
Divorce After Discovering His Affair with Her Sister
Chapter 2
The morning after my hospital discharge, I sat at our kitchen table with my laptop open, searching for divorce attorneys while Matthew slept upstairs. My coffee grew cold as I scrolled through profiles, reading reviews, comparing expertise. I needed someone discreet, someone who specialized in high-asset divorces, someone who wouldn't flinch at what I was about to tell them.
Rebecca Torres's website featured a simple headshot—sharp eyes, professional smile, zero nonsense. Her biography listed fifteen years handling complex divorces for Seattle's elite. Perfect.
Her downtown office occupied the twentieth floor of a glass tower overlooking Elliott Bay. The reception area smelled of leather and expensive coffee. I checked my reflection in the elevator doors before entering—perfectly composed, hair neat, makeup subtle. The devoted wife costume I'd worn for seven years.
"Mrs. Silva." Rebecca Torres rose from behind her mahogany desk, extending a firm handshake. Mid-forties, tailored navy suit, wedding ring notably absent. "Please, sit."
I settled into the chair across from her and withdrew the photograph from my purse, placing it face-up on her desk. "My husband Matthew Silva and my cousin Aspyn Mendez."
Rebecca studied the image without reaction, then flipped it over to read the inscription. Her expression remained professionally neutral.
"Three days ago, I overheard my husband on the phone at the hospital." My voice emerged steady, clinical. "He called me a placeholder. Said once the baby is born and his inheritance secured, we'll divorce and he'll be with her."
Rebecca's pen moved across her notepad. "You're pregnant?"
"Ten weeks."
"Does he know?"
"The hospital disclosed it during my allergic reaction. Aspyn put shellfish in my food at my grandmother's birthday dinner." I watched Rebecca's pen pause. "She's known about my allergy since we were children."
"Deliberate harm." Rebecca's tone sharpened. "That's useful. What assets are we protecting?"
I outlined our financial situation—Matthew's tech company shares, our Seattle home, joint accounts, my inheritance from my parents that I'd foolishly placed in both our names. Numbers I'd memorized in the sleepless hours since discovering the photograph.
Rebecca leaned back, fingers steepled. "We need documented evidence. Recordings, financial records showing asset diversion, proof of the conspiracy. Text messages, emails, anything demonstrating premeditation." Her eyes met mine. "Can you maintain the facade while we build an airtight case?"
Something cold and certain unfurled in my chest. "I've been playing the devoted wife for seven years. I can do it a few weeks longer."
A ghost of approval crossed Rebecca's face. "Then let's destroy him properly."
That weekend, I sat at Matthew's parents' dining table, smiling as his mother discussed nursery colors. The Sunday family dinner I'd attended dozens of times, except now I saw everything through new eyes.
Aspyn arrived fifteen minutes late, making an entrance in a cream silk blouse that probably cost more than my monthly grocery budget. But what caught my attention was the diamond tennis bracelet circling her wrist—platinum, at least three carats, catching the chandelier light with every gesture.
I'd never seen it before.
She took the seat across from me, and I noticed Matthew's hand brush her lower back as she passed—brief, familiar, possessive. His mother was too busy fussing with serving dishes to notice.
"Lena, darling, you're glowing!" Matthew's mother squeezed my shoulder as she set down a platter of roasted chicken. "Pregnancy suits you. We're so thrilled, aren't we, Richard?"
Matthew's father nodded from the head of the table. "About time we had a grandchild. Seven years is a long wait."
Aspyn reached across the table, her bracelet sliding down her arm, and grasped my hand. "You must be so overwhelmed, cousin." Her fingers were cool, her smile saccharine. "If you need anything at all—someone to talk to, help with preparations—I'm here for you."
The underlying mockery in her tone was barely concealed, a secret joke only she and Matthew understood. I watched her thumb stroke across my knuckles, the same hand that had probably traced Matthew's skin in moments I didn't want to imagine.
"That's so thoughtful," I replied, matching her sweetness. "Family is everything, isn't it?"
Something flickered in her eyes—surprise, perhaps, that I could meet her gaze so steadily.
I excused myself to the bathroom, locking the door behind me. My hands shook as I withdrew my phone and photographed my wrist at various angles, then Aspyn's bracelet from the photos in the cloud that auto-captured. Three carats, platinum setting, easily fifteen thousand dollars. I texted the images to Rebecca with a single word: "Gift?"
Her response came immediately: "Tracing it now."
Then I bent over the toilet and vomited—not from pregnancy, but from pure, concentrated rage. I rinsed my mouth, reapplied my lipstick, and returned to the table wearing my devoted wife smile.
The following Monday, Rebecca's contact installed recording devices in Matthew's car and home office. Tiny, undetectable, illegal in some contexts but admissible in divorce proceedings under certain circumstances Rebecca assured me she understood intimately.
"Just live normally," she'd instructed. "Let him incriminate himself."
So I did. I prepared Matthew's breakfast—two eggs over easy, whole wheat toast, black coffee. I managed our household, scheduled his dry cleaning, responded to his mother's texts about baby shower plans. I attended to his needs with the same devoted efficiency I'd perfected over seven years.
And the devices captured everything.
One week later, I sat alone in Rebecca's office while she played back the recordings. Matthew's voice emerged from the speakers, casual and contemptuous: "She's so predictably devoted. Tonight's our 'intimacy night.' She actually keeps to that schedule religiously. Afterward, she'll sleep soundly, and I can call you."
Aspyn's laughter tinkled through the recording. "Poor Lena. She has no idea."
"She's useful," Matthew replied. "That's all that matters until the baby comes."
I sat motionless, face expressionless, but my fingernails dug crescents into my palms deep enough to draw blood. Rebecca reached across her desk and placed a box of tissues beside me.
I didn't touch them.
"Is this enough?" My voice emerged flat, mechanical.
Rebecca's smile was sharp as a blade. "Oh, we're just getting started."
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