
Divorce After Discovering His Affair with Her Sister
Chapter 3
Matthew's announcement came over dinner on a Thursday evening, his voice carrying that particular enthusiasm he reserved for business opportunities and social advancement.
"I'm thinking we should do something special for my birthday next month," he said, cutting into his steak with surgical precision. "A real celebration at the Waterfront Hotel's grand ballroom. Business partners, family, friends—everyone who matters."
I took a sip of water, my hand steady around the glass. "That sounds wonderful. How many guests are you thinking?"
"Maybe a hundred and fifty?" His eyes gleamed with the prospect. "I want to showcase everything we've built. The company's performing exceptionally this quarter, and with the baby coming..." He reached across the table, covering my hand with his. "It's the perfect time to celebrate our success."
Our success. The words tasted like ash.
"I'd love to help with the arrangements," I said, allowing warmth to color my voice. "We should definitely invite both sets of parents. And all the extended family—your aunts and uncles, my grandmother, Aspyn of course."
Something flickered in his expression at Aspyn's name, quickly smoothed away. "Of course. Family's important."
He stood, circling the table to press a kiss against my forehead. His lips were cool, impersonal. "You're such a perfect wife, Lena. This party will showcase everything we've built together."
I smiled up at him, the devoted wife he expected to see. Inside, I was already calculating—one month to finalize everything with Rebecca, one month to ensure every piece of evidence was airtight, one month until Matthew's perfect celebration became his public execution.
"I'll start making calls tomorrow," I promised.
The irony wasn't lost on me—I would help him plan the party that would destroy him.
Aspyn's visits increased after that, her presence in our home becoming almost constant. She arrived Tuesday afternoon with shopping bags from Nordstrom, claiming she'd found adorable baby clothes she couldn't resist.
"Where should I put these?" she asked, holding up a tiny onesie embroidered with teddy bears.
Matthew was in his office on a conference call, his voice a low murmur through the closed door. I gestured toward the living room. "Just leave them on the sofa. I'll sort through everything later."
She drifted instead toward our wedding photos displayed on the mantel—images I'd once treasured, now monuments to my own blindness. Her finger traced the silver frame, lingering on my face captured in that moment of naive joy.
"You looked so hopeful on your wedding day," she remarked, her tone light, conversational. "Almost naive. Did you really believe he loved you?"
I continued folding the baby blankets I'd purchased solely for appearances, my movements methodical. The voice recorder in my pocket was running, capturing every word. I'd developed the habit of keeping it active whenever Aspyn visited.
"I believed in family loyalty," I said, meeting her eyes without flinching. "I believed blood meant something."
Her smile wavered for a fraction of a second, surprise flashing across her features before she recovered. "Of course it does, cousin. That's why I'm here—to support you through this."
"How thoughtful." I placed the folded blanket precisely atop the others, creating a neat stack. "Tell me, does Matthew appreciate your dedication to family?"
The question hung between us, loaded with meaning she couldn't quite decipher. Her eyes narrowed slightly, searching my face for something she didn't find.
Matthew's office door opened before she could respond. "Aspyn? I didn't know you were here."
She turned toward him with a brightness that looked practiced. "Just dropping off some baby things for Lena. You know how I love to shop."
I watched them—the way his gaze softened when it landed on her, the subtle shift in his posture, the unspoken language between them that I'd been too trusting to notice before. My hand moved to my stomach in a gesture that had become automatic, protective of something I'd already decided to let go.
That evening, alone in Rebecca's office, I presented my latest discovery.
"I've been reviewing our joint accounts," I said, sliding printed statements across her desk. "There are regular transfers I don't recognize."
Rebecca's eyes moved down the columns of numbers, her expression sharpening. "Five thousand monthly. Going back..." She flipped through pages. "Two years?"
"Can you trace where it's going?"
She was already typing on her computer, her fingers flying across the keyboard. Minutes passed in silence broken only by the click of keys and the distant hum of traffic twenty floors below. Then she leaned back, a smile playing at the corners of her mouth.
"Aspyn Mendez. The account's in her name."
I'd expected it, prepared myself for confirmation, but the reality still landed like a physical blow. One hundred and twenty thousand dollars. Two years of systematic theft, funded by my own labor, my own trust.
"This strengthens your case considerably," Rebecca continued, already making notes. "Dissipation of marital assets. We can argue he's been supporting his mistress with community property."
"I want copies of everything," I said quietly. "Every transfer record, every receipt. I want documentation of exactly how much my husband valued his mistress over his wife."
Rebecca looked up from her notes, something like admiration in her eyes. "We'll bury him, Lena. Completely."
I nodded, rising to leave. Outside her office windows, Seattle's lights glittered against the darkness—beautiful, cold, indifferent. Somewhere in that sprawl of glass and steel, Matthew was probably with Aspyn, spending money that should have been ours, planning a future that would never materialize.
One month until his birthday party. One month until everything came crashing down.
I pressed the elevator button and waited, my reflection ghostly in the polished doors. The woman staring back at me looked composed, determined, nothing like the trusting wife who'd discovered a photograph four weeks ago.
Good. That woman was gone. In her place stood someone far more dangerous—someone who understood that the best revenge required patience, planning, and the perfect moment to strike.
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