
After Husband's Affair with the Teacher, My Wife's Revenge Begins
After Husband's Affair with the Teacher, My Wife's Revenge Begins Chapter 1
The morning light filtered through my corner office windows as I stepped inside, my heels clicking against the polished marble floor. After fifteen years of building this company from nothing, I still felt a quiet satisfaction seeing my name etched on the glass door: *Stella Ward, CEO*. But today, something unexpected waited on my mahogany desk.
A stunning seafood platter sat beneath crystal wrap, glistening with lobster tails, jumbo shrimp, and caviar arranged like precious jewels. The accompanying card bore Peter's familiar handwriting: *Happy Valentine's Day to my beautiful wife. - P*
"Oh my God, Stella!" My assistant Rebecca practically bounced into the office behind me, her eyes wide with admiration. "Is that from Peter? That must have cost a fortune!"
More colleagues gathered at my door, their envious murmurs filling the space. "Look at those lobster tails," someone whispered. "He really knows how to treat a woman." Another voice chimed in: "My husband got me gas station flowers. You're so lucky."
I forced a smile, accepting their compliments while something nagged at the back of my mind. Peter had been working late more often recently, claiming new client demands. This elaborate gesture felt... uncharacteristic. But I pushed the thought away, focusing on the warmth in my chest at his apparent thoughtfulness.
"Ladies, back to work," I said gently, shooing them away. "We have the Morrison contract to finalize."
As the morning progressed, I found myself glancing at the platter, its opulence somehow feeling heavier than it should.
---
By lunch, I needed air. Charlotte had suggested *Le Bernardin*, and I welcomed the chance to escape my office's suddenly suffocating atmosphere. My best friend was already seated at our usual corner table, her new Hermès bag gleaming beside her chair.
"You look radiant," Charlotte said, standing to embrace me. Her auburn hair caught the restaurant's ambient lighting, and her smile was genuine as always. "Valentine's Day treating you well?"
I slid into my seat, the leather cool against my back. "Peter surprised me with this incredible seafood platter this morning. The whole office was swooning over it."
Charlotte's fork paused halfway to her mouth, a piece of seared scallop balanced precariously. "Seafood platter? What kind?"
"Lobster, jumbo shrimp, caviar – the works. It was gorgeous." I took a sip of my wine, savoring the crisp Chardonnay.
Something flickered across Charlotte's face – surprise, maybe confusion. She set down her fork with deliberate care. "Stella... was it from Delacroix Gourmet?"
"I assume so. Why?"
Charlotte's manicured fingers drummed once against the white tablecloth. "Honey, those platters aren't sold items. They're complimentary gifts." Her voice was gentle, but each word hit me like a physical blow. "I got the exact same one yesterday when I bought this bag. They give them to customers who spend over ten thousand dollars."
The restaurant's ambient chatter seemed to fade into white noise. My wine glass felt suddenly heavy in my hand. "Complimentary?"
"The manager explained it's their Valentine's promotion. Spend big on jewelry or handbags, get the seafood platter free." Charlotte's brown eyes were filled with concern as she reached across the table. "Stella, are you okay? You look pale."
I set my glass down carefully, my business training kicking in to maintain composure even as my world tilted. "So someone spent ten thousand dollars yesterday, and Peter... took credit for their gift."
"Maybe he bought you something else? Jewelry? A watch?" Charlotte's voice carried desperate hope, but we both knew the truth settling between us like winter frost.
I shook my head slowly. "No. Nothing else."
The remainder of lunch passed in a blur of forced conversation and mechanical eating. Charlotte tried to fill the silence with work gossip and weekend plans, but my mind was elsewhere, cataloging recent changes in Peter's behavior with the cold precision I used in board meetings.
---
That evening, I drove to Penny's kindergarten with my hands gripping the steering wheel tighter than necessary. The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across the playground where children's laughter should have been comforting. Instead, everything felt sharp-edged, hyperreal.
Penny emerged from the building with her usual boundless energy, her dark curls bouncing as she skipped toward me. At six years old, she was my anchor, my reminder of what mattered most.
"Mommy!" She launched herself into my arms, and I breathed in her familiar scent of apple juice and playground dust.
"How was your day, sweetheart?" I buckled her into her car seat, my movements automatic.
"Really good! Miss Heidi showed us her new purse today. It's so pretty – it looks just like Aunt Charlotte's new one!" Penny's innocent enthusiasm felt like ice water in my veins. "She said it was a special present from someone who thinks she's really pretty."
My hands stilled on the seatbelt. "Miss Heidi has a bag like Charlotte's?"
"Uh-huh! The same brown color with the gold buckles. Miss Heidi let Emma touch it because Emma said it looked expensive." Penny swung her legs happily, oblivious to the earthquake her words had triggered.
I slid into the driver's seat, my reflection in the rearview mirror showing a woman I barely recognized – pale, hollow-eyed, but with something new burning behind the shock. The pieces were falling into place with devastating clarity: the ten-thousand-dollar handbag, the complimentary seafood platter, Peter's recent late nights.
As I started the engine, my phone buzzed with a text from Peter: *Working late again. Don't wait up.*
For the first time in our eight-year marriage, I didn't believe him.
After Husband's Affair with the Teacher, My Wife's Revenge Begins of Contents
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