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After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge Novel Cover

After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge

Tuesday mornings at the bistro always smelled like burnt sugar and fresh bread. I'd learned to like that. Five years of early shifts will do that to a person — take something ordinary and turn it into something close enough to comfort that you stop noticing the difference. I was at the espresso machine when Mr. Hale came in. Retired schoolteacher, always sat at the corner table by the window, always ordered a flat white with oat milk and a blueberry scone, even though he spent a full minute every single time pretending to look at the menu. He'd been coming in for three weeks. I had his order memorized after the first Tuesday. "The usual?" I called before he'd even sat down. He looked up, surprised and pleased in the way regulars always are when you remember.
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Chapter 2

He came at noon.

Not because he needed lunch. Because noon was when the bistro was fullest — every table taken, the counter lined with regulars, the kind of crowd that would remember what they saw. Knox Carter understood the value of an audience. He always had.

I heard the door and felt him before I turned around. That scent — pine resin, cold iron — cut through the smell of grilled bread and coffee like a blade through paper. Sera went still inside me. The same stillness as yesterday. Like she was holding her breath.

I finished pouring a flat white for the woman at table four and did not hurry.

He was standing at the counter when I turned. Dark jacket again. No expression worth describing. He set something down on the counter between us — a thick stack of bills, folded once. He didn't announce it. He just put it there and looked at me the way you look at something you find mildly disappointing.

The dining room had gone quiet in the way rooms go quiet when the pressure in them changes and no one can say exactly why.

"There's a gas station across the street," he said. His voice was conversational. Almost pleasant. "Go over and get me whatever's cheapest on the hot rack."

I looked at the money. Then at him.

"A woman who sold her pack for blood money," he said, "should know that menu pretty well."

Somewhere behind me, I heard a chair scrape back very slowly and then go still. River, probably. I didn't look.

I picked up the stack of bills. Counted it — two hundred and some, far more than anything at a gas station hot rack would cost, which was exactly the point — and set most of it back on the counter in a neat pile. Then I walked to the supply shelf at the end of the counter, took down a small pack of crackers from the snack basket we kept for waiting customers, and wrote up a receipt on the order pad.

Two dollars and forty-nine cents.

I laid the receipt on the counter beside the remaining change. Exact to the cent.

"We carry those here," I said. "Saves the trip."

Knox looked at the crackers. He looked at the change. Something moved across his face — fast, unreadable — and then it was gone and he was just looking at me again with that particular flatness that was worse than anger.

He picked up the crackers. Left the change where it was. Left the rest of his money too, which I had already decided I would donate to the tip jar and split out at the end of the shift.

He walked out without another word.

The dining room let out a breath it had been holding. The woman at table four asked if she could get extra foam on her latte. I told her yes and turned back to the machine.

My hands were completely steady. I made sure of it.

---

The rent notice came three days later.

I found it slipped under my apartment door on a Thursday morning, official-looking, my landlord's name at the top but something slightly off in the language — too formal, too precise, the kind of phrasing a real estate lawyer writes rather than a man who'd always just texted me about plumbing. The amount in the highlighted box was double what I'd been paying.

Effective the next billing cycle.

I sat down on the edge of my bed and read it twice. Then I folded it and put it in the drawer with the envelope labeled "Mom — Week 14" and the folder I kept for Chase's copay receipts.

I already knew what this was. Knox hadn't bothered to be subtle. He wanted me to know it was him.

I went to work.

---

The medication call came on Friday afternoon.

I was in the middle of a shift when my phone buzzed in my apron pocket. I stepped into the walk-in cooler — my coworkers had learned what that meant — and answered it.

The woman on the line was from the Lycan healer distribution service, carefully apologetic, explaining that a customs flag had been placed on Margaret Foster's weekly compound shipment. A contraband alert. She said "we're working to resolve it" in the specific tone of someone who has been told not to explain further.

I said, "How long."

She said it could be two to three weeks.

I thanked her. I stood in the cooler with my back against the metal shelf and the cold moving through my uniform and stared at nothing for about forty-five seconds. Then I went back out and finished the shift.

I called my mother that evening. Told her the medication was delayed by supply chain issues. She said "oh, these things happen" in the cheerful, incurious way she always said things when she was trying not to worry me. I said I'd look into alternatives and she said I worked too hard and I said goodnight and I hung up.

I sat at my kitchen table with the rent notice and the tip envelope and the copay folder laid out in front of me like a hand of cards I'd been dealt and had to play with regardless.

Two weeks without the compound would mean setbacks in her treatment. Three weeks might mean more than that. I had two contacts in the Lycan healer network who weren't pack-adjacent, one of whom might be willing to source through a different channel if I asked carefully. That was one option. The second shift I'd already picked up at the bistro covered the rent gap partially but not fully. I'd need to cut Chase's weekend therapy session, the one his primary therapist had started last month, which meant losing ground I couldn't easily get back.

I ran the numbers until they stopped moving.

Then I wrote them down.

Knox wasn't trying to hurt me. He was trying to make sure I couldn't survive staying. He'd done the math the same way I had — calculated exactly which pressure points would force me out quietly, without a scene, without any record of what he'd done. The rent hike was clean. The customs flag was untraceable. The pack network whispers that were already costing me the three other service accounts I'd been building — those were the most elegant move, because they'd never be documented at all.

He was patient when he wanted to be. I'd watched him rebuild an entire pack with that patience once. I knew how long he could sustain something when he decided it mattered.

Sera surfaced quietly at the edge of my mind. Not agitated. Just present.

I looked at the numbers one more time.

Then I put the papers away, got up, and started planning.

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