
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 5
The encrypted call came through at 2:47 AM.
I was in my home office, the false wall panel open behind me, surrounded by a decade's worth of investigation files. The orchids my father had given me sat on the windowsill, their white petals ghostly in the darkness. I'd been watering them when my phone vibrated with the secure notification.
My lead investigator's face filled the screen, pixelated and grainy from the encrypted connection. Behind him, I could make out the peeling wallpaper of a cheap Tijuana apartment.
"We found him," he said. "Wilson Gray. He's dying. Liver failure. Maybe three months left, and he's broke."
I leaned forward, my father's signet ring catching the blue glow of the monitor. "Can he talk?"
"He can talk. Question is whether he will." The investigator shifted, and I caught a glimpse of Gray in the background—a skeletal figure in a stained undershirt, oxygen tubes snaking into his nose. "He wants money. A lot of it. Says he needs medical care, pain management, somewhere comfortable to die."
I pulled up my banking interface, fingers moving across the keyboard with mechanical precision. "How much?"
"Two hundred thousand. USD. Wired to an account in the Caymans."
I didn't hesitate. The numbers blurred across the screen as I authorized the transfer, watching the balance shift with the same detachment I'd felt signing Landon's power of attorney. Money was just another tool. Another weapon.
"Done," I said. "But I want the confession on video. Full detail. Names, dates, payment structure. Everything."
The investigator nodded. "He's ready now. You want to watch?"
I touched my father's ring, feeling the weight of ten years pressing against my chest. "Yes."
The camera shifted, focusing on Wilson Gray. Up close, he looked like a corpse already—skin the color of old newspaper, eyes sunken deep into his skull. But when he spoke, his voice was steady, matter-of-fact, the tone of a man discussing a business transaction.
"My name is Wilson Gray. Ten years ago, I was contracted by Richard Ross to eliminate a man named Campbell. First name... Michael, I think. Engineer. Had some patents Ross wanted."
I stopped breathing.
Gray coughed, a wet, rattling sound. "Ross paid me fifty thousand up front, another fifty on completion. The job was clean—mechanical sabotage on the target's vehicle. Brake line cut, steering fluid drained. Made it look like mechanical failure on the FDR Drive."
My hands gripped the edge of the desk, knuckles white.
"Ross met me personally. Some restaurant in Midtown, private room. He brought his lawyer—Marsh, I think the name was. They had the patents already drawn up, ready to file the day after Campbell died." Gray's eyes drifted toward the camera, empty and indifferent. "It was just business. Nothing personal."
The investigator's voice came from off-screen. "And you're making this statement of your own free will?"
"Yeah. I'm dying anyway. Figured I might as well get paid for the truth." Gray shrugged, the gesture almost casual. "Ross thought he was untouchable. Maybe he was. But I kept records. Insurance, you know? Audio recordings of our meetings. Copies of the wire transfers. All of it."
The camera panned to show a small stack of documents and a digital recorder. Evidence. Proof. Justice.
I watched the rest of the confession in silence, my father's face superimposed over Gray's dying one. I remembered the last time I'd seen him—the morning of the accident, humming in his workshop, promising to take me to dinner that night to celebrate my engagement to Landon.
He never made it.
When the video ended, I sat in the darkness of my office, the only sound the soft hum of the computer and the distant wail of sirens on the street below. I replayed the confession three times, memorizing every word, every detail, every piece of evidence that would destroy the Ross family.
Then I encrypted the file, backed it up to four separate secure servers, and sent a copy to Marcus Webb with a single line of instruction: *Prepare the criminal referral. We move tomorrow.*
I closed my laptop and walked to the window, looking out over the Manhattan skyline. Somewhere in that glittering sprawl, Richard Ross was sleeping peacefully in his Fifth Avenue penthouse, believing himself untouchable.
I touched the orchids, their petals cool and smooth beneath my fingertips.
"I kept my promise, Dad," I whispered to the empty room. "I found him. I found all of them."
Dawn was still hours away, but I didn't need sleep. I had work to do.
By 9 AM, I was in Marcus Webb's office, the confession video loaded on his secure tablet. He watched it twice, his expression growing more unsettled with each replay.
"This is... comprehensive," he said finally, setting the tablet down like it might explode. "If we submit this to the FBI, it's not just Kensley who goes down. It's the entire Ross family. Richard. The board members who knew. Everyone."
"That's the point."
Marcus leaned back in his leather chair, studying me with something between admiration and fear. "You understand what you're doing? This isn't just revenge. This is scorched earth. Ross Holdings will collapse. The stock will crater. Thousands of employees—"
"Will find new jobs." I opened my portfolio, extracting two thick folders. "I've already identified three acquisition targets who will absorb the workforce. The employees will be fine. The Ross family will not."
I slid the first folder across his desk. "Criminal referral packet for Kensley Fox. Wire fraud, corporate espionage, extortion. The FBI will want to move fast on this one—she's a flight risk."
The second folder followed. "Hostile restructuring plan for Ross Holdings. The moment the board receives proof of criminal misconduct by the founding family, this triggers a mandatory liquidation event. Assets sold, proceeds distributed to shareholders. The Ross family's controlling stake becomes worthless."
Marcus opened the restructuring plan, his eyes scanning the dense legal language. "This is... Jesus, Sloan. This is brilliant. And terrifying."
"It's justice."
He looked up at me, and for the first time since I'd hired him, I saw genuine uncertainty in his eyes. "Are you sure you want to do this? Once we file these documents, there's no going back. The Ross family will be destroyed. Landon will be—"
"Exactly where he deserves to be." I stood, smoothing my coat. "File the criminal referral today. I want the FBI ready to move tomorrow morning."
"And the board meeting?"
"Tomorrow. 10 AM. I'll handle the invitations personally."
I left Marcus's office and pulled out my phone, composing a carefully worded email to Kensley Fox:
*Kensley—Landon has requested your presence at an emergency board meeting tomorrow morning, 10 AM, Ross Holdings headquarters. He wants to discuss the future of the estate and your role in the family. Please come prepared to present your vision for the company's direction. This is your moment.—Sloan*
I hit send, imagining her reading it, her desperation transforming into triumph. She would believe she'd won. That Landon was finally choosing her publicly, legitimizing her position.
She would walk into that building thinking she was being crowned.
She would leave in handcuffs.
I slipped my phone back into my pocket and walked out into the cold Manhattan morning, my father's ring heavy on my finger, the weight of ten years finally, beautifully, lifting.
You may also like





