
His Mistress Stole Our Future, I Reclaimed Mine
Chapter 3
My hands trembled as I clicked 'post' on Instagram. The carefully staged photo of my packed suitcase sat next to a printed Amtrak ticket to New York, accompanied by my enthusiastic caption: "Off to NYC for Teacher Exchange Week! Can't wait to bring back fresh ideas for my little musicians! #TeacherLife #NYCBound"
What made my stomach twist wasn't the lie itself, but the meticulous privacy settings I'd adjusted beforehand. This post was visible to only one person outside my inner circle: Grace Sinclair. The digital breadcrumb I was leaving for her to follow straight to Noah.
"You sure about this?" Liv asked, watching me from her kitchen counter. "You could still just confront him directly."
I closed my laptop with more force than necessary. "And give him time to hide everything? No thanks."
"Fair point," she conceded, sliding a mug of tea toward me. "Marcus called while you were in the shower. His team is already setting up at Cape Cod."
The thought of strangers watching the beach house Noah had secretly purchased with our joint funds made me nauseous. But not as nauseous as the realization that he'd probably been planning this for months—creating our "dream vacation home" that was actually meant for his dream woman.
"They have long-range cameras positioned from three angles," I said, reciting what Marcus had told me. "And audio equipment that can pick up conversations from the deck. If they're there, we'll know."
"And you're sure they'll go there?" Liv asked.
I nodded grimly. "Our anniversary is tomorrow. Noah told me he had to attend a conference in Chicago—another lie. They'll celebrate there. I know it."
---
Liv's apartment became my surveillance headquarters. I barely slept, hunched over my laptop, watching the live feed from Marcus's cameras. The first night yielded nothing—just an empty beach house with lights occasionally switching on and off automatically.
"Maybe they're not coming," Liv suggested gently, bringing me another cup of coffee as dawn broke on the second day.
"They'll come," I whispered, my eyes burning from exhaustion. "Today's the day."
Hours ticked by. I paced. I checked my phone obsessively, half-expecting Noah to somehow discover my deception. At 4:17 PM, movement on the camera feed snapped me to attention.
A Tesla Model 3—Noah's car—pulled into the driveway.
"Liv!" I called out, my voice cracking. "They're here."
She rushed over, squeezing my shoulder as we watched Noah exit the driver's side. Grace emerged from the passenger door, carrying what looked like an overnight bag and a garment bag.
"What's in the garment bag?" Liv murmured.
My throat tightened. "We'll find out."
They disappeared into the house. The cameras couldn't see inside, but Marcus had assured me they would catch anything happening on the deck or beach. I waited, my heart pounding so hard I could feel it in my fingertips.
At sunset, the back door opened. Noah stepped onto the deck first, wearing the suit he'd worn at our wedding. My stomach dropped.
Then Grace appeared, and the world stopped spinning.
She was wearing my wedding dress. My custom-made gown that had cost $3,000—money my grandmother had scraped together as her gift to me. The ivory silk cascaded down Grace's body, the handmade lace catching the golden sunset light. The dress I'd preserved carefully in our closet, hoping someday to show a daughter.
"That fucking bitch," Liv breathed beside me.
I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't move as I watched Noah take Grace's hand, leading her down to the beach. The camera zoomed in, capturing their profiles as they kissed passionately, my wedding dress's train billowing dramatically in the Atlantic wind.
The timestamp in the corner of the video read 7:14 PM—almost the exact moment Noah and I had been pronounced husband and wife three years ago.
They weren't just having an affair. They were erasing me. Rewriting history as if I had never existed.
I closed the laptop, unable to watch anymore. The evidence was secured, automatically uploading to Marcus's secure server. I had what I needed.
"Emma?" Liv's voice sounded far away. "What now?"
I picked up my phone, fingers no longer trembling. Clarity had replaced shock. Purpose had replaced pain.
"Now," I said calmly, "I burn everything to the ground."
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