
His Mistress Stole Our Future, I Reclaimed Mine
Chapter 2
I slipped into the back row of Baker Library's basement lecture hall, pulling my beanie lower over my forehead. The amphitheater-style seating gave me a perfect view of Noah commanding the room of eager MBA students. He looked so confident in his element—navy blazer with elbow patches, gesturing animatedly at his PowerPoint presentation.
"Information asymmetry," Noah's voice carried through the hall, "is often the determining factor in successful acquisitions."
The irony wasn't lost on me. Here I was, his wife, gathering intelligence while he lectured on hidden information. I sank deeper into my seat as a student asked a question about ethical boundaries.
Noah's laugh echoed through the room. "Ethics are important, of course, but in the real world, the person with better information usually wins."
The class chuckled. I didn't.
I watched him advance to slide seventeen: "Best Practices for Concealing Liabilities During Negotiation." My stomach tightened as I pulled out my phone and opened our joint bank account app.
The $80,000 transfer Noah had explained away as "RSU investments for our bigger house" was right there in the transaction history. But now I noticed the recipient: Cape Cod Coastal Properties, LLC. I tapped for more details.
Beneficiary: Eleanor Sinclair.
Grace's mother. The room suddenly felt airless.
In the memo line, one simple word: "Gift."
My fingers went numb as Noah continued his lecture, unaware that his own lessons on information asymmetry were playing out in real time. He'd transferred our money—money that could have paid off my student loans twice over—to buy property for his mistress's family.
I slipped out before the Q&A session began, my mind racing faster than my feet could carry me.
---
The wooden steps of my parents' Medford home creaked under my weight—a familiar sound from childhood that once meant safety but now felt like a warning. I'd come for my cello, the Yamaha that had seen me through Berklee College of Music. It was the only thing of real value I owned outright, and Marcus's retainer wasn't going to pay itself.
"Emma? Is that you?" My mother's voice called from the kitchen before I could reach the attic stairs.
I found her at the kitchen table, medical bills spread before her like a losing hand of cards. The house smelled of burnt coffee and desperation.
"Just grabbing my cello," I said, trying to sound casual. "I'm teaching a private student."
Mom's face tightened. "Noah called us yesterday."
My blood ran cold. "What?"
"He's worried about you. Says you've been acting erratic, checking accounts, asking strange questions." She folded her hands—nurse's hands, cracked from decades of washing between patients. "He told us not to worry, that you're just under stress from work."
"Did he mention anything else?" I asked carefully.
"He promised to pay for our roof repairs next month." Her eyes brightened with relief. "The estimate came in at twelve thousand, Emma. We could never afford that on our own."
From the living room, Dad's voice joined in. "Your mother's arthritis medication isn't covered anymore. Noah said he'd help with that too."
I rounded the corner to see him slouched in his recliner, a Bud Light already in hand despite the early hour. The TV blared a sports commentary show neither of us was watching.
"So I should stay with a cheater because he's buying your loyalty?" The words escaped before I could stop them.
Dad scoffed. "Women always put romance before practicality. Just endure it. You think your mother and I had some fairy tale?"
"Richard!" Mom hissed, but her eyes betrayed her agreement.
I grabbed my cello case from the hall closet, clutching it like a shield. "My marriage isn't a transaction."
"Everything's a transaction, Emma," Dad said, taking another swig. "Sooner you learn that, happier you'll be."
I slammed the door behind me so hard the entire frame shuddered. The milk bottle—a relic from when deliveries still happened—toppled from its perch beside the door and shattered on the porch. A shard sliced across my ankle as I stepped forward.
Blood seeped into my sock, trailing behind me in the snow as I limped to my car. A perfect metaphor for the path I was on—painful, visible, impossible to hide.
---
That night, curled on my friend Liv's couch with my ankle bandaged, my phone pinged with an encrypted email from Marcus. Subject line: "First Findings."
My hands trembled as I entered the password he'd given me. The photos loaded slowly, each pixel revealing a new betrayal.
Grace Sinclair, MIT materials scientist and Noah's college sweetheart, standing on our Cambridge doorstep at 2:30 PM yesterday. Her dark hair cascaded over her shoulders, contrasting with the white silk of my bathrobe—my grandmother's wedding gift to me.
And dangling from her perfectly manicured fingers: Noah's crimson Harvard faculty tie.
I stared at those photos for an hour, memorizing every detail of the woman my husband thought was Harvard while I was merely his safety school.
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