
He Opened the Door, I Walked Out
Chapter 2
The manila envelope arrived three days later.
I didn't flinch when I saw the return address — "Hartwell Investigations" in clean, professional type. I'd hired the detective six weeks ago, back when Richard's pattern of "late nights" had become too obvious to ignore. My friend Sarah, a divorce attorney who'd seen it all, had slipped me his name over coffee like a prescription.
"Just get me proof," I'd told Hartwell. "Everything."
Now I had it.
I took the envelope to my home office, closed the door, and spread the contents across my desk like a surgeon laying out instruments.
The photographs were sharp. Telephoto lens, professional grade. Richard and Amanda walking into the Sunset Motel on Route 9 — a place so far below his taste level that the choice was almost an insult in itself. His hand on her lower back. Her head thrown back laughing. Timestamps on every shot. Tuesday afternoons. Thursday evenings. A pattern as predictable as his quarterly earnings reports.
The final image: them leaving separately. Richard first, checking his phone like a man clocking back in from lunch. Amanda twenty minutes later, hair mussed, glowing with the satisfaction of a girl who thinks she's winning.
She wasn't. She just didn't know it yet.
Hartwell's report filled in the rest. Credit card receipts from the motel. Restaurant bills from their lunches. And one detail that stopped me cold — a Victoria's Secret receipt, size 32B, charged to Richard's corporate card. Not my size. Never my size.
It was the corporate card that held my attention.
Richard had used his company credit card to buy lingerie for his intern.
I'd spent fifteen years in publishing before I married Richard — ten of those as a senior editor at a major house, managing teams, navigating corporate politics, sitting through more HR compliance trainings than I could count. I knew how companies worked. I knew what buried people. And I knew that what Richard had just done wasn't just a personal betrayal — it was a fireable offense.
I pulled up my laptop and started a new document. Not the asset spreadsheet I'd been maintaining for months — that was already thorough. The house, the 401k, the Hamptons property, the car collection. Seven point two million dollars, neatly catalogued. That work was done.
This was different. I titled it: "Corporate Liability."
I started typing. Fast. Organized. The way I used to build editorial reports — clean sections, bullet-proof logic, no emotion.
Item one: Richard was a senior vice president. Amanda was an intern in his department. Direct chain of authority. Every major corporation had policies against exactly this — supervisor-subordinate sexual relationships. The power imbalance alone was a termination trigger.
Item two: The corporate card. Company resources used for personal, sexual purposes. That wasn't just an HR violation — that was potential fraud. Depending on how the company's legal team read it, it could mean immediate dismissal for cause. No severance. No golden parachute. No negotiation.
Item three: The pattern. Tuesdays and Thursdays, during business hours. According to Hartwell's timeline, at least four of their motel meetings fell within Richard's official work schedule. He wasn't just cheating on me — he was cheating his employer. Time theft. Misuse of company resources. A man being paid $400,000 a year to close deals was spending his afternoons in a $79-a-night motel.
I sat back in my chair and looked at what I'd written. Three items. Three career-ending bullets. And Richard had handed me all of them without even realizing it, because he'd never once considered that his boring, rational wife might know how to use them.
My phone buzzed. A text from Richard: "Working late again tonight. Don't wait up. Love you."
I read it twice. Love you. Two words he typed out of habit, the way you sign a form without reading it. Automatic. Meaningless. Sent from whatever bar or hotel lobby he was sitting in, waiting for a girl half his age to make him feel important.
I typed back: "No problem. Exploring some new interests myself. See you tomorrow."
His reply was instant: "That's wonderful, darling. I'm so glad you're embracing our new arrangement."
Our new arrangement. I almost smiled.
I picked up the phone and called Sarah Chen. She answered on the second ring.
"The detective's report came in," I said. "And I need to talk to you about more than just asset protection."
"More than assets?" Sarah's voice sharpened with interest. "What are you thinking?"
"Richard used his corporate card to buy his intern lingerie. He's been meeting her during work hours on company time. He's her direct supervisor." I paused, letting each fact land. "I'm thinking that before we talk about dividing assets, we should talk about making sure he doesn't have a career to go back to."
The silence on the other end lasted three seconds. Then Sarah laughed — low, sharp, the laugh of a woman who'd destroyed better men than Richard Mills.
"I can see you tomorrow morning. Ten o'clock."
"Perfect."
I hung up and turned back to my laptop. The "Corporate Liability" document glowed on the screen, three neat sections of professional ruin waiting to be deployed at exactly the right moment. Not now. Not yet. Timing was everything — I'd learned that in publishing. You didn't release the big story until every piece was in place and every exit was blocked.
Richard wanted an open marriage. He wanted freedom and flexibility and all the modern buzzwords that made infidelity sound like personal development.
Fine. I'd give him openness. I'd open every door he'd been hiding behind — the HR records, the expense reports, the motel receipts — and I'd let the light flood in until there was nowhere left to hide.
But first, I needed one more thing. Something that had nothing to do with revenge and everything to do with proving — to myself, to the world, to the smug, cheating man who'd stopped seeing me years ago — that Elaine Mills still had power.
I closed the laptop and poured myself a glass of wine.
Tomorrow, I'd start building the trap. Tonight, I'd let him think he was winning.
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