
After My Husband Replaced Me with His Mistress at Work
Chapter 2
The morning sun over the Hamptons didn’t feel cleansing; it felt clinical, exposing every dust mote and deception in the rental villa. I sat on the edge of the bed, the cubic zirconia pendant pooling in my palm like a drop of frozen water. It captured the light, yes, but it lacked the fire—the internal, fracturing rainbow—of the stones I’d seen around Layla’s neck last night.
Atlas was by the dresser, buttoning a crisp linen shirt, humming a tune that sounded disturbingly cheerful for a man who had publicly eviscerated his wife’s character hours prior.
"I couldn't find the insurance papers," I said, my voice steady, though my pulse hammered against my ribs. "For the necklace. I wanted to put it in the safe, but I need the appraisal value."
Atlas paused, his fingers freezing on his second button. He watched me through the mirror, his expression shifting from casual to guarded in a heartbeat. He turned, a tight, patronizing smile stretching his lips.
"Maddy, really? It’s Sunday morning. Can we not do the administrative thing right now?"
"It’s just standard practice, Atlas. For a piece this size..." I let the sentence hang, baiting the trap. "The clarity is stunning. It must be VVS1."
He laughed, but it was a sharp, barking sound. He walked over, looming above me, using his height to cast a shadow over the bed. "You know what your problem is? You’re obsessed with the price tag. I give you a beautiful gift, a symbol of our love, and all you care about is how much it’s worth on paper. It’s tacky, Madeline."
The word *tacky* hit me like a physical slap, echoing the "trailer park" comment from the cigar lounge. He wasn't just lying; he was rewriting reality to make me the villain.
"I just want to insure it," I whispered, gripping the fake stone tight enough to cut my palm.
"Don't worry about it. It's under my blanket policy," he dismissed, turning back to his reflection to adjust his cufflinks—a nervous tick I’d never noticed until now. "Just wear it. Stop looking for reasons to be ungrateful."
I didn't argue. I didn't scream. I simply dropped the necklace onto the nightstand. The metal made a hollow *clink* against the wood.
***
Sunday brunch at the Webb penthouse on the Upper East Side was a blood sport disguised as a meal. The dining room was a mausoleum of mahogany and silver, presided over by Eleanor Webb, who sat at the head of the table like a monarch on a throne.
I sat on Atlas’s left. Layla sat on his right.
The seating arrangement was a subtle insult, but Layla’s presence was a declaration of war. She wore a cashmere sweater in a soft oatmeal shade that screamed old money, and at her throat, the real diamond necklace glittered with mocking brilliance.
"Madeline, you’re using the fish fork for the salad," Eleanor noted without looking up from her plate. Her voice was dry as parchment.
I froze, my hand hovering over the arugula. "My apologies, Eleanor."
"It’s fine, Auntie El," Layla chimed in, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness. "Not everyone grows up knowing the difference."
Atlas chuckled, taking a sip of his mimosa. I felt the heat rise up my neck, not from embarrassment, but from a simmering, volcanic rage. I forced myself to cut a piece of melon.
"Speaking of differences," I said, pivoting the conversation to the only ground where I held the high ground. "I reviewed the merger files for the chaotic mess of the Sterling acquisition. If we don't restructure the debt before Q3, the board is going to balk. I have a strategy to mitigate the—"
"Madeline," Eleanor interrupted, setting her knife down with a sharp click. "We do not discuss business at the table. It is boorish."
"Atlas discusses business all the time," I countered, my voice hardening.
"Atlas is the CEO," Eleanor replied, her eyes cold beads of jet. "You are his wife. Your job is to facilitate, not pontificate. Breeding, my dear, shows in silence."
I looked to Atlas for defense, for partnership. He wasn't looking at me. He was looking at Layla. His hand had dropped beneath the table, and the heavy linen cloth shifted slightly. I glanced down. His fingers were interlaced with Layla’s on her knee, his thumb stroking her skin in a rhythmic, intimate caress.
The mouthful of melon turned to ash in my mouth. I swallowed it down, forcing the nausea to settle into a cold, hard knot in my stomach.
***
A week later, I walked into the glass-and-steel cathedral of Webb Tech's headquarters. I carried a leather binder containing the due diligence report I’d spent forty hours compiling—work that would save Atlas from a multi-million dollar oversight in the merger.
The elevator opened to the executive floor, but the sound that greeted me wasn't the hum of servers or the typing of analysts. It was the screech of furniture being dragged across the floor.
I rounded the corner to my office—the small but functional space I had carved out for myself near the conference room. The door was propped open. Two men in blue coveralls were hoisting my mahogany desk, the one where I had built Atlas’s pitch decks and organized his life, onto a dolly.
"Careful with that!" I snapped, stepping forward. "What are you doing?"
"Changing the feng shui," a voice drifted from inside.
Layla stood in the center of the room, holding a fabric swatch against the wall. She turned, offering me a pitying smile. "Oh, hey, Maddy. Atlas didn't tell you?"
"Tell me what?" I demanded, clutching the binder to my chest like a shield.
"I’m coming on board as the new Brand Ambassador," Layla said, tossing the swatch onto a pile of boxes—*my* boxes. "We needed a creative space. Atlas said you wouldn't mind. I mean, you mostly just used this for... what was it? Party planning?"
Atlas appeared in the doorway behind me, checking his phone. "Layla, did the movers get the—oh. Hey, Maddy."
"You’re giving her my office?" I asked, my voice low. "Atlas, the merger files are in here. My research—"
"We can move your stuff to the archives in the basement," Atlas said, not bothering to look up from his screen. "Layla needs the natural light. She’s going to revitalize the company image."
"I built the company image," I said, the words vibrating with five years of erased labor.
Atlas finally looked at me, his eyes devoid of warmth. "You helped, babe. Don't be dramatic. Layla is family. We make room for family."
He stepped past me, placing a hand on the small of Layla’s back as he guided her toward the window, pointing out the view of the skyline. The view I had earned.
I stood alone in the hallway, the movers wheeling my desk past me toward the freight elevator. The binder in my hands felt heavy, filled with value they were too blind to see. I didn't shout. I didn't cry. I simply turned on my heel, the click of my heels against the granite floor sounding like the cocking of a gun.
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