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How I Destroyed My Cheating Husband and His Mistress Novel Cover

How I Destroyed My Cheating Husband and His Mistress

I walked in on my husband and my assistant in our bathtub on our fifth anniversary. "Iris understands my ambitions," he said coldly. "She has vision. You're just... boring." What he didn't know: while I'd played the devoted wife, I'd been watching, documenting, preparing. Now, as I photographed their naked betrayal with steady hands, I smiled at the thought of tomorrow—when he'd discover exactly who he'd been foolish enough to underestimate.
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Chapter 1

The elevator hummed softly as I ascended to our penthouse, a bottle of champagne chilling in my hands and excitement bubbling in my chest. Five years. Five beautiful, challenging, wonderful years of marriage to Damien. I'd left work early, claiming a sudden headache to my assistant, when really I just couldn't wait another moment to surprise him.

The florist had outdone herself—two dozen white roses, his favorite, now arranged perfectly on our dining table alongside the dinner I'd spent hours preparing. Damien's favorite pasta, the wine we'd shared on our honeymoon, candles flickering like tiny stars across our home.

I pushed open our bedroom door, already imagining his surprised smile when he found me waiting for him in the silk dress I'd bought just for tonight. But the smile died on my lips.

The bed was unmade, sheets twisted and thrown aside in obvious haste. A woman's blazer—not mine—lay crumpled on the floor beside Damien's discarded shirt. My heart stuttered as I took in the scene: two wine glasses on the nightstand, one still bearing the faint imprint of unfamiliar lipstick.

The air hung heavy with a scent I didn't recognize—something floral and cloying that made my stomach turn. Not my perfume. Never my perfume.

My hands trembled as I set down the champagne, the bottle making a hollow sound against the hardwood floor. This couldn't be happening. Not today. Not on our anniversary.

Then I heard it—laughter. Soft, intimate, floating from the direction of our master bathroom. A woman's voice, breathy and satisfied, followed by Damien's low chuckle.

My feet moved without my permission, carrying me toward the sound even as my mind screamed at me to stop, to turn around, to preserve whatever illusion of happiness I still had left.

The bathroom door stood slightly ajar, steam escaping from the gap like ghostly fingers. Through the frosted glass of our shower enclosure, I could make out two figures intertwined in our marble bathtub.

"You're incredible," I heard Damien murmur, his voice thick with satisfaction.

"Mmm, much better than at the office," came the reply, and my blood turned to ice.

That voice. I knew that voice.

With shaking hands, I pushed open the glass door.

Iris screamed, her arms flying up to cover herself as water sloshed over the edges of the tub. But it was too late. I'd seen everything—her naked body pressed against my husband's, his hands tangled in her dark hair, the look of pure contentment on his face that I hadn't seen directed at me in months.

"Elara!" Damien's face went white, then flushed red as he scrambled to put distance between himself and my assistant—my trusted assistant who'd worked beside me for two years, who I'd invited to our home for dinner parties, who I'd considered almost a friend.

"This isn't—" he started, but the words died as he met my eyes.

I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. The world tilted sideways, and I found myself gripping the doorframe to keep from falling.

Two years. The timeline crashed over me like a wave. Iris had started working for me two years ago. Fresh out of business school, eager and bright, with ideas that impressed even Damien during our dinner conversations. I'd been so proud when he'd started taking an interest in my work, asking about my projects, requesting that Iris join us for business dinners.

How could I have been so blind?

The late nights at the office. The way Iris always volunteered to handle Damien's requests personally. The knowing looks between them that I'd dismissed as professional rapport. The times I'd come home to find them deep in conversation that stopped the moment I entered the room.

My legs gave out, and I sank to the cold marble floor, my silk dress pooling around me like spilled wine.

"Elara, please," Iris's voice was small, shaking. She'd wrapped a towel around herself, her makeup smeared, her hair dripping. "I never meant for you to find out this way."

Find out this way. As if there was a good way to discover your husband's affair.

Damien climbed out of the tub, water streaming from his body as he reached for a robe. But instead of rushing to comfort me, instead of the apologies I expected, he stood there with something that looked almost like irritation crossing his features.

"You should have knocked," he said, his tone sharp. "You can't just barge into—"

"Barge into my own bathroom?" The words came out as a whisper, but they cut through the steamy air like a blade.

Iris began to cry—delicate, pretty tears that somehow made her look even more beautiful. "I'm so sorry, Elara. But we... we love each other. We tried to fight it, but feelings aren't something you can control."

Love. They loved each other.

I stared at my husband, this man I'd built a life with, searching his face for some sign of remorse, of the man who'd once promised to cherish me forever. Instead, I found cold calculation.

"How long?" My voice sounded foreign to my own ears.

Damien's jaw tightened. "Elara—"

"How long, Damien?"

He exchanged a glance with Iris, and in that moment of silent communication, I saw everything I needed to know.

"Two years," he said finally, his voice devoid of emotion. "Almost from the beginning."

Two years. Our entire marriage had been a lie for nearly half its duration.

"I stopped loving you a long time ago," he continued, each word a nail in the coffin of our relationship. "You're a good woman, Elara, but you're... boring. Predictable. You come home, you cook dinner, you ask about my day. That's it. That's all you are."

The cruelty in his voice was breathtaking.

"Iris understands my ambitions," he pressed on, seemingly oblivious to the way I was crumbling before his eyes. "She has vision, passion. She challenges me. We're building something together—something real."

"We're married," I whispered.

He shrugged, the gesture so casual it might have been discussing the weather. "We'll get divorced. I'll make sure you're taken care of financially—you deserve that much. But this marriage has been over for a long time, Elara. We were just too comfortable to admit it."

Too comfortable. As if love was something you outgrew, like a childhood hobby.

I pushed myself to my feet, my legs unsteady but my mind suddenly, crystalline clear. Without a word, I pulled out my phone and took a photo of them both—Damien in his robe, Iris clutching her towel, both of them looking guilty and exposed.

"What are you doing?" Damien demanded.

"Documenting," I said simply, then turned and walked away.

I moved through our home like a ghost, collecting my purse, my keys, my dignity. The champagne sat abandoned on the bedroom floor, the celebration dinner growing cold in the dining room.

As I reached the front door, I pulled out my phone again and typed a message to Damien: "I need time to process this. I'll be staying at a hotel tonight."

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