Follow
Chapters
Share
His Mistress’ Shopping Spree-Paid by Me Novel Cover

His Mistress’ Shopping Spree-Paid by Me

Logan Hale publicly calls wife Mia “Plan B” on Reddit while bankrolling mistress Sierra’s Aspen condos with their joint Tesla stock. Mia discovers the post, traces the money, and documents $25 k in luxury “business” receipts. She freezes joint assets, hires forensic accountant Max Cruz, and schedules a Seattle “conference” as bait. Cameras catch Sierra and Logan in their own home; Mia secures the footage and files for divorce the day his Series B term sheet drops. She liquidates the Napa condo he bought for Sierra, donates proceeds to Girls Who Code, and launches a divorce-tech app dubbed “Upgrade.” Logan loses funding, custody, and reputation; Mia exits the courthouse with her dog, her portfolio, and a trending hashtag: #PlanBecameCEO.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I invited Sierra over for wine and cheese, arranging a selection of her favorite things on the patio. The evening air carried the scent of jasmine from our garden, and fairy lights twinkled overhead—a perfect setting for what I had planned.

"To us," I said, raising my glass of pinot noir. "Best friends since college."

Sierra smiled, her diamond bracelet catching the light as she clinked her glass against mine. I recognized it immediately—the one purchased with our joint account funds.

"Cheers," she replied, taking a sip. "You always know how to make everything perfect, Mia."

I leaned back in my chair, watching her over the rim of my glass. "That's what I do, right? Make everything perfect for everyone else."

She didn't catch the edge in my voice, too busy scrolling through her phone. "Sorry," she said, not sounding sorry at all. "Just checking a property listing."

I nodded, waiting for the right moment. We talked about nothing important—her latest real estate commission, my plans for redecorating the living room, Logan's upcoming funding round.

Then I casually dropped it in.

"I might need to go to Seattle next weekend," I said, watching her carefully. "There's a UX conference I've been meaning to attend. Logan's been encouraging me to get back into design work."

I saw it immediately—a flicker in her eyes, a slight straightening of her posture. Interest. Anticipation.

"Seattle?" she repeated, her tone just a touch too eager. "For the whole weekend?"

"Friday through Sunday," I confirmed. "Logan's been so supportive of me pursuing my career again. 'Go,' he said. 'Take some time for yourself.'"

Sierra's smile widened, and she reached for the cheese plate. "That's... wonderful, Mia. You deserve it."

I could almost see her mental calculations—three days, two nights. Logan would be alone.

"I'm not sure I'll go," I lied smoothly. "It's so much money, and we're saving for the future."

"Oh, but you should," Sierra insisted, suddenly invested in my career advancement. "I could help watch the house while you're gone. Water your plants."

"That's so thoughtful," I said, reaching over to squeeze her hand. "Maybe I will go after all."

As we finished our wine, I watched Sierra's Instagram stories later that night—a new post of her at a rooftop bar downtown, captioned: "Celebrating new opportunities with my favorite person." The camera panned to show Logan's hand holding a cocktail.

---

"Mrs. Sterling," Jessica Davies said, her voice crisp and efficient over the phone. "I've set up the new accounts as we discussed."

I sat in my car in the grocery store parking lot, Luna in the passenger seat. "And they're untraceable?"

"As untraceable as anything can be these days," she replied. "But they're not linked to your current accounts or your name in any obvious way."

Jessica was everything I needed in a divorce attorney—sharp, discreet, and utterly ruthless when necessary. She'd come highly recommended by Max, who had worked with her on several cases involving financial fraud.

"The timing is crucial," she continued. "We need to move the assets before he can claim they're business-related."

"I understand," I said, making notes in my phone. "I've identified approximately $850,000 in joint assets that are clearly unrelated to his business ventures."

"That's a good start," Jessica said. "Now we need to—"

"Wait," I interrupted, seeing Logan's name flash on my screen. "He's calling me."

"Take it," Jessica advised. "Act normal. We'll talk later."

I switched calls, forcing warmth into my voice. "Hi, honey."

"Mia," Logan's voice was distracted, background noise suggesting he was at the office. "I need you to send me the Henderson contract from my home office."

"Sure," I replied. "Is everything okay?"

