
After My Husband's Mistress Wrecked Our Daughter's Car
Chapter 2
I couldn't sleep that night. Marcus's betrayal kept replaying in my mind—how he'd walked out on his devastated daughter to comfort the woman who had destroyed her graduation gift. The woman who had humiliated Isabella online for thousands to see.
At three in the morning, I found myself in my home office, staring at the screen of my laptop. Something Amanda had said in her hateful video nagged at me: "The Chen-Sterlings think they're untouchable."
How did Amanda Walsh, a woman I'd barely met at a handful of charity events, presume to know anything about us?
I opened Instagram and searched her name. Nothing. Then I tried variations—Amanda Sterling, Amanda W—until a handle caught my eye: @TheRichestChildhoodSweetheart.
The profile picture showed Amanda's perfectly manicured hand holding a champagne flute, a familiar gold watch visible in the background. Marcus's watch. The watch I'd given him for our fifteenth anniversary.
My fingers trembled as I scrolled through the feed. Hundreds of posts. Years of them. Videos of Amanda and Marcus laughing together in restaurants I paid for. Photos of them toasting on the yacht I'd purchased. Captions that made my stomach turn.
"Another day being spoiled by my man! #SecondWife #BetterThanTheFirst"
"When he says his wife is too busy working to notice he's gone... #WinningAtLife"
In one video, they sat close together on our living room couch—my couch—while I was away at a conference in Tokyo. Amanda held the camera as Marcus nuzzled her neck.
"Tell them what you told me about Victoria," she giggled.
Marcus rolled his eyes dramatically. "She wouldn't know passion if it slapped her in the face. All she cares about is that company and Isabella."
"And what about me?" Amanda's voice purred.
"You're the only one who truly understands me," he replied, before kissing her.
I felt physically ill. Twenty years of marriage reduced to mockery for social media entertainment. Twenty years of supporting his lifestyle, funding his hobbies, tolerating his laziness—all while he laughed behind my back with his childhood sweetheart.
I downloaded every post, every comment, every piece of evidence of their betrayal. By sunrise, I had a folder full of screenshots, my vision blurred from tears I refused to shed.
When Isabella came down for breakfast, I composed myself. She looked exhausted, her eyes puffy from crying.
"Did Dad come home last night?" she asked, her voice small.
"Late," I replied, pouring her coffee. "He's still sleeping."
She nodded, staring into her mug. "The dealership says they can't repair the car. It's totaled."
I reached across the table and squeezed her hand. "We'll get you another one."
"It's not about the car, Mom." Her eyes met mine, filled with hurt. "It's about Dad taking her side."
Before I could respond, we heard Marcus's footsteps on the stairs. He entered the kitchen in his silk robe, acting as if nothing had happened.
"Morning," he said casually, heading for the coffee pot.
I placed my tablet on the table, screen facing up. On it was a screenshot of Amanda sitting in Marcus's lap, both of them wearing bathrobes in what appeared to be a hotel room. The caption read: "While the CEO wife is closing deals, I'm closing something else. #SorryNotSorry"
Marcus froze, coffee pot in hand.
"Care to explain 'The Richest Childhood Sweetheart'?" I asked, my voice deadly calm.
He set down the pot slowly. "You're spying on me now?"
"Spying?" I scrolled to another image—this one of Amanda wearing my anniversary necklace. "It's hardly spying when she's broadcasting it to the entire internet."
Isabella looked between us, confusion giving way to horrified understanding.
"Dad?" she whispered.
Marcus shrugged, a gesture so dismissive it made my blood boil. "Amanda is the only one who truly understands me. She always has been."
"The same Amanda who destroyed my car? Who humiliated me online?" Isabella's voice cracked.
"You shouldn't have been flaunting that car in the first place," he snapped. "Not everyone has a mother who can buy them whatever they want."
The silence that followed was deafening. Isabella stood up, her chair scraping against the floor.
"I earned Juilliard," she said, her chin trembling with the effort to stay composed. "I worked for years. I deserved that celebration."
As she fled the room, I remained seated, staring at the stranger who was my husband. The man I'd supported for two decades out of a misplaced sense of gratitude.
"You should go," I said quietly.
Marcus smirked. "This is my house too."
"No, Marcus. It's not."
As he stormed out, my phone chimed with a notification. Another post from @TheRichestChildhoodSweetheart had just gone live—a doctored photo collage showing Isabella's face superimposed on scantily clad dancers, with the caption: "How to get into Juilliard: Step 1: Have mommy's connections. Step 2: There is no Step 2." She had tagged Juilliard professors, donors, and Isabella's future classmates.
The war had just begun.
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