
Exposing Husband's Fraud
Chapter 2
I woke to the ping of notifications flooding my phone. Squinting at the screen, I saw dozens of tags and mentions—all linking to the "Born Unlucky" profile. My stomach twisted as I scrolled through the comments.
"Is this the woman from the app? She looks just like the picture!"
"God, her life really is a disaster..."
"Someone should tell her to stay indoors today—might be safer..."
A photo of me leaving the gala last night had been posted online. Someone had taken a candid shot, my expression frozen in that moment of public humiliation. The caption read: "The real-life 'Born Unlucky' star spotted in Manhattan!"
My hands trembled as I dropped the phone. This wasn't just a private humiliation anymore—it was public. Viral. Permanent.
I threw clothes into a bag, not bothering to fold them properly. Toothbrush, phone charger, passport—I grabbed essentials while my mind raced. I couldn't stay here. Not with Dante's cold dismissal still ringing in my ears.
"Going somewhere?" Mrs. Coleman appeared in the doorway, her voice dripping with false concern.
"I need some air," I managed, zipping the bag closed.
"Adriana, dear, running away won't change your... situation." She emphasized the word with subtle cruelty. "Perhaps you should focus on being more useful instead of dramatic."
I didn't respond. Couldn't. The words would have shattered what little composure I had left.
---
My best friend answered the door before I could knock, coffee mug in hand.
"I've been expecting you," she said simply, pulling me inside.
Her apartment was warm, cluttered with books and takeout containers—the opposite of our sterile penthouse.
"I saw what's happening online," she said, settling me on her couch. "It's everywhere."
"I don't know what to do," I whispered, accepting the mug she offered.
She disappeared into her bedroom, returning with a folder. "I've been collecting these for a while. Thought you should see them."
Inside were screenshots—dozens of them. Dante and Ivanna, exchanging messages that grew increasingly intimate over months. Plans made while I was traveling with his mother. Hotel reservations while I was visiting my father.
And then I saw it.
A photo of Ivanna, posed in front of a mirror, wearing the Bergdorf Goodman dress—my dress. The one Dante had said was "too expensive and impractical" when I'd admired it on our anniversary.
"For the woman who actually deserves it," read the caption beneath.
Something snapped inside me. The dress wasn't just a gift—it was a declaration. A trophy.
"I'm sorry," my friend said softly. "I debated whether to show you, but... you deserve to know the truth."
---
I returned to the penthouse with steel in my spine.
Dante was in the living room with his mother, both looking up as I entered.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
"Adriana," Dante sighed, setting down his whiskey. "About last night—"
"I want a divorce."
The words hung in the air between us.
Dante laughed—actually laughed. "A divorce? Don't be ridiculous."
"I saw the photos, Dante. You and Ivanna. The dress."
Something flickered in his eyes—not guilt, but annoyance at being caught.
"And what exactly do you think you'll get in a divorce?" he asked, leaning forward. "You have no assets, no career. You've been out of the workforce for years."
"Someone should be grateful a man like Dante kept a failed homemaker around this long," Mrs. Coleman added, examining her manicure.
"I'll take nothing if that's what it costs to be free of this," I said.
Dante's smile turned cold. "Nothing is exactly what you'll get."
He pulled out his phone, tapped a few times, then held it up to show me. "Your credit cards are now frozen. Consider it a preview of what happens when you make poor decisions."
---
That night, curled on my friend's couch, I couldn't sleep. The app that had destroyed my life kept playing on my mind.
With a sigh, I reached for my laptop. If I was going to be the "Born Unlucky" woman forever, at least I'd understand exactly how they'd done it.
I downloaded "Destiny Decode" and installed it on my test device. But instead of entering my information, I connected my laptop and opened the developer console.
Old habits die hard. My fingers moved automatically, dissecting the app's architecture layer by layer.
Then I saw it—the encryption pattern. The specific way data was anonymized and processed. The unique algorithm structure.
My breath caught in my throat.
This wasn't just any code. This was my code—the "Ghost-Protocol" project I'd developed in my junior year. The one I'd shown Dante when we were dating, the one I'd never published.
I recognized my work like I'd recognize my own fingerprint.
They hadn't just used my personal information—they'd stolen my intellectual property. The entire foundation of the app was built on my university project.
As the realization dawned, something shifted inside me. This wasn't just about a cheating husband anymore.
This was war.
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