
After My Husband Saved His Mistress Instead of Me
Chapter 3
The crystal chandeliers of the Grand Ballroom cast a golden glow over New York's legal elite. I smoothed my black dress—armor chosen carefully for tonight's Bar Association gala. Three weeks had passed since I'd joined Callahan's firm, and whispers followed me like shadows.
"Zoe Reynolds," a voice purred behind me. "I'm surprised you showed your face here."
I turned to find Lana standing there, resplendent in a red gown that hugged her youthful curves. Her dark eyes glittered with malice barely concealed beneath a veneer of sweetness.
"Excuse me," I said coldly, attempting to move past her.
She blocked my path, her smile never reaching her eyes. "Dakota's been so worried about you. He says you're having trouble... coping."
I stepped around her, heading toward the restroom. "I'm not interested in anything Dakota has to say."
She followed me, her heels clicking aggressively against the marble floor. Once inside the opulent bathroom, she checked her reflection in the mirror before turning to me.
"It must be hard," she said, examining her perfect manicure, "losing a baby and a husband in the same week."
Something snapped inside me. The grief and rage I'd been containing erupted like a volcano.
"You want to know what's hard?" I stepped closer, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "Having to look at you—a pathetic little girl so desperate for Daddy's love that you latched onto the first man who resembled him."
Her smile faltered.
"That's right," I continued, seeing her eyes widen. "I know exactly what you are. Rocco Mendoza's discarded daughter, so starved for attention that you'd destroy another woman's life for it."
"You don't understand," she hissed, her composure cracking.
"I understand perfectly." I leaned in, my voice ice-cold. "You're nothing but a reflection of your father's cruelty—small, meaningless, and destined to be abandoned again."
She recoiled as if I'd slapped her.
---
Two hours later, I was reviewing files at my new office when Elena knocked on my door.
"Zoe, there's someone here to see you. A walk-in."
I frowned. Callahan had warned me about taking on pro bono cases too soon, but something in Elena's expression made me nod.
The young woman who entered couldn't have been more than twenty-two. Her hands trembled as she clutched a worn backpack to her chest.
"Ms. Reynolds?" Her voice was barely audible. "I need help."
"Sylvia," she said, after I offered her a seat. "Sylvia Martinez."
I gestured for her to continue, but she seemed frozen, staring at the floor.
"He said no one would believe me," she finally whispered. "That I was just a waitress looking for attention."
Something in her words triggered a cascade of memories—Rocco Mendoza's hands on me, his threats, the disbelief from authorities.
"Who?" I asked, though I already knew.
"Rocco Mendoza." She looked up, tears streaming down her face. "He raped me at one of his corporate events three months ago."
The room spun around me. I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think.
"I was working as a server," Sylvia continued, oblivious to my distress. "He said he needed help with something in his private room..."
I was back there—in that hotel room five years ago, Rocco's weight on me, his threats echoing in my ears.
"Ms. Reynolds? Are you okay?"
I couldn't answer. My chest tightened as panic clawed its way up my throat. I was dimly aware of Sylvia's concerned voice, then footsteps rushing toward me.
"Zoe." Callahan's voice cut through the fog. He knelt beside my chair, his eyes level with mine. "You're having a panic attack."
I nodded weakly, embarrassed by my loss of control.
"What's the first legal step we take?" he asked quietly.
The question anchored me, pulling me back from the edge.
"We... we need to document the incident," I managed, my breathing slowly steadying. "And secure any physical evidence."
He nodded approvingly. "Exactly. Now, what's next?"
---
That evening, my phone buzzed with a notification from an account I didn't recognize. A livestream had been sent to me—private, but visible.
Dakota stumbled through our old apartment, his movements jerky. Lana circled him like a predator, her voice high and unsteady.
"You promised you'd leave her," she shrieked, her face contorted. "You promised!"
"I can't just..." Dakota slurred, reaching for her. "Need to handle it properly..."
"Handle it?" She laughed wildly. "Like you handled her?"
I watched, coldly detached, as she deliberately knocked over a lamp, then screamed as if he'd done it.
"Get away from me!" she shouted into her phone, presumably recording only audio now. "Stop it!"
Dakota lunged forward, his coordination off. "Lana, give me the phone..."
I closed the stream, feeling nothing but a distant pity for the chaos they'd created together.
My phone rang immediately after. Dakota's number.
I let it ring until it stopped.
Then I blocked his number permanently.
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