
CEO Wife's Bold Revenge
Chapter 3
I watched with calculated calm as Lea sauntered into the quarterly investors' meeting on Tyler's arm. She wore a fitted emerald dress that hugged her curves—a dress that cost more than what most assistants made in a month. The whispers rippled through the room like wind through tall grass.
"Is that Tyler Reynolds with Lea Watson?"
"Where's Samantha?"
"Are they...?"
I stood near the champagne fountain, my own glass untouched, observing the performance. Tyler's hand rested on the small of Lea's back with practiced familiarity as he guided her through the crowd of investors and board members. My husband's eyes briefly met mine across the room—a challenge, perhaps, or simply checking if I was maintaining our arrangement.
Lea caught my gaze and smiled, her lips curving with unearned triumph as she deliberately leaned closer to Tyler, whispering something that made him laugh. The sound cut through the ambient chatter, drawing more curious glances.
"Mrs. Reynolds." James Morrison, the business journalist from Media Weekly, appeared at my side. "Interesting dynamics tonight."
"James." I smiled with perfect composure. "Business is always evolving, isn't it?"
"Indeed." His eyes darted between me and the couple across the room. "Though I'm curious about Ms. Watson's new... position. She's introducing herself as Tyler's business partner to the Hendersons."
I took a deliberate sip of champagne. "How fascinating."
As if on cue, Lea detached herself from Tyler and glided toward us, her confidence radiating with each step.
"Samantha, darling." Her voice dripped with false warmth. "I was just telling the Hendersons about our new arrangement. They're so impressed by how... progressive Pinnacle Media has become."
James didn't bother hiding his interest, his reporter's instincts clearly sensing a story.
"Progressive is certainly one word for it," I replied, maintaining my pleasant smile. "Though I prefer 'evolving.'"
"Exactly." Lea touched my arm with familiarity that made my skin crawl. "You should really embrace the freedom, Samantha. Tyler says you're still adjusting, but once you do..." She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a stage whisper. "The possibilities are liberating."
I could smell Tyler's cologne on her skin.
"I'll keep that in mind." I gestured toward a group of investors. "If you'll excuse me, I should check on the Winstons. They were asking about our Q3 projections."
As I walked away, I heard James ask Lea about her official role at Pinnacle. Perfect. Let her dig her own grave with the press.
---
"You're a million miles away tonight," Quentin said softly, his fork pausing midway to his mouth. The candlelight at Marcello's cast a warm glow across his features, softening the distinguished lines around his eyes.
I blinked, realizing I'd been staring at my untouched risotto for several minutes. "I'm sorry. It's been... a complicated week."
"Three dinner dates, and each time you seem to be carrying something heavy." He set down his fork and reached across the table, his fingers stopping just short of mine. "I'm a good listener, Samantha. If you want to talk about it."
The genuine concern in his eyes undid me. After weeks of Tyler's calculating manipulation and Lea's smug performance, Quentin's simple humanity felt like oxygen after drowning.
"My marriage is over," I said quietly, the words tumbling out before I could reconsider. "Though Tyler doesn't realize it yet."
Quentin didn't look surprised. "The signs have been there. I just didn't want to presume."
"He's sleeping with my assistant." I took a sip of wine, the expensive Bordeaux suddenly tasting like nothing. "Proposed an 'open marriage' when I caught them. He thinks I've accepted his terms."
"But you haven't."
"No." I met his eyes directly. "I'm planning something else entirely."
Quentin's expression remained steady, non-judgmental. "I suspected as much. You always were ten steps ahead of everyone else."
Something in his quiet understanding broke the dam I'd built around my emotions. My eyes filled with tears I'd refused to shed since that day in Tyler's office.
"He betrayed everything," I whispered, voice cracking. "Not just our vows. Our partnership. Our vision. And he expects me to smile and step aside while he parades her through the life we built together."
Quentin reached across the table then, his warm hand covering mine. "Tell me everything, Sam. I'm here."
And so I did. The discovery, the recordings, Marcus Chen, the financial preparations—all of it poured out between us as our dinner grew cold. Quentin listened without interruption, his eyes never leaving mine, his hand steady on my own.
"You're not just protecting yourself," he said finally. "You're reclaiming your power."
"Yes." I wiped away a stray tear. "That's exactly it."
---
The jewelry box sat on my desk like a bomb waiting to detonate. Black velvet with gold trim—Tyler's signature gift packaging. Inside lay a diamond tennis bracelet, identical to the one he'd given me for our third anniversary.
I'd found it while searching for the Henderson contract in his desk drawer, along with the receipt. Company credit card. Forty-five thousand dollars. The memo line read "Client appreciation gift."
My fingers traced the diamonds—each one catching the light from my office window. Same cut, same setting, even the same inscription inside the clasp: "Forever Yours."
I took a photo of the bracelet, the receipt, and the credit card statement. Then I forwarded them to Marcus Chen with a single question: "Is this enough?"
His response came within minutes: "It's a start. Financial misconduct established. Keep gathering."
I closed the jewelry box and returned it exactly as I'd found it, then sat back in my chair, a strange calm settling over me. Tyler hadn't just betrayed our marriage—he'd weaponized our memories, recycling the same romantic gesture for his mistress without even the creativity to choose something different.
My phone buzzed with a text from Quentin: "Thinking of you. Dinner tomorrow?"
For the first time in weeks, I felt something like hope flutter in my chest. Tyler thought he was dismantling our life with surgical precision, but he had no idea I was already building something new from the wreckage.
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