He Streamed Our Divorce, I Streamed His Funeral Novel Cover

He Streamed Our Divorce, I Streamed His Funeral

9.0 / 10.0
“A wife at home, an affair is even more exciting.” When my husband Marcus, the arrogant CEO of Vance Media, livestreamed his blatant infidelity to millions of viewers, he thought he had achieved the ultimate public humiliation. He paraded his blonde influencer mistress in my boardroom, mocked me as obsolete "legacy code," and dumped me with a heavily rigged divorce agreement. He wanted to watch me break. But he made one fatal calculation : he forgot who built his kingdom. I wasn’t just his scorned ex-wife. I was The Architect—the mastermind who coded the very platform, the algorithms, and the recommendation engines he used to humiliate me. If Marcus wants a show, I’ll give him a finale he’ll never forget. Armed with an ancient backdoor kill switch and backed by Kai Thorne, a lethal rival billionaire who sees my intellect as the ultimate asset, I am stepping out of the shadows. Step by step, I will data-mine his secrets, strip away his wealth, and turn the digital mob against him. Marcus thought he won the narrative, but class is officially in session—and I am about to burn his factory to the ground.

He Streamed Our Divorce, I Streamed His Funeral Chapter 1

The low hum of the HVAC system was the only thing keeping me company in the storage closet. I’d only meant to rest my eyes for five minutes, just until the interminable speeches of the annual meeting were over.

My head was resting against a stack of leftover gift boxes, the smell of cardboard and dust filling my nose, when a sharp, trilling noise shattered the quiet.

I jolted awake, my pulse spiking like a trapped bird. The sound wasn’t coming from my phone. It was coming from the intern’s phone that had been left charging on the folding table next to me. The screen lit up the dark space, casting long, eerie shadows against the concrete wall.

I blinked, rubbing the sleep from my eyes, and reached for it, intending to silence it so I wouldn't get caught slacking off. But as my thumb grazed the screen, the device unlocked to a livestream.

“A wife at home, an affair is even more exciting.”

The title seared itself into my retinas. The thumbnail showed a man’s hand, distinctly masculine with a gold signet ring on the pinky, resting possessively on a woman’s thigh. I knew that ring. I’d bought it for Marcus ten years ago to celebrate our first IPO.

The realization hit me with the force of a physical blow, knocking the wind out of my lungs, but strangely, my hands didn't shake. I tapped the volume down, keeping it just audible enough to hear the heavy breathing and the soft giggles of the woman in the video. The view count was spinning violently upward: 800,000 viewers.

The chat was a blur of scrolling text. “The CEO really knows how to have fun,” one comment read. “Gold digger or true love?” read another. “Lucky girl.”

I should have been screaming. I should have been throwing the phone against the wall or collapsing into a puddle of tears. That was the normal reaction. That was what a wife did when she saw her husband, the CEO of the very company whose annual meeting was happening just down the hall, livestreaming his infidelity to the entire world.

Instead, my brain shifted gears. The pain was there, a sharp, jagged stone in my gut, but over it, a cold, analytical layer settled like a blanket of snow. I looked at the screen not as a betrayed woman, but as the architect of the platform Marcus was using.

I studied the hook of the title. “A wife at home…” It was provocative, utilizing the ‘forbidden fruit’ psychological trigger. It pandered to the primal desire for transgression without being explicitly vulgar in the metadata, ensuring it wouldn't get auto-flagged by the content moderation bots. Clever. But not clever enough.

I glanced at the timestamp. 8:45 PM. Prime time. Peak user engagement on the East Coast, just as the West

Coast was getting off work. The recommendation algorithm was pushing it aggressively because of the skyrocketing retention rate—people weren't just clicking; they were staying to watch the car crash.

I had personally crafted that recommendation logic a decade ago. I knew exactly how much weight the system gave to the first three minutes of watch time and the velocity of concurrent viewers. Marcus was gaming the system I built, riding the wave of engagement I had engineered.

