
After My Husband Wed His Mistress, I Took Everything
Chapter 3
The apartment on 4th Street smelled of lavender and stale air, a scent preserved in time like a pressed flower. Eleanor unlocked the door with a steady hand, the click of the tumbler echoing in the silence that followed our exodus. It was a modest two-bedroom flat she had purchased a decade ago under her maiden name—a secret escape hatch she had prayed she would never need to use.
I dropped my bag onto the floor. My shoulders ached, not from the weight of my laptop, but from the sudden, crushing absence of the life I thought I had. I walked to the window, looking out at the city lights. Somewhere out there, the Hunter empire was crumbling, but inside my chest, the ruins were still smoking.
"Tea," Eleanor said. It wasn't a question. She was already in the kitchenette, filling a kettle. Her movements were precise, mechanical. She was holding herself together with sheer willpower and spinal rigidity.
"We’re homeless, Eleanor," I said, my voice sounding thin. "Technically."
"We are liberated, Lina," she corrected, placing two mugs on the small laminate table. She sat down, her eyes dark and hard as flint. "There is a difference. Grief is a luxury we cannot afford tonight. Tonight, we strategize."
We didn't sleep. We spent the night dissecting our finances, our legal standing, and the inevitable retaliation. By the time the sun bled gray light through the blinds, the weeping in my chest had hardened into a cold, jagged resolve. I wasn't just a scorned wife anymore; I was a relationship counselor who had just been handed the most complex case of her career: my own revenge.
My phone buzzed incessantly against the table, a frantic heartbeat of notifications. I finally picked it up. Forty-two missed calls from Grady. Twelve from Dean. I pressed play on the latest voicemail, setting it on speaker so Eleanor could hear.
*"Lina! You have to come back!"* Grady’s voice was high, bordering on hysterical. *"This rental... it's a disaster. The plumbing screams, Lina. There are no servants. Paige is—Paige is losing her mind. She threw a vase at me because there's no walk-in closet!"*
In the background, a crash sounded, followed by Dean’s booming, liquor-soaked roar. *"Stop whining, boy! Give me that phone. You listen to me, Lina! You think you can walk away with the assets? I made you! I will ruin you! I’m calling the board. I’ll have your licenses revoked by noon tomorrow. You’ll never work in this town again, you ungrateful—"*
The message cut off.
Eleanor took a sip of her tea, a ghost of a smile touching her lips. "It seems the transition to the working class is proving difficult for them."
"They're going to come after our careers," I said, noting the threat in Dean's drunken slur. "They want to starve us out."
"Let them try," Eleanor whispered. "But first, we remind them that we are not hiding."
That evening, I dressed with deliberate care. I chose a crimson dress that hugged my frame—a color Grady always said was "too aggressive." I applied my lipstick like war paint. I needed to be seen. I needed to prove to myself that I existed outside the shadow of the Hunter men.
I went to *Le Jardin*, a bistro with floor-to-ceiling windows and a jazz band that played with soulful abandon. I sat at the bar, ordering a glass of Pinot Noir, letting the music wash over the static in my brain.
"May I?" A voice asked.
A man stood beside me. He was older, distinguished, with kind eyes that held none of Grady’s shifting deceit. He extended a hand toward the small dance floor.
I hesitated, then took it. For a few minutes, I wasn't a victim. I was just a woman moving to the rhythm of a saxophone, feeling the blood return to my extremities.
The peace was shattered by the sound of glass breaking.
"There she is!" The scream tore through the restaurant, stopping the band mid-note.
Dean Hunter stood in the entryway. He was a wreck. His expensive suit was rumpled, his tie loose, his face a mottled map of alcoholic rage. He pointed a shaking finger at me, staggering forward.
"Look at her!" Dean bellowed, spitting on the polished floor. "My son's wife! Dancing with strangers while her husband suffers! You whore! You promiscuous, gold-digging mistress!"
The room went deadly silent. The man I was dancing with stepped in front of me protectively, but I gently moved him aside. I didn't retreat. I didn't look down.
Dean lunged, grabbing a bread basket from a nearby table and hurling it. "You think you're innocent? You're the other woman! You wrecked my family!"
My heart hammered against my ribs, but my training kicked in. I analyzed him: dilated pupils, unstable gait, projection of guilt. He was terrified. He was trying to reclaim power through public humiliation.
I smoothed the front of my red dress and met his eyes with a terrifying calmness. Around us, I saw the glow of smartphone screens. The patrons weren't jeering at me; they were recording him.
"Go home, Dean," I said, my voice low but carrying clearly in the silence. "You're drunk. And you're trespassing on my time."
"I'll destroy you!" he shrieked, as the manager and two security guards grabbed his arms. He thrashed, looking less like a titan of industry and more like a rabid animal trapped in a corner. "I am Dean Hunter!"
"Not anymore," I murmured to myself as they dragged him out the door, his curses fading into the night air.
I turned back to the bar, my hand trembling only slightly as I reached for my wine. The video would be online within the hour. Dean wanted a spectacle. I would make sure he got one.
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