
Exposing Husband's Affair: Wife's Triumph Over Betrayal
Chapter 3
The tablet discovery left me shaken, but I needed more evidence. Evelyn's words echoed in my mind: 'Follow the money, Clara. Affairs leave two trails—emotional and financial.'
I waited until Barrett left for his supposed golf game with clients before accessing the company's financial records. As CEO, I had ultimate oversight, but Barrett handled day-to-day operations—a trust I now questioned with every breath.
In my home office, I logged into our secure financial system and began methodically reviewing the past two years of transactions. Three hours in, I found it—a pattern of payments to 'Moonlight Productions' that bypassed standard approval protocols. Each transfer bore Barrett's digital signature but none had crossed my desk.
'What the hell is Moonlight Productions?' I muttered, fingers flying across the keyboard.
The answer came within minutes: an independent film company registered to Diana Scott. My stomach clenched as I tallied the amounts—$195,750 over twenty-four months, all carefully distributed to avoid triggering automatic alerts.
My hands trembled as I downloaded the records to a secure drive. This wasn't just an affair; it was embezzlement from the company I'd built from nothing. The company whose true ownership structure Barrett didn't fully understand.
'Ms. Taylor?' Rebecca's voice came through the intercom. 'Just reminding you about tonight's anniversary dinner at Lumière.'
The celebration dinner. For Diana's twenty years as 'family friend.' The irony burned like acid.
'Thank you, Rebecca. I'll be there.'
That evening, Lumière's soft lighting and elegant ambiance felt like a cruel joke. I watched Barrett and Diana across the table, cataloging every glance, every 'accidental' touch. Diana had positioned herself beside him, their shoulders occasionally brushing in ways that seemed innocent to everyone but me.
'To twenty wonderful years of friendship,' Barrett raised his glass, his smile reaching his eyes in a way it rarely did with me anymore. 'Diana, you've been such an important part of our lives.'
'More than you know,' I added, my smile tight as I sipped my champagne.
When the dessert menus arrived, Diana leaned toward Barrett, her hand casually resting on his forearm. 'They have that pecan pie you love so much.'
I froze, my menu suspended midair. Barrett hated pecan pie. Had always claimed to be allergic to pecans throughout our entire marriage. I'd watched him send back dishes that had even touched them.
'That sounds perfect,' Barrett said, his eyes lighting up. 'Let's share one.'
The waiter brought the pie with two forks. I watched in stunned silence as Barrett took the first bite, closing his eyes in apparent bliss.
'This is incredible,' he moaned, scooping another forkful and offering it to Diana. 'You have to try this part with the caramel.'
Diana accepted the bite from his fork—an intimacy that sent bile rising in my throat. Her lips closed around the utensil that had just left his mouth, her eyes never leaving his.
'Aren't you allergic to pecans, Barrett?' I asked, my voice cutting through their moment.
His fork clattered against the plate. 'I—I outgrew it. Didn't I mention that?'
'No,' I said softly. 'You never mentioned that.'
Three days later, Barrett texted that he had an emergency client meeting. I was ready, dressed in black, my car parked two blocks from our penthouse. I followed his Audi through evening traffic until he pulled into the parking garage of Diana's luxury apartment building.
The security guard recognized me—Diana had hosted gatherings I'd attended as her 'niece.' I smiled and mentioned forgetting something after our lunch earlier. He waved me through without question.
Diana's unit was on the third floor, with a small balcony overlooking a courtyard. The gauzy curtains were drawn but not closed—enough to see inside without being obvious from the street. I positioned myself in the shadows of an adjacent building's overhang.
Through the window, I could see Barrett sitting on Diana's cream-colored sofa, his shirt discarded on the floor. Diana stood behind him, her fingers tracing the outline of the birthmark on his right shoulder—the mark he'd always been paranoid about, convinced it might be cancerous despite multiple dermatologists assuring him otherwise.
'My sweet boy,' Diana's voice carried faintly through the partially open balcony door. 'This is our special mark. Our connection. I've told you a thousand times it's not dangerous.'
Barrett leaned back against her, his posture suddenly childlike, vulnerable. 'I know. I just worry.'
'That's why you have me,' she murmured, bending to press her lips against the mark. 'To take care of you. To protect you.'
I stepped back, my chest constricting with a toxic blend of disgust and clarity. This wasn't just an affair. This was something far more twisted—a psychological manipulation I was only beginning to understand.
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