
Cheating Husband's Costly Loss
Chapter 3
The penthouse felt like a stranger's home when I returned that evening. Every familiar object—the crystal vase Landon had brought from Milan, the wedding photos on the mantle, even the expensive Italian leather sofa—seemed to mock me with their false promises. I paced the living room, my body humming with a strange energy I'd never felt before. Not sadness. Not quite anger. Something sharper, more dangerous.
When the elevator chimed, I stopped mid-stride. Landon walked in, loosening his tie, briefcase in hand—the perfect picture of a hardworking husband returning home. The sight of him made my stomach turn.
"Sofia," he said, his voice cautious. He'd clearly heard something had happened. "What's going on? Skye left me a dozen messages."
"Where were you today, Landon?" My voice was eerily calm.
"I told you, meetings downtown with the Singapore investors." He set his briefcase down, approaching me like I was a spooked animal. "What's this about?"
"I met Angelique today."
He froze. The color drained from his face, but he recovered quickly, his expression shifting to practiced concern. "Who?"
"Don't." I held up my hand. "Don't you dare lie to me again. I met your other wife today. The one wearing my pink diamond."
His shoulders slumped slightly, but his eyes were calculating, measuring how much I knew, how much damage control was needed.
"Sofia, it's not what you think. She's just..." he paused, searching for the right words, "a meaningless fling. Nothing serious."
"A meaningless fling who's been wearing a thirty-million-dollar ring for over a year?" I laughed, the sound brittle and unfamiliar. "A meaningless fling who knows about your shoulder scar and how you like your eggs?"
"You're overreacting." He reached for me, but I stepped back. "These things happen in marriages. We can work through this."
Work through this. As if his three-year deception was a minor disagreement about vacation plans or dinner choices. As if he hadn't given another woman the symbol of love I'd been waiting for. As if he hadn't been living a complete double life while I waited faithfully at home.
"You know what's happening right now?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt. "Your sister is posting a video of your girlfriend threatening to throw us into Central Park's lake. She's telling the world how your mistress destroyed my camera and cut up her dress. She's showing everyone exactly who you are."
His face hardened. "You're being dramatic. No one will believe—"
His phone buzzed repeatedly in his pocket. Then mine. Then the landline. The notifications kept coming as Skye's post went viral, spreading through social media like wildfire.
"What have you done?" he whispered, pulling out his phone, his face ashen as he scrolled through the messages.
"I didn't do anything," I replied. "You did this. All of it."
Within hours, #JusticeForSofia was trending. Comments flooded in by the thousands, then millions. Women sharing their own stories of betrayal. Men condemning Landon's behavior. Celebrities reposting the video with messages of support. My private heartbreak had become a symbol of something larger—of women refusing to be silenced, refusing to accept betrayal with quiet dignity.
The next morning, I sat across from Marcus Chen in his sleek downtown office. Sunlight glinted off his wire-rimmed glasses as he reviewed the documents I'd brought.
"You understand what you're asking?" he said, his voice measured. "With the Watkins family's support and this evidence, we can pursue an aggressive strategy. He'll lose everything—inheritance, business interests, reputation."
"Good," I said, surprised by the steel in my voice. "That's exactly what I want."
Marcus studied me for a moment, then nodded. "Most clients come in devastated, uncertain. You seem... resolved."
"I am." I met his gaze steadily. "He spent three years building a life with another woman while I waited at home. He gave her the ring I thought was meant for me. He mocked me behind my back."
I leaned forward, my hands steady on his polished desk. "I don't want him to lose some things, Mr. Chen. I want him to lose everything."
Marcus's smile was slow and predatory. "Then that's exactly what we'll make happen, Mrs. Watkins."
"Bishop," I corrected him. "My name is Sofia Bishop."
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