
His Mistress, My Revenge
His Mistress, My Revenge Chapter 1
The elevator climbed toward the presidential suite, each floor marker lighting up like a countdown to my freedom. I clutched the keycard tighter, savoring the weight of this small rebellion. For the first time in five years, I was doing something Logan didn't know about—something he couldn't control.
"Welcome to the Spencer Fifth Avenue, Ms. Chen," the bellhop said, using the alias I'd chosen. The irony wasn't lost on me. Here I stood in my family's crown jewel, pretending to be someone else, testing beds in a hotel that would one day be mine.
The suite door clicked open, revealing floor-to-ceiling windows that framed Central Park like a living painting. I set down my overnight bag—packed in secret, hidden in the back of my closet for weeks—and let myself breathe. The city lights twinkled below, each one a reminder of the world beyond Logan's suffocating grip.
I ran my fingers along the Egyptian cotton sheets, testing their thread count for my "report." This job was supposed to be simple: evaluate the sleep quality, note any disturbances, suggest improvements. But as I unpacked my things, placing them carefully in drawers that smelled of lavender, I realized this was more than a job. It was proof I could still make decisions. Still be someone beyond Mrs. Logan Hayes.
My phone buzzed against the marble nightstand. Logan, probably. Checking if I'd picked up his dry cleaning or confirming what time dinner would be ready. I almost ignored it, but habit won. Five years of conditioning didn't disappear in an evening.
But it wasn't Logan.
The sender was blocked, the subject line empty. My finger hovered over the delete button—spam, probably. But something made me open it. Maybe it was the rebellion already coursing through my veins, or maybe it was instinct.
The first image loaded slowly, pixels forming shapes that made my stomach drop.
Logan's profile, unmistakable even in the amber lighting. His hand tangled in blonde hair that definitely wasn't mine. The timestamp glowed in the corner: 3:47 PM today. While I was at home, preparing his favorite meal, he was here. In this very hotel.
I scrolled, each photo a knife twisting deeper. Olivia Carter, his executive assistant, pressed against him in the elevator. Her lipstick smeared across his jaw in the hallway. His hands on her waist as they entered a room—God, was it this same suite?
The phone slipped from my trembling fingers, clattering against the marble floor. I sank onto the bed I was supposed to be testing, but all I could feel was the world tilting off its axis. The careful lies I'd told myself—that his late nights were really about work, that his growing distance was just stress—crumbled like ash.
Fifteen years ago, I'd pulled him from a burning car, flames licking at my back as I dragged him to safety. The scars still traced patterns across my skin, a map of that sacrifice. He'd promised to protect me after that, to be my shield against a world that stared at my disfigurement.
I forced myself to pick up the phone, to look at the last photo. They were leaving the hotel together, his arm possessively around her waist—the same gesture he'd stopped using with me years ago. Her smile was radiant, victorious.
The Manhattan skyline blurred through my tears, but I refused to let them fall. Not here. Not in my family's hotel where someday I'd walk these halls as Natalie Spencer, not the broken wife of Logan Hayes.
I called the front desk. "This is Ms. Chen in the presidential suite. I'll be checking out early."
"Is everything satisfactory, ma'am?"
I almost laughed at the question. "No. But that's not your fault."
The drive home passed in a haze. By the time I reached our penthouse, I'd looked at those photos a dozen more times, each viewing hardening something inside me. The doorman nodded as I passed, probably wondering why Mrs. Hayes was returning from her "book club" with red-rimmed eyes.
The elevator to our floor had never felt longer. I steadied myself against the mirrored wall, practicing the face I'd wear. Calm. Composed. The same mask I'd perfected over five years of marriage.
But when I opened our front door, Logan's voice drifted from the living room, casual and commanding: "Natalie, perfect timing. We have a guest for dinner."
I rounded the corner to find him lounging on our leather sofa, still in his work clothes. And beside him, perched like she belonged there, sat Olivia Carter.
"You remember Olivia from the office," Logan said, not even looking up from his phone. "She's having some housing issues. I told her she could stay with us for a few nights."
Olivia's smile was sharp as cut glass. "I hope that's not too much trouble, Natalie."
The photos burned in my memory as I forced my lips into something resembling a smile. "Of course not. What are friends for?"
Logan finally looked up, his eyes sweeping over me with casual dismissal. "Great. We're starving. Think you could whip up that salmon dish? Olivia loves seafood."
As I turned toward the kitchen, my phone buzzed again. Another message from the blocked number: *Now you know. What will you do?*
What would I do? I glanced back at them, heads bent together over his phone, sharing some private joke. Olivia's hand rested on his knee with nauseating familiarity.
I would cook their dinner. I would smile. I would play the perfect hostess.
And then I would destroy them both.
His Mistress, My Revenge of Contents
New Release Novels

















