
Expose Husband's Deceit
Chapter 2
I stood in our bedroom, the silence pressing against my ears. Cooper had been placed in his crate in the garage—I couldn't risk him alerting Liam to what I was doing. My hands trembled slightly as I pulled open the drawer of my nightstand, searching for... what? Evidence. Proof that Dr. Martinez was right.
"Think, Estrella," I whispered to myself. "Where would he hide it?"
I moved methodically around our bedroom, checking places I'd never thought to look before. Behind the row of books on his bedside table. Inside the pocket of his robe hanging on the bathroom door. Nothing seemed out of place until I reached for the decorative pillows on our bed.
That's when I saw it—a single blonde hair caught in the embroidery of Liam's pillowcase. Long, golden, definitely not mine. My stomach clenched as I carefully extracted it with my fingernail, holding it up to the light. It gleamed, almost mocking me.
"One piece of evidence," I murmured, placing it carefully in a tissue and slipping it into my pocket.
I moved to the guest bathroom next—Liam always insisted we keep it pristine for visitors. The towels hung perfectly aligned, as always. But as I lifted one, a faint scent hit me—not the lavender vanilla I always used, but something sweeter, more floral.
"Jasmine," I realized, my throat tightening. "She wears jasmine."
My fingers traced the edge of the sink counter, coming away with nothing but a faint smudge of pink. Lipstick? I leaned closer, inhaling deeply. The scent was unmistakable now—perfume mixed with the metallic tang of lipstick.
"He brought her here," I whispered, the reality sinking in like a stone in my chest. "In our home."
The kitchen was my last stop. I opened cabinets slowly, methodically, searching for anything out of place. Most were perfectly organized—Liam was meticulous about keeping things in order. But when I reached for the cabinet above the refrigerator, something felt different. It stuck slightly as I pulled it open.
There, pushed to the back behind the seldom-used martini glasses, sat a single wine glass. Red wine had left a faint stain at the bottom, but it was the smudge of crimson around the rim that made my blood run cold.
Lipstick. On a glass hidden where I'd never look.
---
"Sarah, I need your help," I said into my phone later that evening, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me.
"You name it," came her immediate reply.
"I need access to our home security system from the foundation office. Can you help me set that up?"
There was a pause. "Estrella, what's going on?"
"I'll explain later," I said. "Right now, I just need to see something."
Two hours later, I was sitting in my darkened office at the foundation, the glow of three monitors illuminating my face. Sarah had helped me remotely access our home security system—something Liam didn't know I could do.
"Are you sure about this?" Sarah asked through my phone's speaker.
"Absolutely," I replied, fast-forwarding through footage from the past week.
That's when I saw her.
A young woman with flowing blonde hair, her face partially obscured as she entered our home. Not through the front door—through the side entrance that led directly to our bedroom wing. She appeared confident, comfortable, as though she belonged there.
I checked the timestamp: 2:17 PM. I had been in Chicago, meeting with potential donors.
I scrolled through more footage, finding her again and again. Always during my business trips. Always using the same entrance. Always staying for hours.
"There she is," I whispered, freezing on a frame where her face was clearly visible. Young—perhaps early twenties. Pretty in a conventional way, with a bright smile that seemed to mock me through the screen.
---
"Marcus, I need one more favor," I said the next morning, calling my foundation's security consultant.
"Mrs. Barnes, anything," he replied.
"I need traffic camera footage from our street for the past month."
By afternoon, I had what I needed—clear images of a sleek red convertible pulling into our driveway on multiple occasions. The same days the blonde woman appeared in our security footage.
I zoomed in on the license plate and sent it to Sarah.
"Can you run this?" I asked.
"Consider it done," she replied.
Three hours later, I had a name: Olivia Davis.
And a connection: Intern at West Marketing Solutions—Liam's company.
I stared at her driver's license photo, memorizing every feature of her face. The same face I'd seen in our bedroom. In our kitchen. Drinking from our glasses.
"You're good, Liam," I whispered to the empty room. "But not good enough."
My phone buzzed with a text from Liam: "Working late again?"
I smiled thinly as I typed my response: "Just finishing up some foundation business."
Little did he know that I was just beginning.
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