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Divorce After Big Betrayal Novel Cover

Divorce After Big Betrayal

The smell of roasting turkey and cinnamon-spiced apples filled the air as I helped Spencer's mother arrange the Thanksgiving table. Three years of marriage had taught me exactly how she liked things—crystal glasses at each place setting, the good china that only came out for holidays, and fresh flowers as a centerpiece. "Sara, dear, could you check if the gravy is ready?" Margaret Wagner called from the kitchen, her voice warm with maternal affection. "Of course," I replied, smoothing down my cream-colored sweater dress. I'd chosen it specifically for today—elegant but comfortable, perfect for a family dinner. The sound of the front door crashing open froze me mid-step. "Hello, everyone!" A woman's voice, husky and deliberate, cut through the festive atmosphere like a knife. I turned toward the entryway, a welcoming smile instinctively forming on my lips—until I saw her. She stood framed in the doorway, a vision in a provocative red dress that clung to every curve. Long black hair cascaded over one shoulder as she surveyed the room with calculated confidence.
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Chapter 2

The house felt empty when I returned, the silence pressing against my ears like a physical weight. I'd driven home in a daze, my body operating on autopilot while my mind replayed Ember's words over and over.

*Three years of birth control pills. A tattoo I'd never seen. A pact about children.*

I moved through our bedroom like a ghost, touching familiar objects that now felt foreign. The navy blue comforter Spencer had chosen when we first moved in. The framed wedding photo on the nightstand—his arm around my waist, both of us smiling at the camera.

"Liar," I whispered, picking up the frame and studying his face. Had there been signs I'd missed? Some flicker in his eyes that suggested the man I loved was living a double life?

My hands trembled as I opened his nightstand drawer. Nothing unusual—just his wallet, watch, and a few scattered coins. The closet yielded nothing either, just his neatly pressed shirts and suits arranged by color.

But I knew Spencer. He was meticulous, organized. If he was hiding something, it would be somewhere I wouldn't think to look.

I dropped to my knees and reached under the bed frame, feeling along the dust-covered slats until my fingers brushed against something cool and metal. A small box, pushed far into the corner.

Inside lay a phone I'd never seen before.

It was newer than his regular iPhone, sleeker. I pressed the power button, and the screen illuminated with a photo of Ember—not the wine-soaked mess from Thanksgiving, but Ember at her most beautiful, laughing at something off-camera.

My stomach lurched as I swiped through the screens. A group chat with just two members: Spencer and Ember.

*Miss you already,* Ember had written just three hours ago. *When can I see you again?*

*Soon,* Spencer had replied. *Same place as last time.*

I scrolled upward, my vision blurring with tears and rage. Months of messages unfolded before me—explicit photos, intimate words, detailed plans for their meetings.

*The usual hotel at 2PM. Sara thinks I'm at work.*

*Wear the red lingerie I bought you.*

*I love watching you take those pills every morning. She'll never know.*

Each message was a knife twisting deeper. I took photos of everything with my own phone, my hands shaking so badly I could barely hold it steady.

The sound of the front door opening sent me scrambling to hide the evidence. I shoved the phone back in its box and slid it under the bed just as Spencer's footsteps echoed up the stairs.

"You're home," he said flatly when he appeared in the doorway.

"Where were you?" I demanded, trying to keep my voice steady.

"Dealing with the fallout from your little scene." He loosened his tie, his movements stiff. "You embarrassed yourself, Sara."

"Embarrassed myself?" I stood up, anger overriding my shock. "You've been lying to me for three years!"

"It's not what you think," he said, but his eyes wouldn't meet mine.

"I found your phone, Spencer." I watched his face carefully. "The one with all the messages to Ember."

A flicker of panic crossed his features before he composed himself. "Those messages are old. I keep her in check by pretending to still care."

"In check?" I repeated incredulously. "You're sleeping with her!"

"That's not—" He stopped himself, running a hand through his hair. "It's complicated."

I moved closer, and that's when I noticed it—a scent that wasn't his usual cologne. Something darker, woodsy. Beneath it, the faint trace of Ember's perfume clinging to his clothes.

"Get out," I whispered, my voice breaking.

"Sara, listen—"

"Get out!" I screamed, pushing him toward the door.

He left without another word.

In the days that followed, I became a detective in my own marriage. I photographed every message, every photo, every piece of evidence I could find. I recorded our conversations when I could, saving them as insurance.

"You're acting strange," Spencer commented one evening as I calmly served dinner, my phone recording our conversation from my pocket.

"Just tired," I replied with a smile that felt foreign on my face.

He studied me with newfound wariness. "You've been very quiet lately."

"I'm just... processing everything."

I noticed how he guarded his phone now, taking calls in the other room or stepping outside. How he'd leave the house for "business meetings" that seemed to appear out of nowhere.

"Another meeting?" I asked one morning as he grabbed his keys.

"Something came up," he muttered, avoiding my eyes.

I nodded, smiling as if I believed him. "Don't be late tonight."

As soon as the door closed behind him, I checked his calendar on the shared laptop—nothing scheduled. Another lie.

That night, I heard him on the phone in the guest bathroom, his voice low but urgent.

"I can't talk now," he hissed. "She's watching everything I do."

I pressed my ear against the door, straining to hear more.

"She knows something," he continued. "I don't know how much, but she's not stupid."

My heart pounded in my chest. He was right about that—I wasn't stupid. And I was just beginning to fight back.

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