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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 5

The gallery was on West 21st. One of those spaces where the walls are white and the wine is bad and everyone is dressed like they've thought very hard about not appearing to have thought hard at all.

Architectural Digest had asked for us specifically. Manhattan couples redefining the work-life aesthetic. I'd said yes on behalf of both of us, and Damian had been delighted, because he always is when the camera is pointing our direction.

I wore the ivory sheath. Simple. Deliberate. The kind of dress that photographs as effortless and takes forty minutes to put on correctly.

The photographer was a young woman named Petra with a Leica and a serious face. She positioned us near a structural column, the kind of brutalist concrete that reads as artistic when lit correctly. Damian put his arm around my waist. His hand was warm through the silk.

"Beautiful," Petra said, not to either of us specifically. "Can we do one more? Maybe something a little more—intimate? Natural?"

Damian turned to me. His eyes did the thing they've always done for cameras—open, soft, present in a way he rarely was in private.

I leaned slightly into him. And then, because the moment required it, I let my free hand drop to my stomach. Not a dramatic gesture. Just the way a woman might, without thinking. The way a woman with something quietly, privately precious might rest her hand without even deciding to.

Petra's shutter clicked twice in quick succession.

"Perfect," she said.

Damian pressed his lips to my temple. His hand tightened at my waist.

I kept my eyes forward and smiled at the middle distance.

***

The image ran in the digital edition the next morning. I was tagged before eight a.m.

I looked at it the way I look at everything now—not as a wife, but as a strategist reviewing a deliverable. The composition was clean. The concrete column behind us had exactly the gravitas Petra intended. My hand on my stomach was visible but subtle. A reader might not even notice it consciously. They'd just feel something. A warmth. A sense of something pending.

Damian had posted it to his Instagram at seven-fifty-two.

*Everything worth having.*

Fifty-six likes in the first twenty minutes. Comments from art world acquaintances, two clients, his college roommate. The usual geography of a man's curated public life.

Sabrina liked the post at seven-fifty-eight.

Six minutes.

I opened the BISCUIT drive. Added the timestamp. Added a screenshot of the notification. Labeled the subfolder: *EXHIBIT D.*

Then I closed my laptop and went to feed Biscuit his breakfast.

***

Celeste found me at seven-thirty on a Thursday, still at my desk, the Calloway pitch half-built on one screen and the BISCUIT operational map open in a minimized window on the other.

She set a coffee on my desk without being asked. Earl Grey. She'd remembered.

"The Calloway deck is in good shape," she said, not looking at the screens. "I'm taking the eleven o'clock with their brand team. You don't need to be there."

I looked up at her.

Celeste Nguyen had worked for me for four years. She was thirty-one and ran the operational floor with a precision that made me feel, on my worst days, mildly unnecessary. She had never once asked me a personal question. It was one of the things I respected most about her.

"There's also the Meridian renewal coming up on the fourteenth," she continued. "I've drafted the terms. I'll send them over tonight for your review, but honestly, Gabriela—" She paused. Just a beat. "I've got the floor. Do what you need to do."

She picked up a file from the corner of my desk and walked out.

I sat there for a moment after she left.

Two people this month had offered me that. Paige across a hotel table. Now Celeste across a mahogany desk. Both of them watching me carry something they couldn't name and offering me the only thing that actually helped: the floor, held steady beneath my feet while I worked.

I made a note to give Celeste a raise when this was over.

Then I minimized the Calloway deck and got back to work.

***

The shell company's registered address was a serviced suite on 47th. The kind of place that rented by the month to businesses that didn't need permanence—consulting firms, holding entities, things that existed legally before they existed in practice.

I arrived at eight-forty Tuesday morning.

The building had three stairwells. I'd done the walkthrough twice the week before, once with Paige and once alone. The northeast stairwell had the best angles—two fixed sight lines from the landing above and one from the reception threshold. The light was consistent. No windows to compete with.

I placed the cameras myself. Tested each feed on my phone. Adjusted the third one two degrees left.

Then I stood in the stairwell for a moment and listened to the building. Ambient HVAC. Distant elevator hum. No footsteps. The silence of a space that existed to be forgotten.

The blood packs were in the inside pocket of my coat. Paige had sourced them from a prop supply warehouse in Burbank. Film-grade. Room temperature. She'd tested the consistency herself the night before on a kitchen tile, then sent me a photo with the caption: *Convincing. Don't spill it in the Uber.*

I hadn't laughed. But I'd wanted to, which I decided was enough.

I texted Paige the address and the time. She confirmed in two words: *I'm ready.*

Sabrina's meeting notice had gone out Monday under the Castro Creative Consulting letterhead I'd had printed the week before. First-quarter review. Responsibilities overview. The tone I'd used was breezy and slightly important—the register she responded to. I'd signed it with my own name and watched the read receipt arrive within four minutes.

She was coming.

I took the elevator up to the suite, set my coat over the back of a chair, smoothed the ivory blouse, and sat down at the table.

The cameras were live.

Outside, somewhere below on 47th, the city moved the way it always does—indifferent, loud, continuous. I folded my hands on the table.

Three moves had become one.

I waited.

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