Follow
Chapters
Share
From Political Wife To Power Player Novel Cover

From Political Wife To Power Player

I was the perfect political wife, the brilliant strategist behind my husband Hamilton' s mayoral campaign. Our life was a masterpiece of ambition and domestic bliss. Then, a single message on his laptop shattered it all: a hotel key card, a winking devil emoji, and a note about their next "policy discussion." My first thought was our rebellious daughter, Bryanna. But the truth was far worse. The affair was with a young staffer, Kalie. And Bryanna wasn't a victim; she was an accomplice. I overheard her telling Hamilton that Kalie "gets him" and that I was just a "drama queen." She was covering for them, idolizing the woman destroying our family. My own daughter saw me as an obstacle, a burden. She and my husband were in on the lie together, laughing at me behind my back. They thought I was a fool. They were wrong. They broke the wife, but they unleashed the strategist. On election eve, in front of the entire city and live television cameras, I decided I would introduce the world to the real Hamilton Fields.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The next few weeks were a masterclass in deception. I moved through our opulent home like a ghost, a perfect wife in a perfect facade. Each morning, I would kiss Hamilton goodbye, watch him leave for another day of campaigning, another day of lies. Each night I would greet him with a smile, listen to his inflated stories of public service, and pretend not to see the guilt flickering in his eyes, or the lingering scent of another woman on his expensive cologne.

Today, my charade felt particularly potent. Hamilton was supposedly speaking at a community outreach event across town, a photo opportunity with local youth groups. He had messaged me earlier, a saccharine text: "Thinking of you, love. Wish you were here. Just another day saving the world!"

I stared at the message, a bitter laugh dying in my throat. Thinking of me? He was thinking of Kalie. He was probably with her right now, in the luxurious penthouse suite above his campaign office, a place he often used for "private consultations." I knew, because DeepStateDiaries had told me. My anonymous ally had quickly become my silent commander, guiding me through the murky waters of digital espionage.

From the window of a nondescript sedan, parked a block away from the gleaming high-rise, I watched. The building, Hamilton's campaign headquarters, was a hive of activity. Donors, volunteers, media-all buzzing around the man they believed in. The man I had built.

Hamilton's black SUV pulled up to the curb, not at the main entrance, but at a discreet side door. He emerged, radiating charisma, waving at a few passersby, a practiced, almost involuntary gesture. He wasn't alone. Kalie Villarreal, looking far too young and far too pleased with herself, was by his side, carrying a stack of "urgent" campaign reports. She was wearing a dress that clung to her slender figure, a little too revealing for a professional setting, a little too similar to the type of dress Hamilton bought me for formal events.

He leaned in, whispering something to her, and Kalie giggled, a sound that grated on my nerves. Then, Hamilton' s phone buzzed. I saw him glance at it, his smile faltering for a split second before he plastered it back on. He was talking to someone, his voice low, urgent. I watched his face. It shifted, a flash of annoyance, then a practiced concern. He gave Kalie a quick, almost dismissive nod, then ducked into the side entrance. Kalie followed, her hips swaying a little too confidently.

DeepStateDiaries had equipped me with a directional microphone, disguised as a pair of innocuous sunglasses. I put them on, adjusting the tiny earpiece. Hamilton's voice, distorted but clear, filled my ear.

"Yes, of course, darling," he said, his tone dripping with false sweetness. "Emergency? What kind of emergency? You know I'm in the middle of… very important meetings." There was a pause, a muffled murmur from the other end. "Oh, the headache again? My poor sweetheart. I'm so sorry. I'll… I'll try to get away as soon as I can. Just finish up this event. Yes, I promise. Love you too."

My stomach clenched. He was talking to me. The headache was my pre-arranged signal, a fabricated excuse to test his loyalty, to drag him away from his mistress. He was a master of performance.

I watched as Kalie, now inside, pointed towards a private elevator, the one that went directly to the penthouse. Hamilton gave a quick, almost furtive glance around, then followed her. The doors slid shut, sealing their secret world.

The sight of them, so brazen, so confident in their deception, burned a hole in my chest. My hands gripped the steering wheel, my knuckles white. A cold, hard knot formed in my stomach, not of sadness, but of pure, distilled rage. He was not just cheating; he was mocking me, using my own home, my own daughter, as a shield for his sordid affairs.

I had to be careful. I knew the building's layout. Years of campaign events, of scouting locations, had given me an intimate knowledge of this city's underbelly. There was a service entrance, a back alley that led to a maintenance staircase. It was not pretty, but it was discreet.

