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CEO Wife's Bold Revenge Novel Cover

CEO Wife's Bold Revenge

The elevator's soft chime echoed through the executive floor as I stepped out, my heels clicking against the polished marble with their usual confident rhythm. The quarterly reports tucked under my arm felt heavier than usual—not from their weight, but from the anticipation of another productive discussion with Tyler about Pinnacle Media's impressive growth numbers. The executive floor hummed with its typical late-afternoon energy. Staff members moved purposefully between offices, their voices creating a familiar backdrop of success and ambition. I nodded to Sarah at the reception desk, her smile bright as always when she saw me approaching Tyler's corner office. "Mrs. Reynolds, he's in his private office reviewing the Henderson account," she said, gesturing toward the frosted glass doors that separated Tyler's inner sanctum from the main workspace. I pushed through the outer office, past Lea's empty desk—she must be in the break room again, I thought absently. The girl had been working late more frequently lately, showing the kind of dedication I'd hoped to see when I'd recommended her promotion from assistant to junior account manager six months ago. The door to Tyler's private office stood slightly ajar, warm light spilling through the gap.
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Chapter 2

The next morning arrived with deceptive normalcy. Tyler hummed in the shower while I prepared coffee in our pristine kitchen, the marble countertops reflecting the early sunlight streaming through floor-to-ceiling windows. Everything appeared exactly as it had for the past five years of our marriage—except now I understood it was all performance.

"I'll be late tonight," Tyler announced, adjusting his platinum cufflinks with practiced precision. "The Henderson presentation needs final revisions."

"Of course," I replied, handing him his coffee in the ceramic mug I'd bought him for our third anniversary. "I'll probably stay late myself. The quarterly financial review requires my attention."

His smile was warm, appreciative even. "That's my efficient wife. Always thinking ahead."

If only he knew how far ahead I was thinking.

After Tyler left, I waited precisely thirty minutes before making my first call. The electronics store on Fifth Avenue specialized in discrete surveillance equipment for concerned business owners. The sales associate, a thin man with wire-rimmed glasses, asked no uncomfortable questions when I explained my need to monitor employee productivity in sensitive areas.

"Voice-activated recording devices are quite popular with executives," he said, sliding a small black device across the counter. "Twelve-hour battery life, crystal-clear audio quality, and virtually undetectable when properly placed."

I purchased three.

By noon, I had transformed into a woman I barely recognized. Moving through Tyler's office with the confidence of someone who belonged there, I placed the first device behind the leather-bound volumes of corporate law that Tyler never touched. The second went beneath his desk, secured with magnetic backing to the metal drawer slides. Sarah had stepped out for lunch, and the executive floor hummed with its usual activity, providing perfect cover for my activities.

The third device found its home in our study at home, nestled behind Tyler's collection of vintage whiskey bottles—another display piece that served function over form.

That evening, as Tyler worked late with his "presentation," I sat in our study reviewing what he believed were routine financial documents. In reality, I was mapping our assets with surgical precision. Joint accounts, stock portfolios, real estate holdings, business partnerships—every thread of our financial web spread across my laptop screen.

Marcus Chen had been recommended by Victoria Sterling, my closest friend and the only person who knew about Tyler's proposal. "He's discrete, brilliant, and absolutely ruthless when protecting his clients," she'd assured me over lunch two days prior.

Marcus's office occupied the thirty-second floor of a gleaming downtown tower, his credentials displayed with understated confidence across mahogany-paneled walls. Harvard Law, Supreme Court clerkship, twenty years specializing in high-asset divorces.

"Mrs. Reynolds," he said, his handshake firm and reassuring. "Victoria speaks very highly of you. How can I assist?"

I placed a manila folder on his desk. "I need to understand my options. Hypothetically."

Marcus opened the folder, his expression remaining neutral as he reviewed the financial statements, property deeds, and corporate documents I'd compiled. "Impressive portfolio. Joint ownership on most assets, I see. How long have you been married?"

"Five years. We built Pinnacle Media together from the ground up."

"And your role in the company?"

"Co-founder. Equal partnership, though Tyler handles most client-facing responsibilities."

Marcus made notes on a yellow legal pad. "In a hypothetical situation involving marital dissolution, asset protection becomes crucial. Joint accounts can be frozen, but individual accounts established before any legal proceedings cannot be touched by the other party."

I leaned forward. "What would you recommend? Hypothetically."

"Diversification. Move funds to individual accounts gradually—nothing dramatic that might raise suspicions. Document everything. And if infidelity is involved, evidence becomes invaluable."

The recording devices suddenly felt warm in my purse.

Over the following week, I executed Marcus's suggestions with methodical precision. Small transfers, spread across multiple transactions, slowly building a financial foundation that Tyler couldn't touch. Each morning, I retrieved the previous night's recordings, listening to conversations that revealed the true depth of their betrayal.

"She actually thinks this is about maturity," Lea's voice crackled through my earpiece as I sat in my car outside the office building. "Tyler, you should see her trying to be so understanding. It's almost pathetic."

Tyler's laugh was cold, unfamiliar. "Samantha's always been practical. She'll adapt because she has to. Besides, she needs me more than I need her."

"When will you tell her about the social events? The charity gala next month?"

"Soon. She'll understand that you're better suited for those responsibilities. Younger, more... engaging with our clients."

I turned off the recording, my hands steady despite the rage burning in my chest. They weren't just betraying our marriage—they were planning to erase me entirely.

That afternoon, while researching media contacts for what Tyler believed was a new marketing campaign, I found myself staring at a LinkedIn profile I hadn't visited in ten years. Quentin Gray, Senior Partner at Gray & Associates Architecture. His photograph showed the same warm brown eyes I remembered, though his dark hair now carried distinguished silver at the temples.

Before I could second-guess myself, I typed a message: "Quentin, I hope this finds you well. I'm in town for business and wondered if you might have time for coffee. It's been far too long. - Samantha Coleman."

The response came within an hour: "Samantha! What a wonderful surprise. I'd love to catch up. Tomorrow at 2 PM? There's a quiet café on Madison that serves excellent Vienna-style coffee. Seemed fitting."

Vienna. Where we'd met during that magical summer internship, walking cobblestone streets and sharing dreams over coffee that tasted like possibility itself.

I closed my laptop, a genuine smile crossing my face for the first time in weeks. Tyler thought he was orchestrating my future, but he had no idea that I was already writing a completely different script.

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