
Divorce After Husband's Affair Unmasked
Chapter 2
I waited until morning to confront him. The kitchen counter between us felt like a battle line as sunlight streamed through our floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating the sleek minimalist space Westin had insisted on when we renovated. I'd wanted warm woods and terracotta tiles. He'd wanted chrome and marble. Like everything else, I'd given in.
But not today.
"Seventy-five thousand dollars, Westin." My voice was steadier than I expected. I placed my tablet on the counter, the banking app open to the transaction history. "To Georgia Hamilton. Were you ever going to tell me?"
Westin's coffee cup froze halfway to his lips. For a split second, panic flashed across his face before his features rearranged into something resembling concern.
"You've been going through my computer?" He set down his cup, his tone suggesting I was the one who'd done something wrong.
"I've been looking at our joint accounts," I corrected. "Accounts that contain my money too. Money we agreed would be for our future."
He sighed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "It's not what you think, Lorelei."
"Then what is it? Because from where I'm standing, it looks like you're funneling our savings to another woman."
"It's for her mother." He circled the counter, approaching me with open palms like I was a frightened animal. "Margaret has cancer. Stage four. Georgia can't afford the treatments, and insurance won't cover the experimental protocol that might save her."
I took a step back, maintaining distance. "And this concerns us... how?"
"It's the right thing to do," he insisted, his voice taking on that self-righteous tone I'd grown to recognize whenever he was justifying something questionable. "Think of it as good karma for when we have children. Wouldn't you want someone to help if it were your mother?"
"My mother," I said slowly, "who you've met exactly twice in six years because you always have excuses to skip holidays with my family?"
His jaw tightened. "That's not fair."
"No, you know what's not fair?" My voice rose despite my efforts to remain calm. "Two years ago, when I needed surgery for my endometriosis—surgery that might have preserved my fertility—you told me we couldn't touch our savings. You said it wasn't an emergency."
"That was different," he dismissed with a wave of his hand.
"How? How was that different?"
"Georgia's situation is more urgent. Her mother could die."
The callousness of his response knocked the wind from me. I stared at him, truly seeing him perhaps for the first time. This man who'd held me while I cried over the doctor's warning that the delayed surgery might impact my ability to conceive. This man who'd promised we'd find other ways to have a family "when the time was right."
"So my health, my fertility, wasn't urgent enough for you," I said quietly. "But for Georgia..."
"Don't make this something it's not." Westin's tone hardened. "I'm trying to do a good deed here. You're turning it into something ugly."
"You transferred almost a third of our savings without discussing it with me. You changed our car's air freshener to a scent you know gives me migraines. You come home smelling like someone else's perfume." My voice broke. "What am I supposed to think this is?"
"You're being paranoid." He checked his watch. "I have a client meeting. We'll discuss this later when you're thinking more rationally."
And just like that, he grabbed his briefcase and walked out, leaving me standing in our kitchen, shaking with rage and heartbreak.
* * *
Two days later, I sat in a downtown office across from David Chen, the divorce attorney Sarah had recommended. His office was everything our apartment wasn't—warm woods, soft lighting, bookshelves filled with actual books rather than the artfully arranged objects Westin preferred.
"So he's transferred $75,000 to this woman without your consent," David summarized, reviewing the documents I'd brought. "And you believe they're having an affair?"
"I know they are." I handed him another folder. "Phone records. Text messages I recovered. Hotel receipts."
David raised an eyebrow, impressed. "You've been thorough."
"I'm a nurse," I said simply. "Documentation matters."
He nodded, scanning the evidence. "We'll need to move quickly but carefully. If he's already transferring assets, he may try to hide more."
"What do I do in the meantime?" I asked.
"Act normal," David advised. "Don't give him reason to suspect you're planning anything. We'll need to document everything, build our case, and when the time is right..."
"We strike," I finished, feeling a strange calm settle over me.
At home that evening, I made Westin's favorite dinner and smiled when he complimented the meal. I nodded sympathetically when he mentioned another late meeting the following night. I even kissed him goodbye in the morning, the taste of betrayal bitter on my lips.
Behind my smile, I was already gone.
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