
After My Husband Hid His Second Family with My Best Friend
Chapter 1
Sunday morning sunlight streamed through the kitchen window, casting a warm glow across my laptop screen. I sipped my coffee, still warm, and scrolled through the annual Spotify Wrapped report that had appeared in our shared family account. Kellen and I had been listening to it together just yesterday, laughing at the algorithm's attempt to summarize our year in music. 'Look at this,' he'd said, pointing to a chart of our most-played artists. 'We really did listen to that indie band a lot, didn't we?' I smiled at the memory, my finger hovering over the trackpad.
The playlist was titled simply 'For You.' I clicked on it, expecting another algorithmic compilation. Instead, I found dozens of love songs—soft, intimate tracks that spoke of stolen moments and secret promises. My breath caught. I had never heard these songs before. None of them had ever played in our home, in our car, or through our shared headphones.
I glanced at the creation date: six years ago. Six years. My stomach twisted as I saw the second account it was shared with—not my own. I frowned, my coffee growing cold beside me. Who else was Kellen sharing this with?
I jotted down the username of the secondary account. My hands were steady, but something inside me was already cracking. I closed the laptop and set it aside, my mind racing. I said nothing.
Over the next forty-eight hours, I worked with the methodical precision that had built our company from nothing. I traced the secondary Spotify account through a labyrinth of digital breadcrumbs. It linked to a device registered at an address in Brooklyn—a two-bedroom apartment I had never seen.
I cross-referenced the address against property records, pulling thread after thread until I found the lease. It was held under a shell company. My fingers trembled slightly as I pulled the registration records. The name of the registered agent stared back at me: Kellen Hayes.
My heart pounded as I dug deeper into the financial trail. Wire transfer after wire transfer, hundreds of thousands of dollars, all flowing from Kellen's personal account to another recipient. I followed the money, each transaction a small betrayal, until I reached the final destination: Poppy Brooks.
I sat at our kitchen table, the screen glowing in the dim light. The apartment was quiet, save for the distant hum of the refrigerator. I stared at the evidence, my mind reeling. Poppy. My best friend. The woman who had stood by me through every triumph and heartbreak. The woman who had introduced me to Kellen.
I didn't cry. I didn't scream. I closed the laptop and went to bed, lying beside my husband as if nothing had changed. But everything had changed.
The next morning, I called Lakelyn Taylor. Not from my usual phone—I couldn't risk it. Instead, I used a prepaid device I'd purchased with cash from a pharmacy two blocks from the office. 'I need you to find everything,' I told her, my voice calm. 'Everything.'
Lakelyn didn't ask questions. She didn't need to. She knew me well enough to understand that I wouldn't have called unless the situation was dire. 'What do you have so far?' she asked.
I gave her the shell company name, the Brooklyn address, and the wire transfer records. 'I need to know everything,' I repeated. 'I need it airtight.'
Two weeks later, Lakelyn delivered. We met in a locked conference room at a law firm with no connections to either of us. She spread the findings across the polished table: paternity records, financial transfers, hotel receipts, surveillance footage, and a family photograph—Kellen, Poppy, and a little boy, smiling and posed. A life I never knew existed.
I absorbed every detail, my face a mask of calm. No tears, no outbursts. Just the cold, hard truth. 'How long will it take to make this unassailable?' I asked.
Lakelyn's eyes met mine, steady and resolute. 'Three months,' she said. 'If we're careful.'
I nodded, my mind already racing ahead. Three months. I could wait. I could plan. I could prepare.
As I left the conference room, my phone buzzed with a text from Kellen: 'Thinking of you. Love you.'
I smiled, a cold, calculated smile. 'Love you too,' I typed back.
The game had begun.
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