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After My Husband Left Me for His Paris Mistress Novel Cover

After My Husband Left Me for His Paris Mistress

The coq au vin had developed a skin, a dull, gelatinous film that mocked the three hours I’d spent prepping it. Ten years. A decade of marriage to Logan King, and the silence in our Upper East Side penthouse was loud enough to rattle the crystal flutes on the table. The bubbles in the vintage Dom Pérignon had long since died, leaving the golden liquid flat and stagnant. At 10:45 PM, the elevator chimed. I didn’t stand up. I just smoothed the silk of my dress, my fingers trembling slightly against the fabric. Logan walked in, but he didn’t look at me. He didn’t look at the dinner. He was checking his watch, his thumb swiping across the screen of his phone with a frantic energy I hadn’t seen in years.
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Chapter 3

The Velvet & Steel workroom smelled like acetone and desperation. I arrived at 6 AM every day that first week, before the fluorescent lights flickered on, before the interns stumbled in with their oat milk lattes. I needed the silence to think, to sketch, to prove I wasn't the ghost of Logan's lies.

The team treated me like a disease. Whispers followed me through the racks of muslin prototypes. Someone had taped a printed screenshot of Logan's interview to the bathroom mirror—the one where he'd called me "emotionally fragile" and "creatively barren." I peeled it off without ceremony, crumpled it, and flushed it down the toilet.

"Nice haircut, Mrs. King," sneered Jade, a twenty-three-year-old pattern-maker with septum piercings and a superiority complex. She was pinning a bodice on a dress form, her movements deliberately slow. "Very... divorced."

I didn't respond. I just threaded my needle and kept working on the sleeve Marcus had assigned me—a test, obviously, to see if I'd crack under the weight of grunt work.

But on Wednesday, the crisis hit.

Marcus stormed into the workroom at noon, his face the color of old newspaper. Behind him, two assistants wheeled in bolt after bolt of silk charmeuse—except it wasn't the champagne gold we'd ordered. It was a sickly yellow, the color of jaundice.

"The supplier sent the wrong dye lot," Marcus said, his voice flat with exhaustion. "The show is in three weeks. We have forty-two pieces that require this exact fabric. We're dead."

Jade dropped her pins. The room went silent except for the hum of the industrial sewing machines.

I stood up, wiping my hands on my apron. My heart was hammering, but my voice came out steady. "We can fix it."

Marcus turned to me, his eyes narrowed. "Excuse me?"

"Over-dyeing," I said, walking toward the bolts. I ran my fingers over the silk, feeling the weight, the weave. "We can tea-stain it first to kill the yellow undertone, then over-dye with a rust-based pigment. It'll deepen the color, add dimension. It won't be what you ordered, but it'll be better."

"That's insane," Jade said, crossing her arms. "You'll ruin forty yards of silk."

"Or I'll save the collection," I shot back, my eyes never leaving Marcus's face. "Give me one bolt. Let me prove it."

Marcus stared at me for a long, agonizing moment. Then he jerked his head toward the dye lab. "You have until midnight. If you destroy that fabric, you're gone."

***

I worked through the night. The dye lab was a concrete bunker in the basement, the air thick with chemical fumes. I brewed vats of black tea until the water was dark as bourbon, submerging the silk in stages, watching the yellow fade into something warmer, richer. Then came the rust dye—iron oxide mixed with vinegar, a technique I'd learned from a textile professor at Parsons a lifetime ago.

My hands were stained orange. My eyes burned. But when I pulled the first length of silk from the final rinse, it shimmered under the fluorescent light—a deep, molten amber with veins of copper running through it like fire.

Marcus arrived at 6 AM. He didn't say a word. He just ran his hand over the fabric, held it up to the light, and exhaled.

"Do the rest," he said quietly. Then he looked at me, really looked at me, and nodded. "You're not a socialite. You're a killer."

Jade didn't speak to me for the rest of the week. But she stopped leaving screenshots on the mirror.

***

Across town, Logan's empire was rotting from the inside out.

Vivian had redecorated the penthouse in a fever dream of gold leaf and Versace knockoffs. The living room looked like a Dubai hotel lobby had vomited onto Fifth Avenue. She was sprawled on the new velvet sofa—tacky, tufted, the color of Pepto-Bismol—scrolling through her phone, her champagne flute leaving rings on the marble coffee table.

"Logan, darling," she called out, not looking up. "The interior designer needs another fifty thousand for the bedroom. And I need a new car. The Maserati is so last season."

Logan sat at his desk in the study, surrounded by unopened envelopes. SEC letterhead. IRS audit notices. His lawyer's increasingly frantic voicemails. He shoved them aside and pulled up a loan application on his laptop—a private equity firm in the Caymans, the kind that didn't ask questions.

He typed in the amount: $2 million. His hand hovered over the keyboard. The terms were predatory, the interest rates criminal. But Vivian's laughter drifted in from the other room, bright and careless, and he clicked "Submit."

He was Logan King. He was untouchable.

***

Ruthie called me at 7 AM on Saturday. "Queens Diner. One hour. Come alone."

She was waiting in a corner booth, her Chanel suit incongruous against the cracked vinyl seats. A plate of untouched eggs congealed in front of her. She slid a small USB drive across the Formica table.

"What is this?" I asked, my fingers closing around the cold metal.

"Logan's ledgers," Ruthie said, her voice low. "Offshore accounts. Shell corporations. He's been hiding assets for years—money that should have been marital property. Money that should be yours."

I stared at the drive. It was small, innocuous. A weapon.

"Why now?" I asked.

"Because he's getting sloppy," Ruthie said, her eyes hard. "And because you deserve to win."

I slipped the drive into my pocket. I didn't know if I'd use it. Not yet. I wanted to build my empire first, on my own terms.

But I kept it close. Just in case.

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