
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 2
Dawn crept over the East River, bleeding a bruised, iron-gray light into the penthouse. I hadn’t slept. The black coffee in my mug had gone tepid, but the bitter bite on my tongue was exactly what I needed to ground me.
"I want her dismantled, Marcus. Financially, legally, and publicly."
Marcus Webb sat across my mahogany desk, his posture as rigid and unyielding as the bespoke suit he wore. Manhattan’s most aggressive corporate attorney didn't blink at the venom in my voice. He thrived on it.
"We freeze the assets?" he asked, his pen hovering over a yellow legal pad.
"Not yet. We let them think they're winning." I twisted my father’s signet ring around my index finger, the heavy gold a cold, familiar anchor against my skin. "I need a forensic audit on Kensley Fox. Every bank account, every credit card, every Venmo transaction. And tell the investigators in Mexico to double the bounty on Wilson Gray. If he breathes, I want to know the air pressure."
Marcus nodded, his shark-like eyes gleaming with professional appreciation.
I dragged a thick manila folder across the polished wood. The label read *Fox, Kensley - Executive Assistant*. With a smooth, deliberate motion, I picked up my father’s Mont Blanc pen, crossed out her title, and wrote *Target*.
The war had officially begun.
Three hours later, I was back in the suffocating, antiseptic grip of New York-Presbyterian’s ICU.
Landon lay beneath a tangle of wires and breathing tubes, his pale skin bruised the color of rotting plums. The rhythmic hiss of the ventilator was the only proof he was still alive. I stood at his bedside, my hands clasped tightly over my chest, playing the role of the shell-shocked, devoted wife for the nurses lingering outside the glass.
"He’s a fighter, Sloan."
I didn’t have to turn to recognize the booming, aristocratic baritone of Richard Ross. My father-in-law stood in the doorway, leaning heavily on his silver-tipped cane. His gaze swept over me, carrying the same dismissive weight it had for twenty years. To Richard, I wasn't the architect of his son's empire; I was just the hired help who had overstayed her welcome. The man who had likely ordered my father's execution now offered me a tight, patriarchal smile.
"He has the best doctors in the world, Richard," I murmured, my voice trembling just enough to sell the performance. "We just have to pray."
Richard huffed, a sound of old-money impatience. "I'll be speaking with the board this afternoon. We need to project stability. Landon's... indiscretions will be managed."
*Managed.* That was the Ross family way. Bury the bodies, buy the silence.
"Of course," I said softly, stepping back to let him approach his broken son.
My phone vibrated in my coat pocket. A secure message from my lead investigator. I slipped out into the harsh fluorescent glare of the corridor, putting a wall between myself and the Ross patriarch before opening the encrypted file.
The first packet of evidence was a masterpiece of amateur greed.
I scrolled through the PDF, my eyes scanning the highlighted columns. Kensley’s pregnancy was confirmed—medical records from an Upper East Side clinic, billed directly to a dummy LLC Landon had set up. But it was the second spreadsheet that made my pulse steady into a cold, lethal rhythm.
Eighteen months. That was how long Kensley had been siphoning funds from Ross Holdings through phantom vendor accounts. *Apex Consulting. Horizon Logistics.* Fictitious entities funneling thousands of dollars a week directly into her offshore accounts.
I memorized the transaction dates, cross-referencing them against my eidetic catalog of Landon’s expenses. On the exact day Landon bought her a fifty-thousand-dollar Cartier panther bracelet, Kensley had wired another twelve thousand to herself. She was bleeding him dry while he showered her in diamonds. The sheer audacity of it was almost poetic.
My phone buzzed again. A second file dropped into the secure folder.
*Subject: Corporate Espionage - Priority Red.*
I leaned against the cool plaster of the hospital wall, my thumb swiping over the screen. These weren't bank statements. They were intercepted, heavily encrypted emails sent from Kensley’s personal IP address to a server at Vantage Capital—Ross Holdings' most vicious competitor.
She wasn't just a thief. She was selling Landon’s proprietary trade secrets, the very algorithms I had helped design.
A nurse hurried past, her rubber soles squeaking against the linoleum, but the sound faded into white noise. I stared at the digital proof of Kensley's treason. One call to the SEC right now would end her. The FBI would raid her apartment before Landon even woke up.
But that was too quick. Too merciful.
If I reported her now, it was simple grand larceny. But if I let her continue? If I let her transfer just three more files across state lines? The crimes would compound into federal wire fraud, corporate espionage, and extortion. A mandatory minimum sentence that no amount of Landon’s money could plea bargain away.
I locked my phone and slipped it back into my pocket. Through the observation window, Richard Ross was patting Landon’s motionless hand, entirely oblivious to the fact that the empire they so desperately guarded was already burning to the ground.
I smiled, a small, terrifying curve of my lips, and walked back into the room.
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