I parked the car, my movements precise, mechanical. The sunglasses still on, recording every sound. I walked with purpose, my heart a dull drum against my ribs. The alley reeked of stale garbage and exhaust fumes. Not the glamorous backdrop for a mayoral candidate's affair. I found the unmarked door, a heavy steel slab. It was kept unlocked for deliveries, a detail I remembered from a charity gala Hamilton had hosted here years ago. I pushed it open, the screech echoing in the narrow space.

The staircase was dimly lit, reeking of disinfectant and dust. I climbed, my heels clacking against the concrete, each step a deliberate act of defiance. My mind was a whirlwind of memories: Hamilton's promises, his charm, the life we had built. All of it, a lie. A carefully constructed illusion for his own advancement. He had married me for my mind, my strategic brilliance, my ability to polish his image. My heart, my love – they were just collateral damage.

The climb felt endless, each floor a testament to the years I had wasted on this man. I reached the penthouse level, my breath coming in ragged gasps. Not from exertion, but from the raw, unadulterated pain that had finally broken through my carefully constructed composure. I stood outside the heavy oak door, listening. Muffled voices, laughter. His laughter.

My hand still clutched the burner phone. I dialed Hamilton's number. It rang twice.

"Hello, darling," he answered, his voice breathless, slightly strained. I could hear a faint, high-pitched giggle in the background, quickly stifled. "Everything alright? You sound… out of breath."

"Hamilton," I said, forcing a tremor into my voice, "my head… it's gotten much worse. I feel dizzy. I think I need you to come home. Now."

There was a beat of silence, a pregnant pause that spoke volumes. Then, a sigh, heavy with feigned concern. "Oh, Caroline. My poor love. I'm so sorry. But you know I'm in the middle of a very important meeting with the Mayor's office. It's crucial for the campaign."

"Hamilton," I insisted, my voice cracking, "I'm not asking. I need you. I feel faint. I might… I might need to go to the hospital." That did it. The word "hospital" was a red flag, a potential public relations nightmare.

"The hospital?" he repeated, his tone sharper now, laced with genuine anxiety, not for me, but for his image. "No, no, darling, don't do anything drastic. I'll… I'll be right there. I'll wrap things up here. Give me fifteen minutes. Max. Just… stay calm. Don't call anyone." The last part was a clear order, not a request. He didn't want anyone else involved, anyone else to see the cracks in his perfect facade.

"Okay," I whispered, barely audible. "Just… please hurry."

He hung up. I stood there, listening. A muffled exclamation, then Kalie's voice, raised in an angry protest. "What? No! You can't just leave! We're not done, Hamilton!"

Hamilton's voice, low and placating. "Kalie, darling, it's an emergency. Caroline, you know. She can be… fragile. I'll be back. Soon." The lie was so smooth, so practiced. He didn't even try to hide the contempt in his voice when he spoke about me.

Then, the sound of movement, a door opening and closing. Within minutes, the elevator chimed, and I heard his hurried footsteps fade down the hallway. He was gone. Fleeing back to our illusion of a home, leaving his mistress in his wake.

The penthouse door opened again, a furious Kalie storming out. She was even prettier up close, youthful and vibrant. Her red dress, now slightly disheveled, clung to her curves. She looked like a woman who had just been abruptly interrupted in the throes of passion. She leaned against the doorframe, her face flushed, her carefully applied makeup smudged. She checked her phone, then let out a frustrated groan.

"That old hag," she muttered, not to anyone in particular, but loud enough for me to hear through the mic. "Always pulling some stunt. What a drama queen. As if he actually cares." She ran a hand through her hair, then looked up, her eyes narrowing. She caught her reflection in the polished steel of the elevator doors and quickly composed herself, forcing a smile. But the anger still simmered beneath the surface.

Then, she noticed something. A small, delicate gold bracelet on her wrist. It was a replica. An exact replica of the vintage Tiffany bracelet Hamilton had given me on our tenth wedding anniversary, claiming it was a family heirloom. My stomach churned. He had bought her one too. Or perhaps, he had simply taken mine, and given it to her.

A slow, dawning realization hit me, a punch to the gut that stole my breath away. Kalie. Kalie Villarreal. Bryanna' s high school guidance counselor. The "mentor" Bryanna had been raving about, the "coolest adult ever." The woman who, Bryanna had enthusiastically reported, had "helped Dad with his campaign strategy, Mom, she's so smart!"

Bryanna. My daughter. The pieces clicked into place with sickening clarity. Kalie wasn't just his mistress. She was Bryanna's confidante, her role model. Bryanna had admired her, idolized her, and been complicit in this monstrous lie. She hadn't just covered for Hamilton; she had actively embraced the woman who was systematically destroying our family.

My mind replayed scenes: Bryanna's glowing descriptions of Kalie, the way she would defend Hamilton's late nights, her sudden coolness towards me, the subtle eye rolls when I offered advice. She wasn' t just naive. She was involved. She had chosen his side. My own daughter.

