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His Mistress Wore My Louboutins Novel Cover

His Mistress Wore My Louboutins

The red light on my camera blinked three times before going dark. I tapped the side of the device, hoping it was just a minor glitch. "Hey guys, technical difficulties! Give me one second," I said cheerfully to my invisible audience, though I knew my microphone had probably died along with the camera. I'd been in the middle of my weekly mukbang stream, showcasing a new Korean barbecue place that had opened downtown. The comments had been flowing, my viewer count climbing steadily. Now, silence. After five minutes of futile troubleshooting, I sighed and packed up my equipment. The restaurant manager gave me a sympathetic smile as I explained the situation. "Equipment failure happens to the best of us," he said kindly.
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Chapter 3

The next morning, I stood in the electronics store, staring at rows of security cameras. My palms were sweaty, my heart racing as if I were planning a heist rather than documenting my own betrayal.

"Can I help you find something?" A young sales associate approached, his name tag reading 'Kevin.'

"I need cameras," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "Small ones. The kind you wouldn't notice right away."

Kevin's eyebrows rose slightly. "Home security?"

"Something like that," I replied, the cold hardness in my chest expanding. "Something that records to the cloud, not local storage."

I left with three tiny cameras and a determination I'd never felt before. Amy had helped me research models that would be virtually undetectable—no blinking lights, no visible wires, just silent witnesses to the truth.

The apartment was empty when I returned, Marcus having texted that he was "working late again." Each word on my phone screen now felt like a coded message, a lie I could finally decipher.

My hands trembled as I positioned the first camera on our bookshelf, angled toward the living room entrance. The second went in a potted plant near the hallway leading to our bedroom. The third—this one made my stomach clench—I placed inside the vintage clock on our bedroom wall, facing our bed.

Our bed. The thought made bile rise in my throat.

After testing the feeds on my new burner phone—another suggestion from Frank—I sat on the edge of the bathtub, suddenly exhausted. This wasn't supposed to be my life. I was supposed to be building my streaming career, maybe starting a family with Marcus, not installing spy cameras in my own home.

"Focus, Lily," I whispered to myself. "One step at a time."

The next day, Amy met me for lunch at a small café far from our usual haunts.

"I've been thinking about your finances," she said, sliding a folder across the table. "You need to protect what's yours."

Inside was paperwork for establishing a limited liability company. "Blue Horizon LLC," I read aloud.

"My cousin's a business attorney," Amy explained. "She drew these up. Once it's filed, we can open accounts under the LLC. Marcus won't have access, and if we're careful, he won't even know they exist."

I stared at her, this friend who was helping me build a financial escape route while my supposed best friend was sleeping with my husband.

"Why are you doing all this for me?" I asked, my voice cracking.

Amy's eyes softened. "Because you deserve better, Lily. And because I've seen what happens when women don't protect themselves."

Over the next week, my double life took shape. By day, I was still Lily Chen, bubbly food streamer, loving wife. I cooked Marcus's favorite meals, laughed at his jokes, and pretended not to notice when he said he was "meeting clients" at night.

By night, I reviewed camera footage, watching as Rachel slipped into our apartment using her own key—a key I never knew existed. I documented times, dates, conversations. I set up Blue Horizon LLC and began redirecting portions of my streaming revenue to accounts only I controlled.

And in the stolen hours between, I created something entirely new: LilyFitJourney, a private fitness channel documenting what would become my physical transformation.

"This is day one," I whispered to my camera, alone in our guest bathroom. "180 pounds. This journey isn't just about weight loss. It's about reclaiming myself."

I didn't publish the video—not yet. But recording it felt like making a promise to myself, a vow more sacred than the ones Marcus and I had exchanged at our wedding.

That night, as I lay beside my sleeping husband, my phone vibrated with an alert from one of my cameras. I slipped out of bed and into the bathroom, opening the security app with trembling fingers.

Rachel was entering our apartment, kicking off those red-soled shoes by the door. She moved with the confidence of someone who belonged there, who had done this many times before.

I watched, a strange calm settling over me, as she texted someone—Marcus, presumably—and made herself comfortable on our couch.

My husband's phone buzzed on the nightstand beside me. I looked at his sleeping form, then back at my screen where Rachel waited.

The game was just beginning.

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