"Fine, fine. Just busy with the Series B preparations."

I ended the call and returned to Jessica. "He's getting nervous about something."

"Good," she said. "That means we're on the right track."

Over the next two weeks, I methodically transferred funds—moving our savings to new accounts, liquidating stocks and reinvesting them under different names, securing our property deeds.

Each transaction was carefully documented and timed to coincide with Logan's business meetings, when he was too distracted to notice.

---

"He's home late again," I told Max during our weekly meeting, sliding a folder across his desk.

Max reviewed my notes, his expression grim. "And Sierra's Instagram activity has increased?"

I nodded, pulling out my phone to show him. "See for yourself."

The screen displayed Sierra's latest post—a candlelit dinner at Atelier Crenn, one of the most exclusive restaurants in the city.

"Last night," I said quietly. "While Logan was supposedly at a 'tech meetup.'"

Max's jaw tightened as he scrolled through more posts—Sierra at the Fairmont Hotel spa, sipping champagne by the pool at a private club.

"And he's taking calls in private now," I added. "In the bathroom, in the garage. Always with the door closed."

"Classic behavior," Max said, setting down my phone. "He's getting careless because he thinks you're not paying attention."

I felt a cold satisfaction settle in my chest. "He never did think I was paying attention."

---

I was organizing receipts in my home office when I found it—a statement from our joint credit card that Logan had "forgotten" to file.

I spread the papers across my desk, Luna watching curiously from her bed in the corner.

"Look at this, girl," I murmured, pointing to a series of charges.

*Fairmont Hotel - $850*

*Sensual Healing Spa Retreat - $1,200*

*Le Bernardin - $750*

All listed as "business expenses."

I dug deeper, finding more receipts tucked inside a folder labeled "Q3 Business Development."

*Couples massage at Solage Resort - $1,100*

*Wine tasting tour for two - $850*

*Private dining experience at French Laundry - $2,500*

Each receipt had the same handwritten notation: "Entertainment for potential investors."

But the most damning was a receipt from Tiffany & Co.—the diamond bracelet Sierra wore so proudly.

*Gift for business partner - $3,200*

I stared at the evidence, my hands steady as I photographed each receipt with my phone.

"Business partner," I said aloud, the words bitter on my tongue.

Luna whined softly, sensing my mood.

"It's okay, girl," I assured her, though my voice shook slightly. "This is exactly what we needed."

I added the photos to my "Project: New Beginning" folder, organizing them by date and amount.

The total came to nearly $25,000 in the past three months alone.

As I sat back in my chair, something shifted inside me—the last remnant of the woman who had believed in Logan's love, in Sierra's friendship, in the life I thought we had built together.

She was gone now, replaced by someone stronger.

I reached down to scratch Luna behind her ears. "We're going to Seattle," I told her. "And while we're gone, they're going to think they've won."

What they didn't know was that I had already set the trap—and they were walking right into it.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

