
Exposing Husband's Deceit
Chapter 1
The silk sheets felt cold against my skin as I lay in our Manhattan penthouse, staring at the ceiling where shadows from the city lights danced in patterns that seemed to mock my happiness. Three hours. Ellis had been in the bathroom for three hours on our wedding night, and the champagne bubbles in my stomach had long since turned to lead.
I traced the platinum band on my finger, still unable to believe I was Mrs. Spencer. The wedding had been everything I'd dreamed of—the cathedral ceremony, the reception at the Plaza, Ellis looking devastatingly handsome in his tailored tuxedo as he whispered promises of forever in my ear. Now, wrapped in the designer negligee I'd chosen specifically for this moment, I felt like a fool.
Ellis's phone buzzed against the nightstand, the screen lighting up with Veronica's name. My sister-in-law's photo smiled back at me—that perfect, practiced smile she wore at every family gathering. The phone buzzed again, insistent.
"Ellis?" I called toward the bathroom door. "Your phone."
The bathroom door flew open, and Ellis emerged, his hair damp, a towel wrapped around his waist. He moved with unusual urgency, snatching the phone before I could blink.
"Veronica?" His voice carried a tenderness I'd never heard him use with me. "What's wrong?"
I sat up, the silk straps of my negligee sliding off my shoulders. Through the phone's speaker, I could hear Veronica's voice, breathy and panicked.
"Ellis, I'm having terrible chest pains. I can't breathe properly. I think something's really wrong."
My husband's face transformed, concern etching lines around his eyes. "Where are you? Have you called 911?"
"I'm at home, but I'm scared to be alone. Could you... could you come over? Just until I feel better?"
The request hung in the air like poison. On our wedding night. She was asking my husband to leave our bed on our wedding night.
Ellis was already moving toward the closet, pulling out clothes with practiced efficiency. "Of course. I'll be right there."
"Ellis." My voice came out smaller than I intended. "It's our wedding night."
He paused, shirt half-buttoned, and looked at me with something that might have been pity. "Lara, she could be having a heart attack. She's family."
Family. The word tasted bitter. "Then call an ambulance. Call Sutton."
"Sutton's in London on business, you know that." He finished dressing, his movements sharp and decisive. "And Veronica specifically asked for me. She trusts me."
Trusts him. On our wedding night, his sister-in-law trusted him more than his wife needed him.
Ellis leaned down and pressed a perfunctory kiss to my forehead, the kind you'd give a child. "I'll be back as soon as I can. This is just a precaution."
I watched him leave, heard the elevator doors close, and felt something fundamental shift inside my chest. The woman who had walked down the aisle this morning, radiant with love and hope, was dying in this moment. In her place, something colder and more calculating was being born.
Twenty minutes passed. Then thirty. The city hummed below our windows, oblivious to the destruction of my marriage. I found myself reaching for my phone, my fingers moving with a purpose I didn't fully understand yet.
The Uber arrived within minutes. I'd thrown on jeans and a sweater, my wedding dress hanging in the closet like a ghost of the day's promises. Veronica lived in a converted brownstone in the Upper East Side, close enough to walk but far enough that Ellis's urgency seemed almost theatrical in retrospect.
I stood across the street, hidden in the shadows between streetlights, and looked up at her third-floor windows. The lights were on, warm and inviting. No ambulance. No emergency vehicles. Just the soft glow of what looked like candles.
Then I saw them.
Through the sheer curtains, two figures moved together in an embrace that had nothing to do with medical emergencies. Ellis's hands tangled in Veronica's hair, her head thrown back in laughter. They moved with the familiarity of lovers, not the urgency of a medical crisis.
My phone was in my hands before I consciously decided to record. The video captured everything—their passionate kiss, the way Ellis lifted Veronica onto the kitchen counter, the intimate conversation that followed.
"God, I thought she'd never fall asleep," Ellis's voice carried through the slightly open window. "Did you see her face when I left? Like a kicked puppy."
Veronica's laughter was like breaking glass. "Poor little Lara. So trusting, so naive. Does she really think you married her for love?"
"She's useful," Ellis replied, his hands roaming over Veronica's body. "The perfect wife on paper. But you... you're what I actually want."
"How long do we have to keep up this charade?"
"Not long. Once I have access to her trust fund and the business connections through her design work, we can figure out the next step."
I stopped recording. My hands were steady, my breathing controlled, but inside, something was crystallizing into diamond-hard resolve. They thought I was naive. They thought I was weak.
They were about to learn how wrong they were.
Back in the penthouse, I sat at Ellis's desk and opened my laptop. The video uploaded to a secure cloud account, backed up in three different locations. Then I opened a new email and typed a single line:
"I believe you should see what your brother and wife are doing. I expect you to return to the family estate within three days."
I attached the video and sent it to Sutton Spencer's private email address.
The game had begun.
You may also like





