
Exposing Mistress's Deceit
Chapter 1
I stood at the kitchen counter at 5:30 AM, just like every morning for the past eight years. The familiar weight of the spatula in my hand, the soft sizzle of eggs in Gregory's favorite non-stick pan, the careful arrangement of his toast—golden brown, never burnt—on the plate I'd warmed in the oven. These small rituals had once felt like acts of love. Now they felt like muscle memory, performed by a woman I barely recognized.
Walker was still asleep upstairs, his room a disaster zone of expensive toys and clothes I'd picked up countless times. Gregory would be down soon, checking his phone while I served his breakfast, maybe grunting a thanks if I was lucky. The morning light filtered through our pristine kitchen windows, illuminating the granite countertops I'd lobbied for during our renovation three years ago. Everything looked perfect. Everything was perfect, wasn't it?
That's when I heard Gregory's voice drifting from his study, low and amused. He was on the phone, probably with one of his golf buddies. I almost tuned it out—his work calls were background noise to my morning routine—but something in his tone made me pause.
"...I'm telling you, Mark, it's like living with a ghost," Gregory's laugh was sharp, cutting through the quiet house like glass. "She's boring as watching paint dry. Seriously, I can't remember the last time she said anything interesting."
The spatula trembled in my hand. I set it down carefully on the counter, my movements suddenly deliberate and slow.
"Oh, you should see her now," Gregory continued, his voice carrying that casual cruelty I'd somehow never noticed before. "She's completely let herself go. Sweatpants every day, hair always in that same messy bun. I married a woman with ambition, and now I'm stuck with... this."
My breath caught in my throat. The eggs began to burn, but I couldn't move to turn off the heat. Eight years of getting up before dawn to make his breakfast. Eight years of ironing his shirts, managing his schedule, hosting his dinner parties, raising his son while he climbed the corporate ladder.
"The worst part? She acts like she's doing me some huge favor by taking care of Walker. Like being a mother is this massive sacrifice she's making for the family." His laughter was ugly now, mean. "She quit her job to play house, and now she wants a medal for it."
The smoke alarm began to beep. I reached over mechanically and turned off the burner, scraping the ruined eggs into the trash. My hands moved without conscious thought while my mind reeled. How long had he been talking about me like this? How many of his friends had heard these jokes? How many dinner parties had I hosted where the guests went home laughing about the pathetic housewife who didn't know her husband mocked her behind her back?
"Anyway, I've got to run. Virginia's probably burning my breakfast as we speak." Another laugh. "I swear, sometimes I wonder what I was thinking."
I heard the click of his phone, the creak of his chair. In thirty seconds, he'd walk into this kitchen expecting his perfect breakfast, his perfect wife, his perfect life. And I'd serve it to him with a smile, just like I had every morning for eight years.
But not today.
I cracked new eggs into the pan, my movements sharp and precise. The familiar routine felt different now—not loving, not automatic, but deliberate. I was making breakfast for a stranger. A stranger who happened to share my bed and my name and my child.
Later that morning, I stood outside Walker's kindergarten classroom, watching through the window as Mrs. Patterson helped him with his backpack. I was five minutes early, as always. Being punctual was one of those things I prided myself on—one of the many small ways I tried to be the perfect mother.
"My mom never does anything fun," Walker's voice carried clearly through the partially open door. "She just cleans all day like a robot. Sarah's mom takes her to the movies and buys her ice cream, but my mom just makes me eat vegetables and tells me to clean my room."
Mrs. Patterson glanced up and saw me through the window. Her expression shifted—surprise, then sympathy, then something that looked uncomfortably like pity. She'd heard this before. This wasn't the first time my five-year-old son had complained about me to his teacher.
"Well, Walker," Mrs. Patterson said gently, "I'm sure your mom loves you very much. Sometimes grown-ups show love in different ways."
"She's always tired," Walker continued, oblivious to my presence. "And she never laughs anymore. Dad says she used to be different, but I don't remember."
I pushed open the door, forcing a bright smile. "Ready to go, sweetheart?"
Walker looked up at me with those eyes—Gregory's eyes—and I saw something there I'd never noticed before. Not love, not even affection. Just expectation. The same look Gregory gave me when he wanted something.
"Can we get McDonald's?" Walker asked, already knowing I'd say no.
"We have dinner waiting at home," I replied automatically.
Mrs. Patterson gave me that look again—the one that said she understood more than she wanted to. "Have a good evening, Mrs. Carter."
That night, after Walker was in bed and Gregory was back in his study with another phone call, I climbed the stairs to our bedroom. I hadn't been up here during the day in months—there was always something to do downstairs, always some task that needed my attention.
I opened my closet and reached for the box on the top shelf, the one I hadn't touched since we moved into this house. Inside were photographs from my old life—my real life. Pictures from company events, award ceremonies, team-building retreats. In every single photo, I was laughing. My eyes were bright, my smile genuine. I looked... alive.
I carried the box to my vanity and spread the photos across the surface, then looked up at my reflection in the mirror. The woman staring back at me was a stranger—pale, hollow-eyed, wearing a faded t-shirt that had seen better days. When had I stopped seeing myself? When had I become invisible, even to myself?
I picked up one photograph—me at my promotion party, holding a champagne glass, surrounded by colleagues who respected me, valued my opinions, saw me as more than just someone's wife and mother. The woman in that picture had dreams, ambitions, a voice that mattered.
I set the photograph down and looked in the mirror again. This time, I didn't see a stranger. I saw a woman who had forgotten who she was, but who could remember. A woman who had given up everything and received nothing in return. A woman who was tired of being invisible.
A woman who was ready to reclaim her life.
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