ENTANGLED WITH THE THREE BILLIONAIRES Novel Cover
7.9
Shelly Mchan, a young woman in her early twenties, arrives at Hawthorn company, hoping to gain Independence and freedom. She get's entangled with three men; one her boyfriend, the other her boss and the other, her boss's twinn. These three men, known as the King brothers belong to the wealthy conglomerate family ranking second in the US wealthiest and most influential families. Any woman will do anything to sleep with any of these three powerful brothers but Shelly Mchan who sleeps with all three of them finds herself trapped in the web of their lust and enemity. How horrible can it be to find yourself in the middle of the power tussel between these three powerful brothers? When their conglomerate father announces that the largest share of his inheritance and company goes to any of his three sons settled down in marriage, Shellys gets thorn between saying the truth and changing her status as she finds out that she's pregnant for one of the brothers but doesn't know who in particular is the father. Could it be her overprotective boyfriend or her boss's twinn who's so obsessed with her, or even worse, her domineering and possesive boss who says he hates her but his actions speaks otherwise? Who could be the actual father? who could be the one that her heart really longs for? If she could marry into the Kings family and become Mrs. King who among the brothers will be her man? What if the father of the baby isn't the one her body yearns for, her mind shuts down for or the one her heart throbs and races for?
After finding my chubby faked paralysis for Nanny affair, I made him bankrupt Novel Cover
7.1
Irena returns early from a business trip and discovers her husband Sam's eight-year affair with Sasha, who has his child. She also learns of Sam's fake paralysis and the family's conspiracy to use her for money. Irena decides to divorce Sam, withdraws her investment from his company, and wins in court. Sam later faces ruin, tries to win Irena back, but fails. In the end, Sam commits a tragic act, leaving Irena to move on from the painful memories.
His Unwanted Wife Is A Top Scientist Novel Cover
9.6
For four years, I played the perfect, naive, low-income wife to my wealthy husband Duke, completely hiding my true identity as a top-secret DARPA scientist. On our anniversary, I discovered he was having an affair with an old-money socialite named Adelia. He used our marital assets to buy her a half-million-dollar Birkin bag, but that wasn't the worst part. While hiding in a parking garage, I recorded him telling his mistress that the daily prenatal vitamins he lovingly gave me were actually high-dose contraceptives. He had secretly sterilized me to ensure I would never produce a "low-class" heir, planning to toss me aside with a tiny settlement in six months. When I confronted him, he violently attacked me, smashed my head against a marble dresser, and locked me in our bedroom. I thought of the four years I spent crying in doctors' offices, blaming my own body for my infertility, while he held my hand and comforted me with perfect, monstrous concern. I didn't wait to be punished. I climbed down the second-story balcony in the dark, leaving behind every diamond and luxury bag he had ever given me. Sitting in the back of a taxi, I wiped the blood from my forehead and opened a secure app on my phone. "Divorce fraud. Initiate sequence." It was time for him to finally meet Dr. Patterson.
Husband's Affair Exposed Novel Cover
8.3
The quarterly reports spread across my mahogany desk like fallen autumn leaves, each page representing millions in revenue that should have filled me with satisfaction. Instead, I found myself staring at the numbers without really seeing them, my Mont Blanc pen hovering over profit margins that suddenly felt meaningless. The phone's shrill ring cut through the afternoon silence of my corner office. I glanced at the caller ID—Riverside Pharmacy—and frowned. We didn't use that pharmacy. David and I had our prescriptions filled at the upscale clinic near our penthouse. "Leah Cox speaking." "Ms. Cox, this is Rosa Rodriguez from Riverside Pharmacy." The woman's voice carried a note of irritation that immediately put me on edge. "I'm calling about an outstanding balance on your husband's account. David Pierce?" My grip tightened on the phone.
My Husband Brings Side Bitch on Family Trip Novel Cover
9.1
I booked a luxury Hawaiian vacation to celebrate my secret business breaking six figures. My husband, David, thanked me by bringing his mistress along. He thought I was just a penniless, stay-at-home mom clipping coupons. He thought his pride demanded a wife whose sole focus was him. So, when his mistress, Serena, faked a drowning and framed me for child endangerment, David and my manipulated ten-year-old son watched the police take me away in handcuffs. They took my home. They took my child. They thought they had stripped me of everything. What David didn’t know was that the very ground he walked on was bought with my money. The first-class tickets, the premium suites, the food on his table—I paid for all of it in the quiet, stolen hours of the night. I didn't spend my three-year prison sentence crying over a broken family. I spent it building a venture capital empire. On the day of my release, David came to the prison gates to mock my downfall. Instead, he met the new billionaire owner of the company he used to run—me. He chose the mistress and the lies. Now, he’s about to discover the true cost of his betrayal.
My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress Novel Cover
7.9
The ticker tape on the news crawl was still burning behind my eyelids: *Foster Enterprises Declares Insolvency.* The words were a neon slash across my vision, turning the gray Manhattan skyline into a blur of vertigo and rain. My phone had been vibrating against my hip for an hour—lawyers, creditors, panic—but I didn't answer. I only had one destination. Zain. He was the only solid thing left in a world that had liquefied beneath my feet this morning. I bypassed the doorman at the Obsidian Tower, my breath hitching in my throat as the elevator surged toward the penthouse. I needed his voice. I needed him to tell me that money was just paper, that my father wasn't going to prison, that we would survive this. The penthouse door was unlatched. That should have been my first warning.