
Housewife Revenge: I Stole the Cheater's Lottery
Chapter 1
Today is our moving day.
Morning sunlight spilled through the windows of our old house, glinting off the carefully polished banister.
This would be my last day in our tiny warm little house, because we were moving into a bigger one. My boxes sat stacked near the gate, each one labeled in my careful handwriting.
Thomas, my husband, went out earlier this morning, probably to fetch a car or something, and I, I just couldn’t calm down and kept pacing in our narrow hallway, imagining what our new house would look like.
Would it smell like lemon? Would there be roses in the garden? Would it take me an hour to finish touring the rooms?
Right, it felt like a dream, and I knew hardly anyone would believe such a thing, but—my husband won the lottery.
Fifty million!
Even now, the number seemed absurd, as if I might blink and wake up back in our cramped old kitchen. When Thomas first told me, I’d been too stunned to react, but as the days passed, I began to picture things.
Not just big things like the new house, but small ones, the kind that make life softer. I’d already decided to buy a real hearth oven for the kitchen—nothing extravagant, but something that would make fresh bread fill the rooms with warmth…
The door swung open.
I turned in excitement, expecting to see Thomas and greet him with a kiss—we haven’t been this intimate for years but surely a lottery and a moving day deserved something special and passionate.
But I froze.
Thomas stepped inside—true, but not with the driver I’d expected him to be fetching, instead, with a woman at his side.
I stared at them.
She was young, striking, with honey-blonde hair and a cautious smile. Clutching her hand was a small boy, maybe seven. His eyes stopped me cold. They were Thomas’s eyes.
The smile slid from my face.
“Thomas…?” My voice sounded thin, fragile in the echoing foyer.
“This is Amber,” he said, in a tone I hadn’t heard before—flat, almost formal. “And this is Leo.”
I looked at the boy, then back at Thomas.
“Is he… Your son?” But I didn’t need his answer.
Thomas’s hand settled on the boy’s shoulder. “Yes. They are my family, Laura.” He said it slowly, like he wanted each word to cut. “The real one. I will move into the house with them. Not you.”
My stomach turned cold. “What are you talking about?”
“I mean,” he said, sweeping his hand to show off the house, “you are not moving anywhere today. We don’t have a place in our house for you, sorry.”
The sound in my ears was like rushing water. The walls I’d built inside myself cracked and fell, and humiliation poured in hot and fast. I stared at Thomas as if he suddenly turned into a monster.
I still remember how he’d rushed home that day.
-
The front door had slammed so hard our framed photos rattled on the wall. I’d stepped into the foyer, dish towel in hand. Thomas had stood there, hair mussed, chest heaving, his eyes lit with a strange fire.
He’d thrust a lottery ticket into my palm. “Check it, Laura. I won. Fifty million. Fifty. Million.”
He’d paced the room, shouting, I’ll buy that mansion on the hill. I can move anywhere.
And I, too surprised to react, had stupidly ignored that word choice of his, totally immersed into a fragile dream.
I won. I’ll buy. I can move.
…Always I.
Never once “we”.
I should have heard it then.
-
Now, in the narrow hallway of our house, the truth was in his voice, sharp as glass.
There was never a place for me there.
“You bastard.” The words tore out of me as I shoved him. “You lying, cheating bastard!”
He caught my wrists with practiced ease, his face hard. “Don’t make this harder than it needs to be.”
The boy shrank behind Amber. One of the moving boxes tipped, spilling ornaments across the marble. In the blur of shouting, I didn’t notice his small hand reaching down—until a glint of metal caught the light.
The blade sliced into my side. A hot, searing pain tore through me and I gasped, stumbling backward, my hand clamping over the wound.
“Leo!” Amber’s voice was sharp, but it barely reached me.
Thomas froze for half a heartbeat—then something changed in his eyes. Not panic. Not guilt. Cold decision.
He closed the distance in two strides. One hand slammed over my mouth, cutting off my scream, the other gripping the knife still lodged in my side. He twisted. The agony exploded white-hot, stealing my breath.
I kicked weakly, clawing at him, struggling, tasting blood where I bit my tongue. The world was narrowing, sound muffled, light dimming at the edges.
“The money was never for you,” he whispered, his breath hot against my ear. “It was always for us.”
The pain was unbearable, a crushing weight pulling me under. My lungs screamed for air, I might be crying, or just gasping for air, I didn’t know.
Because soon, blackness took over me and—nothing.
-
I jerked awake, heart pounding so violently I could hear it in my ears.
Sunlight streamed through familiar curtains. My curtains. I was in my own bed.
“What…” My voice came out hoarse. I threw the covers back, scrambling to touch my side. No blood. My blouse was gone. My skin smooth.
My hands flew to my neck, my chest—everywhere he had held me down. Nothing. Not a single mark.
I was breathing. Alive.
The digital clock glowed 7:13 a.m.
My gaze snapped to the calendar on the nightstand—and froze. April 15th. A month before Thomas had “won” the lottery.
Somehow, impossibly, I was back.
“What the hell…” My breath came fast and uneven. I pressed a trembling hand over my mouth, feeling the phantom ache of the knife, the suffocating grip, the moment my life had gone black.
The numbers came to me clear as glass: 12-17-23-34-45-47. Powerball: 10. I wrote them down with shaking hands.
“He thought he killed me,” I whispered, pressing my palm to my unbroken skin. “He thought he’d won.”
But this time, the ticket wouldn’t be his key to freedom.
It would be mine.
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