The irony was bitter, tasting like copper in my mouth. He was using my tools to humiliate me.

A notification popped up on the stream: The user is gifting a 'Rocket'!

My eyes narrowed. I recognized the user handle. It was a junior VP from Marketing. He was watching this.

He was participating in it.

The realization crystalized something in me. I wasn’t a victim in this narrative; I was a variable that hadn’t been accounted for. I stood up, smoothing the wrinkles from my blouse. My legs felt steady, planted firmly on the concrete floor. I checked my reflection in the darkened phone screen. My eyes were dry. My expression was blank.

I set the intern’s phone back down on the table, screen dimming, and walked out of the closet. The corridor was empty, the carpet hushing my footsteps. The sound of muffled applause echoed from the main hall, a rhythmic, thunderous beat that called me forward.

I pushed through the heavy double doors. The air in the main hall was thick with the scent of expensive perfume, champagne, and the metallic tang of hundreds of vibrating smartphones. The room was a sea of dark suits and glittering evening gowns, all faces turned toward the massive stage at the front.

Marcus was there. He stood center stage, a silhouette against the blinding spotlight, his glass raised high. He looked radiant, flushed with the adrenaline of whatever he had just done backstage.

“And to that,” Marcus’s voice boomed through the speakers, smooth and confident, “I say we embrace the chaos. An upgrade to life requires courage!”

The crowd roared with laughter and applause. They thought he was making a metaphor. They thought he was talking about a new product line or a merger.

Then, the screen behind him flickered.

The camera feed cut from the company logo to a high-definition, grainy-styled video. It was the stream. The massive screen displayed Marcus’s hand, the signet ring glinting under studio lights, sliding up Scarlett’s bare thigh. The internet celebrity laughed, throwing her head back, her blonde hair cascading like silk.

The laughter in the hall died instantly. It wasn't a sudden stop; it was a collective gasp, a vacuum of sound sucking the air out of the room. The executives froze, their champagne glasses hovering halfway to their lips.

Phones were drawn instantly, a sea of black mirrors rising to capture the moment.

Marcus didn't flinch. He smiled, a predator’s baring of teeth, and turned to look at the screen. He saw himself, saw the view count climbing toward a million, and he turned back to the audience, expecting shock, awe, perhaps fear. He owned this moment.

I stood near the back, my hands clasped loosely in front of me. I watched the panic ripple through the board of directors. I watched the COO turn pale, his eyes darting between the screen and his phone as the stock ticker likely began to plummet in his pocket.

Marcus looked out over the crowd, his eyes scanning for a reaction. He looked like a king who had just set fire to his own castle and wanted applause for the light show.

My phone buzzed in my pocket. The vibration was sharp, a different frequency than the ambient noise.

I didn't look away from the stage. I watched my husband basking in the glow of his own destruction. I pulled the phone out and answered it, pressing it to my ear.

“Isabella, the new algorithm update is scheduled to push in five minutes,” a frantic voice said on the other end. It was the Lead Engineer. “The traffic spike is crashing the servers, the load balancer can’t handle the—”

I looked at Marcus. He was laughing now, a low, self-satisfied chuckle that the microphone picked up and broadcast to the horrified room. He thought he had won.

“Hold off that algorithm version for now,” I said into the phone, my voice calm, steady, and cutting through the engineer’s panic. “I need it.”

I didn't wait for a response. I ended the call and slipped the phone back into my pocket. The people around me were still filming, still gasping, unaware of the woman standing just feet away from them. They didn't know who I was. They just knew a chaotic spectacle was unfolding.

I turned on my heel and walked toward the exit, my heels clicking sharply on the marble floor, the only rhythmic sound in a room drowned in silence and shock. I didn't look back at the screen. I didn't look at

Marcus.

I had work to do.

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He Streamed Our Divorce, I Streamed His Funeral of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
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