
After Husband's Affair Unveiled
Chapter 3
I came home from the hospital with a brace on my wrist and bruises blooming purple across my ribs. Drake was waiting in the living room, pacing. When he saw me, relief flooded his face—the kind of relief that looked rehearsed.
"Elle, thank God." He rushed over, reaching for me, but I stepped back. Just slightly. Enough that he noticed.
"I'm fine," I said. My voice came out flat, detached. "The medics said it's just minor injuries."
His hands hovered in the air between us before falling to his sides. "I was so worried. When I heard you were stuck down there—" He ran a hand through his hair, and I watched him construct the narrative in real time. "The emergency crew said they could only extract one person at a time safely. Sasha has severe claustrophobia, she was having a panic attack. I had to make an impossible choice."
An impossible choice. As if my life and his mistress's temporary discomfort were somehow equivalent.
"I understand," I said, and watched relief smooth the tension from his shoulders. "You were under stress. Anyone would have panicked."
He pulled me into his arms then, and I let him. His cologne mixed with that floral perfume, Sasha's scent clinging to his shirt collar. I pressed my face against his chest and felt nothing.
"I'm so sorry," he whispered into my hair. "I should have been there for you."
"It's okay." The lies came easier than I expected. "Caspian helped me. He was nearby for some business thing."
Drake stiffened slightly at the name. "James was there?"
"Lucky for me." I pulled back, meeting his eyes. "Otherwise I might have been stuck there much longer."
Something flickered across his face—calculation disguised as concern. "Well. I'm glad you're safe." He kissed my forehead, the gesture as hollow as our vows. "You should rest. Big week coming up."
"Yes," I agreed. "The gala."
His eyes sharpened with that familiar hunger. "Your moment to shine, darling. All that brilliant work finally getting the recognition it deserves."
Our work, he'd said in his speech drafts. Our research. Our patent.
I smiled at him, this man I'd trusted with everything, and watched him smile back. He had no idea the patent documents he'd forged were already worthless. That three hours ago, while he'd been comforting Sasha, I'd been in Caspian's car signing transfer agreements that his legal team had dated and notarized for two days prior.
The patent belonged to James Holdings now. Drake's entire scheme had collapsed before he even knew the game was over.
"I think I'll take a bath," I said. "My muscles are sore."
"Of course." He was already reaching for his phone, probably texting Sasha. "I'll order dinner. Your favorite?"
"That would be nice."
I climbed the stairs slowly, letting him think I was injured and tired. In our bathroom, I locked the door and pulled out my phone. A message from Caspian waited: *Documents filed. Legal confirms everything is airtight. Are you sure you want to do this at the gala?*
I typed back: *He wants a public celebration. He'll get one.*
Three dots appeared, then: *I'll be there. Front row.*
I set the phone down and looked at myself in the mirror. The bruises were real enough, dark marks on pale skin. But my eyes were clear, focused. The naive professor's daughter was gone. Someone harder had taken her place.
Four days. I just had to play the role for four more days.
The night of the gala arrived wrapped in the kind of spring evening that made everything feel possible. The university ballroom had been transformed—crystal chandeliers throwing light across white tablecloths, ice sculptures melting slowly near the bar, investors in tuxedos mingling with faculty in their finest.
I stood in the venue's powder room, adjusting the deep emerald gown I'd chosen specifically for tonight. It had cost more than Drake thought appropriate, but I'd bought it anyway with my own money. The neckline was elegant, the back open, and my mother's pendant rested against my collarbone—the only jewelry I wore.
My phone buzzed. Nina's text read: *You look stunning. Are you ready?*
*Almost,* I replied.
I wasn't ready. I was terrified. But terror and determination could coexist.
When I entered the ballroom, heads turned. I felt their eyes track my movement across the floor, whispers following in my wake. Drake stood near the stage talking to investors, and when he saw me, his expression shifted through several emotions before settling on possessive pride.
He crossed to me, taking my hand. "You look beautiful," he said, loud enough for nearby guests to hear. Then quieter: "That dress—"
"Is perfect," I finished. "For tonight."
He threaded his fingers through mine, and we moved through the crowd together. My father stood near the dean's table, watching us with an expression I couldn't quite read. He'd been quieter lately, more observant. I wondered what he'd noticed that he hadn't said.
The evening coordinator signaled from the stage. It was time.
Drake guided me toward the podium, his hand at the small of my back. The gesture looked protective from the outside. I knew it for what it was—control, ownership, the physical manifestation of everything he thought he'd taken from me.
He stepped up to the microphone first, his smile bright and confident. The room quieted.
"Good evening, everyone. Thank you all for being here tonight." His voice carried perfectly, warm and commanding. "We're gathered to celebrate a breakthrough in sustainable energy patents—research that will change how we think about power consumption in urban environments."
Applause rippled through the crowd. I stood beside him, my hands folded, my face composed.
"This work," Drake continued, gesturing to the presentation screens behind us showing my research data, "represents two years of tireless dedication. Late nights, countless iterations, the kind of brilliant innovation that only comes from true passion for the field." He paused, his eyes sweeping the room. "I'm honored to have been part of this journey. To have supported and guided this research from concept to completion."
Supported. Guided. As if he'd done anything but steal.
He turned to me, extending his hand. "I'd like to invite my brilliant wife, Dr. Elle Porter, to share the details of our groundbreaking work."
Our work.
I took his hand and stepped up to the microphone. The crowd's faces blurred under the stage lights, but I found Caspian in the front row, exactly where he'd promised to be. His expression was steady, anchoring.
I smiled at the audience, at Drake beside me, at the investors who thought they were about to fund his future.
"Thank you all for coming," I began, my voice clear and strong. "Tonight is indeed a celebration. But perhaps not the one you were expecting."
Drake's hand tightened on mine. I pulled free, stepping forward.
"Before I discuss the patent," I continued, "I think it's important we all understand exactly whose work we're celebrating."
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