The betrayal was a physical weight, crushing me, squeezing all the air from my lungs. My chest burned, my head throbbed, my vision blurred. I sank against the cold wall of the stairwell, my legs unable to support me. The pain was unbearable, a thousand tiny shards of glass piercing my heart. My daughter. My own flesh and blood. Idolizing the woman who was tearing our family apart, and actively participating in my humiliation.

The grief, sharp and raw, threatened to consume me. But then, a flicker. A spark. Deep within the ashes of my broken heart, something hard and cold began to glow. This wasn't just about betrayal anymore. This was about absolute, unforgiving annihilation. They had broken me, but they had also unleashed something far more dangerous.

I pushed myself up, my muscles screaming in protest. My hands were steady now. My eyes, which had been filled with tears, were dry and sharp. The world outside the penthouse door, the world of Hamilton' s ambition and Kalie' s youthful arrogance, was about to learn a very painful lesson.

I pulled out my phone, ignoring the burning hot tears that finally tracked paths down my cheeks. My first call was to DeepStateDiaries. "I know everything," I said, my voice eerily calm, emotionless. "And I have a plan. I need every piece of information you have on Kalie Villarreal. Social media, financial records, everything. And I need it now."

My second call was to my lawyer, a woman I had trusted implicitly for years. "Prepare the divorce papers," I told her, my voice steel. "And I need a forensic accountant. I want to strip him bare."

My third call was to my assistant, a loyal young woman who had been with me since I started my own, now dormant, political consulting firm. "I need you to clear my schedule," I instructed, "and then I need you to start compiling a multimedia presentation. Everything on Hamilton. His campaign promises, his public statements. And leave space for a… very special surprise."

"Where will this be presented, Caroline?" she asked, her voice cautious.

I looked back at the closed penthouse door, at the symbol of his betrayal. A cruel smile touched my lips. "At the election-eve rally, of course. Live. On the jumbotrons. I want the world to see the man I married, in all his glory."

The line went silent. My assistant, a seasoned professional, understood. This wasn't just about revenge. It was about total, public immolation.

"Consider it done," she said, her voice grim, but with an undercurrent of something that sounded like awe.

I hung up. The game had changed. They had chosen to play dirty. And now, I would show them what a real strategist could do.

And I would start with their precious Bryanna.

