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Exposing Husband's Affair: Wife's Triumph Over Betrayal Novel Cover

Exposing Husband's Affair: Wife's Triumph Over Betrayal

The boardroom victory still hummed through my veins as I stepped into our penthouse, the city lights twinkling below like scattered diamonds. Another successful merger, another step forward for Taylor Industries. Barrett looked up from the leather sofa, his laptop balanced on his knees, and I felt that familiar warmth spread through my chest. After ten years of marriage, he still made me feel like we were building something beautiful together. "How did it go?" he asked, closing the laptop with a soft click. "Better than expected. The Henderson deal is officially ours." I kicked off my heels and padded across the marble floor toward him. "I was thinking we could celebrate with some wine and our playlist. You know, the one from our honeymoon?" Barrett's smile seemed genuine enough as he reached for the smart home remote. "Perfect.
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Chapter 2

The week that followed felt like living in a house of mirrors—everything familiar suddenly distorted, reflecting angles I'd never noticed before. Barrett moved through our routines with the same practiced ease, but now I watched him like a scientist studying a specimen.

It started with the phone calls. Tuesday morning, while I reviewed quarterly reports over coffee, Barrett's phone buzzed against the marble countertop. The smile that spread across his face was radiant, transformative—the kind of expression I remembered from our early dating days, when my texts could make him light up from across a crowded room. But this smile wasn't for me.

"Work?" I asked casually, not looking up from my papers.

"Just... client follow-up." His fingers moved swiftly across the screen, typing a response that took far longer than any professional courtesy required.

By Thursday, I'd counted seventeen such messages. Each one brought that same secret smile, that gentle softening around his eyes that used to be mine alone. When I asked to see a funny meme he was supposedly laughing at, Barrett's hand instinctively curved around his phone, shielding the screen.

"It's nothing interesting," he said, already sliding the device into his pocket. "Just boring office stuff."

The Barrett I'd known for ten years had never been secretive about his phone. He used to hand it to me to answer calls while he drove, left it unlocked on nightstands, shared every amusing conversation. Now, every device lived face-down, password-protected, guarded like state secrets.

Friday afternoon brought the perfect opportunity. Barrett mentioned needing to review some contracts in his home office, and I volunteered to bring him the Henderson merger documents he'd left in the kitchen. The offer felt natural, wifely—exactly the kind of gesture that had defined our partnership for years.

I knocked softly on his office door, balancing the stack of papers against my hip. "Barrett? I have those files you needed."

No answer. Through the crack under the door, I could see his desk lamp was on, but the room felt empty. I pushed the door open, calling his name again, then remembered he'd mentioned running to the pharmacy for his allergy medication.

The office looked exactly as it always did—mahogany desk positioned to catch the afternoon light, built-in bookshelves lined with business journals and the leather-bound classics I'd given him over the years. But as I set the documents on his desk, something caught my eye. The bottom drawer wasn't quite flush with the others, creating a shadow that revealed a thin gap.

I knelt down, running my fingers along the drawer's edge. There, wedged between the drawer and the desk frame, was a slim tablet I'd never seen before. My heart hammered against my ribs as I worked it free, the device warm as if it had been recently used.

The lock screen displayed a simple numerical keypad. I stared at it for a long moment, knowing I was crossing a line that couldn't be uncrossed. Then I typed in the date of Barrett's mother's death—the password he'd used for everything important since we'd met.

The tablet unlocked immediately.

What I found made my hands shake. Apps I didn't recognize, encrypted messaging platforms with names like "Signal" and "Wickr." My throat constricted as I opened the most recently used application, revealing a conversation thread that made the world tilt sideways.

"Missing you already, my sweet boy. Can't wait for our weekend together."

"You know I can't resist when you call me that. Clara's working late again—perfect timing."

"She works too much. You need someone who puts you first. Someone who understands what you really need."

The contact name at the top of the screen read "Little B."

With trembling fingers, I scrolled up through weeks, then months of messages. Pet names that made my stomach churn. References to meetings during Barrett's supposed business trips. Photos of hotel rooms, intimate dinners, hands intertwined across restaurant tables.

I took pictures of everything with my own phone, my hands shaking so badly I had to retake several shots. The evidence felt surreal, like discovering someone else's life accidentally downloaded onto Barrett's device. But the timestamps were real. The locations matched Barrett's travel schedule perfectly.

The sound of the front door opening sent panic shooting through my nervous system. I quickly closed all the apps, powered down the tablet, and shoved it back into its hiding place. By the time Barrett's footsteps reached the hallway, I was sitting in his desk chair, innocently reviewing the merger documents.

"Find everything you needed?" he asked from the doorway, pharmacy bag in hand.

"Just catching up on some reading," I managed, surprised by how steady my voice sounded. "These contracts are more complex than I thought."

That evening, I called Evelyn. My cousin had always been the practical one, the person who could decode complicated situations with surgical precision. If anyone could help me understand what I'd found, it was her.

"I need your help with something," I said without preamble when she answered. "Something that might change everything."

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