
After My Husband Kissed His Stepsister, I Exposed Him
Chapter 4
The morning light filtered through our perpetually drawn curtains as Jonathan flipped through a catalog with practiced precision.
"Emily," he called out, his voice carrying that familiar note of command, "I need you to order this wheelchair."
I stepped into the living room, my eyes falling on the glossy page he held. A wheelchair—sleek, high-tech, and obscenely expensive.
"Fifty thousand dollars," I read aloud, my voice steady despite the anger bubbling beneath my skin.
"It's a medical necessity," Jonathan insisted, his fingers tracing the image with surprising dexterity for someone who claimed he couldn't see. "The Mitchell Foundation Gala is next month. I need to maintain appearances."
I studied his face—the face I'd once loved, now a mask of calculated deception. For ten years, I'd believed every word he said. No more.
"Jonathan," I said carefully, "we can't afford it."
He blinked, clearly not expecting resistance. "What do you mean? Just use the joint account like you always do."
I crossed my arms. "I mean we can't afford it with the new condo payments."
The color drained from his face. Just for a moment—a flicker so brief anyone else might have missed it. But I was watching now. Always watching.
"What condo?" he asked, his voice suddenly cautious.
"The one in SoHo," I replied, maintaining eye contact. "The one you bought for Demi."
Jonathan's jaw tightened. He knew I knew. The question was how much.
"I don't know what you're talking about," he said, but his fingers twitched against the armrest—a tell I'd never noticed before.
I turned away, reaching for my phone. "I've already called the manufacturer. The order's been canceled."
"Emily!" His voice sharpened with genuine anger. "You can't do that!"
"I just did." I met his gaze directly. "Perhaps Demi can buy you one with her condo budget."
---
Two days later, I stood outside Dr. Sarah Chen's office, my heart pounding against my ribs. The receptionist had already buzzed me through—my nursing credentials had granted me access to the "professional consultation" I'd requested.
"Mrs. Wright," Dr. Chen greeted me, her smile not quite reaching her eyes. "What can I do for you today?"
I placed my bag on her desk, the recording device inside already running. "I'm here about my husband's case."
"Jonathan Mitchell," she nodded, pulling out a file. "What would you like to know?"
"I'm curious about the medical evidence of his blindness," I said, keeping my voice casual. "I've been reading up on cornea transplants, and something doesn't quite add up."
Dr. Chen's expression shifted subtly. "I'm not sure I understand."
"The recovery timeline," I pressed. "According to the medical literature, cornea recipients regain partial vision within weeks. Yet Jonathan's condition has remained... consistent."
She adjusted her glasses. "Every case is different."
"Of course," I agreed. "But I found something interesting while organizing our insurance documents." I pulled out a blank notebook. "A payment from Jonathan to you. Fifteen thousand dollars, three days after his 'accident.'"
The color drained from her face. "That was... consulting fees."
"Consulting fees that weren't reported to the medical board," I countered. "Interesting."
Dr. Chen's composure cracked. "Mrs. Wright, I think you should leave."
"Not until you explain why you falsified my husband's medical records."
Her eyes darted to the door, then back to me. "He paid me. Said it was just for a few months, until you settled into caring for him. Then he kept paying..."
---
The SoHo address matched the property records I'd found. I stood across the street, watching Demi enter the luxury building with a grocery bag—my grocery bag, from our favorite organic market uptown.
I approached the doorman, slipping him a hundred-dollar bill. "I'm here to see Ms. Bell. She's expecting me."
He nodded, waving me through without question.
The elevator ride to the twelfth floor gave me time to steady my nerves. This was it—the physical proof I needed.
Demi had left her door unlocked. I pushed it open silently, stepping into a world of luxury built on my sacrifice.
The condo was immaculate—modern art on the walls, plush furniture, and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. All purchased with money that should have been ours.
I moved through the space, documenting everything with my phone. In the bedroom, I found designer clothes with tags still attached—my size, but clearly never worn by me.
Then I saw it—on the kitchen counter, next to a stack of takeout menus: Jonathan's dark sunglasses. The ones he wore whenever we left the apartment, to "protect his sensitive eyes."
Beside them lay a manual titled "Defensive Driving Techniques."
My hands shook as I photographed the evidence. The sunglasses of a supposedly blind man, next to a driving manual.
I was so focused on capturing the moment that I almost missed the sound of the elevator arriving again.
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