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He Risked My Life to Make His Mistress Famous Novel Cover

He Risked My Life to Make His Mistress Famous

The chemical stench clung to my skin like a second layer of sweat. Three days and nights inside the New Jersey plant had left me hollow-eyed and raw-throated, but I'd done it. I'd penetrated their security, documented their crimes, and survived. My hands trembled slightly as I clutched the small recorder in my pocket. The evidence was damning—audio recordings of managers discussing how to bypass environmental regulations, footage of toxic waste being dumped into waterways that fed local communities. I'd risked my life for this story, but it would be worth it. This exposé would finally put our network on the map. The elevator doors slid open to reveal the bustling New York newsroom. Conversations halted as I walked through, my appearance earning raised eyebrows. My hair hung limp with grease, my clothes reeked of industrial solvents, and exhaustion etched every line of my face.
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Chapter 2

The security guard's grip on my arm was firm but not brutal as he escorted me through the newsroom. My colleagues' stares burned into my back like laser points. I kept my chin up, refusing to give them the satisfaction of seeing me crumble. Seven years of investigative journalism had taught me to maintain composure even when my world was collapsing.

"Your personal items, Ms. Jacobs," the guard said, handing me a small box containing my coffee mug, a few pens, and a framed photo of Preston and me from our college days. I'd deliberately left it on my desk as a reminder of what we'd once been.

I nodded stiffly, taking the box without a word. My throat felt raw, not just from the chemical exposure but from the effort of swallowing my rage.

"Miranda."

I turned to see Marcus Thompson approaching, his weathered face creased with concern. The veteran cameraman had worked alongside me on countless investigations, his steady presence a constant in my professional life.

"This is bullshit," he muttered, his voice low enough that only I could hear. "Everyone knows that story was yours. I've seen you working those contacts for months."

David Chen appeared at my other side, his normally cheerful face tight with anger. "Something doesn't add up," he said quietly. "Preston's been acting strange for weeks."

Marcus glanced around before leaning closer. "If you need anything—anything at all—call this number." He pressed a small piece of paper into my palm. "It's a burner phone. We're not buying this sudden 'professional instability' excuse."

I clutched the paper tightly, feeling a flicker of warmth in my frozen chest. "Thank you."

"Stay strong," David whispered as the guard nudged me toward the elevator. "This isn't over."

---

The key wouldn't turn in the lock.

I stood in the hallway of what had been our apartment for five years, my hand trembling slightly as I tried again. The key that had always worked now met only resistance.

Then I noticed the fresh scratches around the lock—new pins installed, a new mechanism. He'd changed the locks while I was still at the newsroom.

A bitter laugh escaped my lips as I sank to the floor, my back against the door. Our door. Or rather, my door, until an hour ago.

Down the hall, a maintenance worker was wheeling out the last of several boxes—my clothes, books, and personal items hastily packed and discarded like garbage.

"Ms. Jacobs?" he called awkwardly. "Mr. Pierce said you'd be collecting these."

Of course he did. Preston had thought of everything, hadn't he? He'd planned this—not just the theft of my work, but my complete erasure from his life.

I twisted my wedding ring around my finger, the diamond catching the harsh hallway light. Seven years of marriage reduced to a pile of boxes in a dingy corridor.

"How long ago did he arrange this?" I asked, my voice surprisingly steady.

The worker shifted uncomfortably. "Three days ago, I think. He paid extra to have it done quickly."

Three days. While I was still undercover at the chemical plant, risking my life for our shared future, Preston was already planning my exit.

Something inside me shifted then—the shock crystallizing into something harder, colder. I stood up slowly, brushing dust from my pants.

"I'll take care of these," I told him. "You can go."

---

The motel room smelled of stale cigarettes and cheap disinfectant. I sat cross-legged on the sagging bed, my laptop balanced on my knees, the blue light illuminating my face in the darkness.

Preston had been careless once—years ago—linking our personal cloud accounts to share photos and documents. He'd forgotten about it, but I hadn't.

My fingers flew across the keyboard, executing the hack I'd perfected in college. Within minutes, I was inside his old account—the one he thought was inactive but still synced to his devices.

There it was: a folder labeled simply "P."

Inside were months of hotel receipts from the Four Seasons, the Peninsula, the Mandarin Oriental—luxury rooms booked on nights when Preston claimed to be working late or traveling for stories.

But it was the text messages that made my stomach lurch.

"Missing you already," Paige had written just three days ago. "Last night was incredible. Can't wait until we don't have to hide anymore."

"Soon," Preston had replied. "Once Miranda's out of the picture, we can stop pretending."

I scrolled further, nausea rising in my throat as their messages grew increasingly intimate. They discussed not just their affair but their plan—detailed strategies for how Paige would take credit for my work, how Preston would position himself as her mentor, how they would explain my "unfortunate departure."

"She's so pathetically loyal," Paige had written. "It's almost too easy."

Preston's response made my blood freeze: "She always was. That's what made her useful."

I closed my eyes, letting the rage wash through me like a cleansing fire. When I opened them again, my hands were steady as I began copying every file, every message, every piece of evidence to my secure drive.

They thought they'd destroyed me today.

They had no idea what I was capable of.

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