You may also like

Evil Luna's Sacrifice Novel Cover
8.7
Carissa Moss became a prisoner of war and stayed in the palace, far from her pack. For the safety of her husband and people, she willingly warmed the king's bed whenever he called. On the day of her husband's death in the dungeon, Carissa vowed to avenge Duncan Bayhill's cruelty and free her people. However, a harsh reality struck her. The day the queen died, Duncan was her second chance.
From Rejected Defect To Supreme Queen Novel Cover
8.3
Angel was slammed onto the freezing stone slabs of the central square, surrounded by the deafening, mocking laughter of her clan. Her own sister, Jasmine, stood over her with a look of pure malice, loudly and falsely accusing Angel of sneaking into the Chief's tent to seduce him. Then, Al Stein, the man who had sworn to be her mate, stepped out of the crowd with a twisted face of disgust. "You're a genetic reject. You can't give me children. You're useless." He threw their bone mate ring hard at her face, cutting her cheek, as the crowd roared for her blood. Without a trial, the High Oracle stripped her of her citizenship and sentenced her to eternal exile in the deadly wasteland. To make her punishment a complete joke, the guards dragged out a comatose, dying outcast named Kain, slicing Angel's finger to force a mate bond between the two defects. They were tossed out into the raging blizzard like discarded corpses, the heavy steel gates slamming shut behind them, cutting off all light and warmth. Angel crawled through the snow, her vision blurring from extreme starvation and the biting wind, suffocating under the weight of their lies. Why did her own blood frame her? Why did her mate throw her away to die in the ice? Just as the freezing shadow of death wrapped around her, a sharp, mechanical voice exploded in her mind. [Genetic Evolution Codex activated. Host Status: Legendary Kitsune Prime.] The despair evaporated from her chest, replaced by a burning vow to survive and make every single one of them pay.
Healing My Seven Broken Beast Mates Novel Cover
9.4
My retirement was finally approved, and I was supposed to be sipping drinks on a sunny beach. Instead, a cold system voice forced me into a nightmare scenario: "Cursed Mates Who Want Me Dead." I woke up in a stinking cave, trapped in the body of a psychopathic tribal princess. The memories that flooded my brain made me sick. The original owner of this body had forcibly marked seven of the continent's most powerful beast-men and reduced them to tortured pets. She had ripped the shimmering scales off Jordi the Merfolk prince, gouged out a proud wolf-man's power crystal, and snapped an eagle-man's magnificent wings. Now, Jordi was a mutilated, terrified mess hiding in a corner. He was so traumatized that he tried to slit his own throat just to escape me. His sister was actively trying to assassinate me. To make matters worse, the system warned me that if I didn't heal these seven ticking time bombs, my soul would be erased. Yet the future timeline clearly showed that these men would eventually unite, burn my tribe to the ground, and dismember me alive. I was paying for a monster's sins. Every time I tried to show mercy, they thought it was a sick new torture method. Words were useless, and my very presence was a trigger. But I am a Tier-S operative, and I don't play the victim. I forced the system to unlock my powers and strapped on my tactical gear. "Stay here and don't starve." I left the trembling Merfolk behind and walked into the deadly primitive forest, heading straight for the powerful Oasis Tribe to take back his stolen scales by force.
MARKED BY THE MOON; SHE WHO SHINES IN BLACK Novel Cover
8.4
She was the fat, invisible girl at a school for wolves... until the system awakened. Dahlia Reed has always been the outcast at Northmont High-a secret academy for elite werewolves. She's human, plus-sized, and bullied by almost everyone. Until her 17th birthday. > [SYSTEM ONLINE. USER IDENTIFIED: MOON-BLESSED.] Suddenly, Dahlia can sense danger before it strikes. She moves faster. Thinks sharper. And there's a strange black glow beneath her skin. Something ancient is waking up inside her. She's not just human anymore. She's Moon-Blessed-the last of a forgotten bloodline with powers the wolves fear. Worse? The bond marks her as the mate of Kyren Voss-the cold, powerful Alpha prince who wants nothing to do with her. But the Moon Goddess already made her choice. Now Dahlia must survive jealous rivals, secret attacks, and powers she doesn't understand. Because deep in Northmont, a war is brewing... And she may be the spark that starts it. One girl. One system. One prophecy that could destroy the wolf world. Her glow-up isn't just magical-it's dangerous
My Arrogant Ex Is My Gaming Master Novel Cover
9.3
Grace finally decided to end her toxic, one-sided relationship with Adelbert, the arrogant heir to a global empire, by texting him to terminate their family trust. His response was a single, freezing word: "Done." When they accidentally bumped into each other in a law firm elevator, Adelbert looked right through her. "I don't know her," he stated coldly to his frat brothers, treating her like invisible trash. Humiliated and completely exhausted, Grace sought an escape in a brutal shooter game called PUBG. But by a sick twist of fate, the random matchmaking threw her into a squad with Adelbert's frat brothers and a god-tier, toxic player named 'Ø'. 'Ø' relentlessly mocked her terrible skills, humiliating her and calling her a "pig" over the voice chat. Yet, during the final shootout, this ruthless player suddenly threw his character in front of hers, taking a fatal barrage of bullets just to keep her alive. Grace soon uncovered the terrifying truth: the top-ranked 'Ø' was actually Adelbert himself. She was utterly confused and furious. Why would the untouchable billionaire who ignored her legal texts and publicly humiliated her suddenly sacrifice himself for her in a cheap video game? Refusing to swallow her pride in both the real and digital worlds, Grace sent a direct challenge to his gaming profile. "I'll prove I'm not a pig." Across the city, Adelbert stared at the notification, a dark smirk curling his lips, and clicked accept.
Playing The Toxic Wife To Attract Billionaires Novel Cover
9.1
June woke up transmigrated into the body of a ruthless billionaire's toxic, disposable wife. Before she could even process the massive Beverly Hills mansion, a cold system voice announced she had exactly five minutes of lifespan remaining. To survive, she was forced to bind with the system and strictly maintain the original owner's "brainless, abusive drama queen" persona to earn hours to live. She was forced to violently slap hot coffee out of a terrified maid's hands and physically spank her manipulative five-year-old stepson. When she tried to escape this nightmare by throwing divorce papers at her terrifying husband, Isaac Walton, he simply ripped them to shreds. Every time she tried to be reasonable or show a hint of kindness, the system tortured her with agonizing cardiac pain, cementing her status as the most hated monster in the family. The most absurd part happened when she threw a hysterical, system-mandated tantrum over a gossip magazine, and Isaac's icy demeanor suddenly melted. He gently touched her hair, offering the one thing she desperately needed. "Stop crying. I'll handle it." Just as a spark of hope ignited in her chest, the system's critical death warning exploded in her skull: accepting his sympathy would instantly deduct thirty days of her life. To stay alive, June had no choice but to violently slap away the only hand reaching out to save her, forcing herself to play the greedy villain while her husband's gaze turned dangerously dark.