top of my head as I plated the salmon. "You're home early."

"Meeting wrapped fast." I smiled at him over my shoulder. "They loved it."

"Of course they did."

I poured him a glass of the Cabernet he liked. I refilled it once during dinner and again before dessert. I asked about his Calvin Klein pitch. I laughed when he did the impression of the junior creative who couldn't pronounce "minimalism." I reached across the table and squeezed his hand.

He didn't notice anything. Not one thing.

That was, somehow, the worst part. Six years, and he could not tell the difference between his wife and the woman wearing her face.

In bed, he kissed my shoulder and rolled over and was asleep in four minutes. I counted.

Then I lay on my back and looked at the ceiling.

The ceiling I had picked. The fan I had picked. The sheets, the mattress, the headboard. Mine. Ours. Hers, on October 14th.

I started to make a list in my head.

The Hamptons house. The joint accounts. The agency, separately incorporated, untouchable, mine. His advertising contracts, all of them with morality clauses I had personally reviewed because he never read anything longer than a paragraph. His credit cards, two of which I was a primary on. The recorder, now in the locked drawer of my home office, three rooms away.

Sabrina. The shell company I'd been sitting on since last spring, the one I'd never bothered to dissolve.

Damian breathed evenly beside me. His arm was warm against mine. I did not move it.

By the time the room started to lighten, I had the bones of it.

***

Five forty-five.

I laced my running shoes in the dark. Biscuit lifted his head from his bed and watched me with that look he gets, the one that says he knows something. He's known for a while, I think. Dogs always know first.

I ran south along the West Side Highway. The river was black and the sky was a bruised blue. My breath fogged. The Hudson smelled like cold metal.

At the half-mile mark, I let it come.

I cried the way you cry when no one is watching and no one will ever watch. Ugly. Wet. My mouth open, my face hot, snot on my upper lip, my stride still even because my legs did not get to fall apart. Only my face. Only for one mile.

I thought about the first apartment we'd shared, the one with the radiator that hissed. I thought about him bringing me soup when I had the flu in 2019. I thought about the way he used to say my full name, Gabriela, in a voice that meant something.

I thought about Sabrina at twelve, standing in our kitchen with a juice box, asking if she could pet Biscuit.

A cab passed. The driver couldn't see my face. No one could.

At the one-mile marker, I stopped. Bent over. Put my hands on my knees. Breathed.

Then I straightened up. Wiped my face with the hem of my shirt. Walked to the railing and looked at the river for thirty seconds.

When I turned around and started running back, I was done.

I have not cried about Damian Collins since.

***

Paige met me at the Crosby Street Hotel at eleven.

I'd booked a suite under a corporate card. She walked in still wearing her work clothes, a paint-streaked denim jacket and prosthetic adhesive on her thumb, and she took one look at my face and shut the door behind her without a word.

I poured two whiskeys. Neat. I handed her one.

"Sit down," I said.

She sat.

I set the recorder on the coffee table between us. Pressed play.

Paige did not interrupt. She did not gasp. Her free hand curled slowly into a fist on her thigh and stayed there. Her jaw set. Her eyes did not leave the recorder.

When it ended, she reached over and pressed stop herself.

She took a long sip of whiskey. Set the glass down. Looked at me.

"What do we need?"

Not are you okay. Not oh my God. Not I'll kill him.

What do we need.

I loved her so much in that second I almost did the second mile.

I opened my laptop instead.

***

The next three nights I worked late at the agency. Celeste, my ops director, knew not to ask. She left a fresh kettle on my desk at eight each evening and locked the front when she left.

I pulled six years of joint statements. I cross-referenced every Cartier charge, every Hermès receipt, every restaurant tab in Tribeca on a night I'd been out of town. I built a spreadsheet with timestamps. I screenshotted Sabrina's Instagram, every post, including the ones with my white marble kitchen island just visible behind her shoulder, and the one of her bare feet on my Hamptons deck at sunset captioned "manifesting."

I matched the deck post to a withdrawal of $4,200 from the joint account two days earlier. Cartier Madison Avenue. I matched the kitchen post to a Saturday Damian had told me he was golfing in Westchester.

By three a.m. on the third night, the dossier had four hundred and twelve pages.

I encrypted the drive. I named it BISCUIT.

I poured the last of the cold tea into my plant and shut down the screen and sat in the dark of my office for a minute, looking at the unframed photo on my desk. Me at twenty-six. Standing outside my first studio in a thrifted blazer, grinning like I owned the world.

"Hi," I said to her, quietly.

Then I picked up my bag.

Phase One started in four hours.

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