
Cheater Loses All at Once
Chapter 2
The house felt different when we returned from the party. Shadows stretched longer across our hardwood floors, and every family photo on the mantle seemed to mock me with their frozen smiles. Quentin disappeared into his study immediately, claiming he needed to "handle some work emails." The same excuse he'd used countless times before.
I tucked Sophie into bed, her sleepy questions about why Daddy seemed upset cutting through me like glass. "Just grown-up stuff, sweetheart," I whispered, smoothing her dark hair. "Nothing for you to worry about."
But as I watched her drift off to sleep, Layla's words echoed in my mind: *He's three now. Growing like a weed.* A boy the same age Sophie had been when she took her first steps, said her first word, lost her first tooth. Milestones Quentin had celebrated with another child while pretending ours were the only ones that mattered.
By midnight, Quentin's breathing had settled into the deep rhythm of sleep. I slipped from our bed, my bare feet silent on the cold floor. His laptop sat on the kitchen counter, still warm. The screen saver displayed photos of our family vacation last summer—Sophie building sandcastles while Quentin and I smiled behind her, the picture of domestic bliss.
I knew his password. Our anniversary date, the same one he'd used for years. The banking website loaded with familiar efficiency, and I navigated to our joint account with trembling fingers.
The first transfer stopped my breath. March 15th, three years ago. Two thousand dollars to an account labeled "L. Grant." I scrolled down, my heart hammering against my ribs. More transfers. Monthly, like clockwork. Sometimes five hundred dollars, sometimes two thousand, occasionally more. The amounts fluctuated, but the recipient never changed.
I grabbed a notebook from the junk drawer and began copying down dates and amounts, my handwriting growing shakier with each entry. The pattern became clear—larger amounts in spring months, smaller ones in winter. Like seasonal support for a growing child.
My phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: *Hope you enjoyed the party. Some truths are worth celebrating.*
Layla. Even now, she couldn't resist twisting the knife.
I deleted the message and returned to the laptop, diving deeper into Quentin's digital life. His credit card statements revealed a parallel universe I'd never suspected. Purchases at Baby Depot during my own pregnancy. Expensive formula—the organic kind I'd wanted for Sophie but couldn't afford. Designer children's clothes from boutiques I'd never heard of.
One receipt made me physically ill. Prenatal vitamins and maternity clothes, purchased the same week I'd asked Quentin to come with me to my twenty-week ultrasound. He'd claimed a work emergency, leaving me to see our daughter's first clear images alone while he shopped for another woman's pregnancy.
I printed everything, the pages warm from the laser printer. Evidence of a double life conducted in plain sight, hidden behind password-protected accounts and reasonable explanations. How many times had I asked about our tight budget while he funneled thousands to his other family?
The next morning, I called Elena Martinez from the grocery store parking lot. My neighbor had always been more than just the woman next door—she'd been my lifeline during Sophie's colicky newborn phase, my coffee companion during lonely afternoons. But more importantly, she was a divorce attorney.
"Coffee?" I asked when she answered. "I need to talk."
We met at our usual spot, a small café downtown where the baristas knew our orders by heart. Elena studied my face as I approached her corner table, her dark eyes sharp with concern.
"You look like hell, Gabby."
I sat down, wrapping my hands around the warm mug she'd ordered for me. "Hypothetically," I began, testing each word carefully, "if someone discovered their spouse was hiding significant financial assets or supporting another family, what would be the best way to document that evidence?"
Elena's expression shifted from concern to professional alertness. She leaned forward, her voice dropping. "Hypothetically, that someone would need comprehensive financial records. Bank statements, credit card receipts, any documentation of undisclosed assets or expenditures. The more detailed, the better."
"And if there were children involved? Custody considerations?"
"Evidence of deception regarding family finances could significantly impact custody arrangements." Elena's fingers drummed against her coffee cup. "Especially if one parent was systematically hiding resources that should have been available for the legitimate child's welfare."
I nodded, filing away each piece of advice. "How long would someone need to collect this kind of evidence?"
"Depends on how thorough they want to be. But Gabby—" Elena reached across the table, covering my hand with hers. "Are we still talking hypothetically?"
I met her eyes, seeing my own determination reflected back. "For now."
But we both knew the truth. The evidence was already mounting, each receipt and transfer statement another nail in the coffin of my marriage. Soon, very soon, the hypothetical would become devastatingly real.
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