
Betrayed Wife's Payback: Her Battle for Justice
Chapter 3
I woke before dawn, my mind crystalline with purpose. The rage that had consumed me yesterday had cooled into something more dangerous—a calculated resolve that felt like ice in my veins. As the first hint of sunlight crept across Manhattan's skyline, I was already dressed in my sharpest suit, armor for the battle ahead.
Evelyn Reed's office was in a discreet building in Midtown, the kind with no company names in the lobby directory—just floor numbers. Her reputation preceded her: the divorce attorney who had gutted some of New York's most powerful men with surgical precision. I'd made the appointment at 7 AM, before Marcus could possibly hear about it through our overlapping social circles.
"Mrs. Thompson." Evelyn greeted me with a firm handshake, her gray eyes assessing. She was older than I expected, perhaps in her sixties, with a sleek silver bob and the poised confidence of someone who had seen it all. "Please, have a seat."
I sat across from her imposing mahogany desk, noting the absence of family photos or personal touches. This was a war room, not an office.
"I understand time is of the essence," she said, sliding a folder toward me. "I've taken the liberty of preparing preliminary paperwork based on our phone conversation."
"Thank you." I opened the folder, scanning the documents with the same attention I'd give a complex acquisition contract. "I need to be absolutely clear—I hold sixty percent of our company's shares. I want those protected before he can move them."
Evelyn's lips curved into a smile that never reached her eyes. "That's why we'll file for an emergency injunction simultaneously with the divorce petition. His medical condition actually works in our favor—courts are sympathetic to spouses being abandoned during health crises."
The irony wasn't lost on me. "He planned to leave me," I said flatly. "I found documents. He was moving assets offshore before his diagnosis interrupted his timeline."
"Perfect." She made a note. "That's exactly the kind of evidence we need. Now, about the timing..."
For the next hour, we mapped out a strategy so meticulous it would have made Marcus proud. By the time I signed the retainer agreement, my hand was steady, my resolve absolute.
"Mrs. Thompson," Evelyn said as I stood to leave, "in my experience, men like your husband count on their wives' emotional attachment to slow them down. They never expect the sword until it's already through their heart."
I met her gaze. "Then he's in for a surprise."
* * *
At precisely 8:30 AM the next morning, I sat at my home office desk and clicked "Submit" on the electronic filing system. The divorce petition and emergency injunction to freeze all marital assets were now officially in the system. I forwarded the confirmation to Evelyn, who would ensure the papers were served to Marcus at the hospital later today.
My finger hovered over my phone. This moment deserved more than a text, but I couldn't bear to hear his voice—not yet. Not until I had dismantled everything he valued.
*Marcus, I've filed for divorce. All accounts are frozen. Don't bother calling. Your lawyer can contact Evelyn Reed.*
I hit send, then blocked his number.
The familiar ding of my laptop announced an incoming video call—right on schedule. I smoothed my hair, checked my reflection in the small mirror I kept on my desk, and accepted the call. One by one, the faces of our board members appeared on screen, confusion evident in their expressions.
"Rachel," Arthur Vance, our lead investor, spoke first. "This is highly irregular. Where's Marcus?"
"That's precisely why I've called this emergency meeting, Arthur." I smiled, the same smile I'd used in countless negotiations. "As you know, Marcus is currently dealing with health issues. What you don't know is that he's also been planning to defraud this company—and me."
I shared my screen, methodically walking them through the documents I'd discovered: the planned asset transfers, the misappropriation of company funds, the emails discussing how to dilute the board's voting power.
"As the majority shareholder," I continued into the stunned silence, "I am calling for an immediate vote to remove Marcus Thompson as CEO and to appoint me as interim chief executive until a suitable replacement can be found."
Arthur's face had turned an interesting shade of purple. "These allegations—"
"Are fully documented," I cut in smoothly. "And verified by forensic accounting. The question now, gentlemen, is whether you want to be on the record supporting a CEO who was planning to defraud his own investors, or whether you want to protect your investments."
The vote was unanimous.
As I ended the call, a notification appeared on my phone—a text from an unknown number. Marcus, using a hospital phone.
*What have you done?*
I didn't reply. He would find out soon enough, when the hospital television aired the breaking news about the leadership change at Thompson Tech. And that was just the beginning of what I had planned for the man who had underestimated me for the last time.
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