
After My Husband Introduced His Mistress as His Soulmate
Chapter 3
The scent of aged leather and single malt scotch hung heavy in Zayne’s study. I stood in the doorway, watching my husband admire his own reflection in the darkened windowpane. He held a crystal tumbler, swirling the amber liquid with a practiced, arrogant flick of his wrist.
"Zayne," I murmured, keeping my voice soft, deferential.
He didn't turn around. "I told you, Val, I'm reviewing the quarterly projections. If this is about the east wing renovations—"
"It isn't," I interrupted gently, stepping onto the Persian rug. I carried a leather-bound portfolio, my fingers gripping the smooth edges. "It’s about our anniversary next month."
He sighed, a harsh sound of put-upon exhaustion, and finally turned. His eyes were flat, already preparing the lecture on how my sentimentality was a burden.
"I don't want a traditional celebration," I said, before he could weaponize his annoyance. "I want a coronation."
That stopped him. The defensive set of his jaw loosened. "Excuse me?"
"Your European expansion was a triumph," I continued, letting a note of breathless admiration bleed into my tone. I stepped closer, placing the portfolio onto his mahogany desk. "For years, people in this city have whispered that you were merely riding the coattails of the Mitchell name. It’s time to prove them wrong. An exclusive, high-profile gala. The city's top investors, politicians, and media. We frame it as an anniversary, but the spotlight will be entirely on your solo achievements. You have outgrown my family's shadow, Zayne."
I watched the precise moment the bait hooked him. His chest expanded. The chronic imposter syndrome that haunted his every waking moment eagerly devoured the validation I offered.
"A coronation," he repeated, the Queens accent completely absent, replaced by a greedy, polished purr.
"Exactly," I said, opening the portfolio. I smoothed my hand over the crisp legal document inside. "But you are far too busy leading an empire to manage caterers and guest lists. I had Adonis draft a comprehensive Power of Attorney. It grants me temporary authorization over the event logistics and the necessary funding transfers. You won't have to lift a finger."
Zayne barely glanced at the dense legal text. He saw only a submissive wife, desperate to please, handing him the crown he believed he deserved. He reached into his suit jacket, withdrew his silver fountain pen, and signed his name with a violent, sweeping flourish.
The scratch of the nib against paper was the sweetest sound I had ever heard.
Forty-eight hours later, that single signature unlocked a labyrinth of rot.
I sat in my darkened bedroom, the glow of my encrypted laptop casting sharp shadows across my face. On the screen, Arlo’s face was illuminated by the sterile light of his own monitors.
"You didn't just hand me a flashlight, Val," Arlo said, his voice a clipped, metallic rasp through the speakers. "You gave me the master keys to the vault. The European expansion is a smokescreen."
"Show me," I demanded, the chill in the room seeping into my bones.
Columns of data cascaded across my screen. "He’s been executing coordinated sell-offs right before major PR disasters," Arlo explained, his fingers flying across his keyboard in the background. "Textbook insider trading. But that’s just the appetizer. Look at the outgoing transfers to these offshore shell companies."
I traced a manicured fingernail over a series of recurring, exorbitant payments. "Consulting fees? To an entity called... V.L. Holdings?"
"Vincent Lee," Arlo corrected, his tone dropping an octave. "I ran the routing numbers through the federal database. Val, Vincent Lee is a ghost. He’s one of the most prolific cartel money launderers in the hemisphere. And he has a daughter."
The pieces slammed together with sickening, perfect clarity. The breath caught in my throat. "Madelynn."
"This isn't just infidelity anymore," Arlo said, his eyes locking onto mine through the camera. "Zayne is laundering dirty money through Mitchell Enterprises infrastructure. He’s building a federal cage around himself."
"Then let's make sure the door locks," I whispered.
The next afternoon, the air inside the exclusive Chelsea boutique, *L’Atelier*, smelled of expensive champagne and suffocating vanity. I sat on a plush velvet sofa, my posture impeccably straight, playing the role of the gracious hostess.
Madelynn stepped out of the fitting room, draped in a crimson silk gown that clung to every curve. She turned toward the three-way mirror, a smug, territorial smile playing on her lips.
"It’s a bit bold, don't you think?" she asked, though she wasn't looking for my approval. She walked over and carelessly shoved her vintage Hermès bag into my hands. "Hold this, would you?"
The physical weight of the bag—bought with laundered blood money—rested in my lap. I didn't flinch. I simply smiled, my right hand slipping into my pocket to press the record button on my phone.
"Zayne enjoys bold things," I offered smoothly, keeping my voice perfectly level.
Madelynn scoffed, adjusting the plunging neckline. "Zayne needs fire, Valerie. You are just so... frigid. It’s no wonder he had to look elsewhere to feel alive. You Mitchells are all rules and old dust."
The insult was meant to draw blood. Instead, it gave me the opening I needed. I tilted my head, adopting a look of naive curiosity.
"Perhaps," I conceded softly. "But New York society is built on those rules. Your family must be so proud of how far you've come, Madelynn. Navigating these circles without any... established connections."
Her eyes flashed in the mirror, her carefully constructed mid-Atlantic accent slipping as her ego flared. "I don't need your dusty society connections, Valerie. My father has international influence you couldn't even comprehend. He moves capital across borders you couldn't even point to on a map. Zayne knows exactly how powerful my family is."
In my pocket, the phone silently captured every damning syllable.
"I'm sure he does," I murmured, my smile sharpening into a razor wrapped in velvet. "The dress is perfect, Madelynn. You should wear it to the gala."
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