
After My Wife Uncovered Her Husband's Lies
Chapter 2
The morning after my world collapsed, I sat in my home office with Taylor beside me, surrounded by financial documents that painted a picture more devastating than I'd imagined. My hands moved mechanically through bank statements while my mind struggled to process the scope of Davis's deception.
"Look at this," Taylor said quietly, pointing to a credit card statement from six months ago. "Dinner at Le Bernardin for $400. You were in Chicago that week for the Morrison deal."
I stared at the charge, remembering how Davis had complained about eating alone while I was away. The lie sat bitter on my tongue now. "He told me he ordered takeout and worked late."
Taylor's jaw tightened, but he kept his voice steady. "There's more. Hotel charges, jewelry purchases, even a weekend in the Hamptons while you were visiting your aunt in Florida."
Each revelation felt like another knife twist. I pulled up Davis's phone records on my laptop, my fingers trembling as I cross-referenced the numbers with the credit card charges. The pattern emerged like a constellation of betrayal—calls to different women before each expensive purchase, each romantic dinner, each lie he'd fed me.
"Five numbers," I whispered, highlighting them in different colors. "Five different women, Taylor. This isn't just an affair. This is... systematic."
The dating app profiles were the worst discovery. Taylor had found them using a reverse image search on photos from Davis's social media—photos I'd taken of him during our happier moments, now repurposed to seduce other women. Each profile told a different story: divorced businessman seeking companionship, widower ready to love again, separated husband waiting for his divorce to finalize.
"'Recently separated, looking for someone special to build a future with,'" I read aloud from his profile on Elite Singles, my voice hollow. "He used our anniversary photo as his profile picture. He cropped me out and used our anniversary photo."
Taylor reached over and closed the laptop gently. "Samara, you don't need to torture yourself with—"
"No." My voice came out sharper than I intended. "I need to see it all. Every lie, every manipulation. I need to understand exactly what I'm dealing with."
The financial transfers were the most damaging evidence. Over $500,000 of our marital assets had been systematically moved to five different women over two years. Davis had been clever about it—never large enough amounts to trigger bank alerts, always with plausible explanations I'd been too trusting to question.
"Business investment in Emmy Hunter's startup," I read from one transfer memo. "$50,000. I remember this. He said it was a sure thing, that we'd double our money."
Taylor pulled up Emmy's social media profile on his phone. "Look at the timeline. She posted photos of a new car the same week as this transfer. A BMW convertible."
My stomach churned. Every "business opportunity" Davis had pitched to me, every "investment" he'd convinced me to approve, had been funding his affairs. I'd been paying for my own betrayal, gift-wrapping my husband's infidelity with my own money.
By noon, I had Emmy Hunter's work address and a plan forming in my mind. Taylor tried to dissuade me, but I was beyond reason now. I needed to look this woman in the eye, needed to understand how she'd justified taking money from a married man's wife.
The marketing firm where Emmy worked occupied the fifteenth floor of a glass tower downtown. I waited in the lobby until I saw her emerge from the elevator—younger than I'd expected, with the kind of effortless beauty that made my chest tighten with inadequacy.
"Emmy Hunter?" I approached her with a calm smile that felt like wearing a mask.
She turned, confusion flickering across her features. "Yes?"
"I'm Samara Ross. Davis Cole's wife."
The color drained from her face. She glanced around the busy lobby, clearly calculating whether to run or stay. "I... I don't know what you're talking about."
I pulled out my phone and showed her the bank transfer records. "$50,000 for your car. $25,000 for what Davis told me was your startup investment. Another $15,000 last month alone." My voice remained steady, professional. "I have documentation of every transfer, Emmy. What I want to know is what he promised you in return."
Her composure cracked. "He said he was getting divorced. He said you two were separated and just waiting for the paperwork to finalize."
"And you believed him?"
"He showed me legal documents! Separation papers, divorce filings—" She stopped, realization dawning in her eyes. "They were fake, weren't they?"
I nodded slowly. "Davis is very good at creating convincing lies. But here's what you need to understand, Emmy. You're not the only one. There are four other women receiving similar payments, all believing they're his one true love."
The devastation on her face almost made me feel sorry for her. Almost.
"Five of us," she whispered.
"Five of you," I confirmed. "And now we're going to discuss exactly what Davis promised each of you, because I have a feeling his stories don't quite match up."
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