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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 2

The Ritz-Carlton suite felt like a fortress—thirty floors above the chaos of my crumbling marriage, with floor-to-ceiling windows that made the city lights blur into abstract art. I sat at the mahogany desk, my laptop open, my phone charging, and my mind operating with a clarity I hadn't felt in years.

The champagne from our anniversary dinner sat untouched in my car's trunk. The silk dress I'd bought for tonight hung in the suite's closet, tags still attached—a monument to my naivety.

I dialed the number Charlotte had given me months ago, back when she'd joked about keeping a private investigator on retainer for her messier divorce cases.

"Marcus Webb Investigations." The voice was crisp, professional, tinged with the kind of confidence that came from years of uncovering ugly truths.

"Mr. Webb, this is Elara Ashford. I need your services immediately."

A pause. "Ashford. As in Ashford Industries?"

"Yes. I need a comprehensive investigation into my husband's activities over the past two years. I want everything—time stamps, locations, financial records, communications. Everything."

"I see. And the subject of investigation?"

"Damien Cross. And his... associate, Iris Chen." The words tasted like ash. "They've been having an affair. I need proof, and I need to know exactly how deep this goes."

"Ma'am, I have to ask—are you prepared for what we might find?"

I closed my eyes, seeing again the image of them in our bathtub, the casual cruelty in Damien's voice, the practiced tears on Iris's face. "Mr. Webb, I'm prepared for anything. What I'm not prepared for is being caught off guard again."

"Understood. I'll need a retainer—"

"Money is not an issue. I need results in forty-eight hours."

Another pause, longer this time. "That's... aggressive. But doable. I'll send over the contract within the hour."

I hung up and immediately dialed Charlotte's number. She answered on the first ring, her voice thick with sleep.

"Elara? It's almost midnight. Are you—"

"Charlotte, I need you to come to the Ritz. Presidential suite. Bring everything you need for an emergency divorce consultation."

The sleep vanished from her voice instantly. "What happened?"

"I found him. With Iris. In our bed, our bathroom, probably every surface of our home." My voice remained steady, clinical. "Two years, Charlotte. It's been going on for two years."

"Jesus Christ. I'm on my way."

While I waited, I opened my laptop and began documenting everything I could remember—every late night, every business dinner, every time Damien had suggested Iris join us for social events. The pattern was so obvious now, painted in neon signs I'd somehow missed.

Charlotte arrived within thirty minutes, her usually perfect blonde hair hastily pulled back, her designer suit wrinkled from being thrown on quickly. She took one look at me and immediately poured herself a scotch from the suite's bar.

"Tell me everything," she said, settling into the chair across from me.

I recounted the evening's events with the same detached precision I used in board meetings. Charlotte's expression grew darker with each detail.

"That bastard," she muttered when I finished. "And Iris... I never liked her. Too eager, too perfect. I should have seen this coming."

"We both should have." I pulled up the financial documents I'd downloaded from our shared accounts. "But that's not what concerns me most. Look at this."

Charlotte leaned forward, her lawyer instincts sharpening as she scanned the numbers. Her face went pale.

"Elara, there's money missing. Significant amounts."

"I know. The joint account has lost nearly two million over the past year. Small withdrawals, spread out, but consistent."

"And here—" Charlotte pointed to another document. "Damien's company stock options. He's been transferring shares. To whom?"

We spent the next two hours combing through financial records, and with each discovery, the scope of the betrayal became clearer. This wasn't just an affair—it was systematic theft.

My phone buzzed at 3 AM. Marcus Webb.

"Mrs. Ashford, I have preliminary findings. You're going to want to see this immediately."

"Send everything to this email address." I rattled off my secure account information.

The files arrived within minutes. Charlotte and I opened them together, and what we found made my discovery in the bathroom seem almost quaint.

Eighty-seven documented encounters over twenty-four months. Hotel receipts, restaurant charges, even vacation bookings—all charged to accounts I didn't know existed. But it was the timeline that made my blood run cold.

Three encounters during the week I'd miscarried last year. Three times Damien had been with Iris while I lay in a hospital bed, grieving the loss of our child.

"That son of a bitch," Charlotte whispered, her voice shaking with rage.

But the worst was yet to come. Marcus had included a background check on Iris that made my stomach drop.

"Charlotte, look at this." My finger trembled as I pointed to the screen. "Iris Chen isn't even her real name."

The woman I'd trusted, the woman I'd mentored, was actually Iris Nakamura—a professional con artist with a history of targeting wealthy men. Three previous relationships, all ending with substantial financial settlements or theft charges that had mysteriously disappeared from public records.

"She's done this before," Charlotte breathed. "Multiple times. And she's good at it—look at how she covered her tracks."

The investigation revealed more: Iris had been researching my family's wealth for months before applying for the job as my assistant. She'd targeted Damien specifically because of his access to me, to my trust funds, to the Ashford fortune.

And Damien... my husband had been helping her every step of the way.

But the final piece of evidence was what broke something fundamental inside me. Medical records Marcus had somehow obtained showed Iris was pregnant—two months along. The timing matched perfectly with when Damien had started talking about wanting children again, about how we should "try again" after the miscarriage.

Charlotte was on her phone, speaking in rapid, hushed tones to someone about asset protection and emergency injunctions. But I barely heard her.

All I could think about was the baby I'd lost—our baby—and how Damien had comforted me, held me while I cried, promised we'd try again when I was ready. All while he was already creating a new family with the woman who was systematically destroying mine.

My phone buzzed with a text from Damien: "Elara, don't be dramatic. Come home so we can discuss this like adults. You're overreacting."

I stared at the message for a long moment, then looked up at Charlotte, who had finished her call and was watching me with concern.

"He thinks I'm overreacting," I said quietly.

Charlotte's eyes flashed with fury. "Elara, you know what you have to do. But I need to ask—are you absolutely certain you want to go nuclear? Once we start this, there's no going back."

I thought about the champagne growing warm in my car. About the dinner I'd spent hours preparing. About five years of love and trust and building a life with someone who had been planning to destroy me almost from the beginning.

"I gave him five years of my life and my heart," I said, my voice steady as granite. "He gave me two years of lies and theft. I think it's time he learned what it means to underestimate an Ashford."

I picked up my phone and typed back: "You're right. I'm coming home tomorrow. We should talk."

Charlotte raised an eyebrow. "You're not actually going back there."

"No," I said, a cold smile spreading across my face. "But they don't need to know that yet. Let them think they've won. Let them get comfortable. It'll make what comes next so much more satisfying."

I turned to Charlotte, and for the first time since walking into that bathroom, I felt truly in control.

"Start the paperwork for complete asset seizure. I want every account frozen, every joint asset locked down. And Charlotte?" I met her eyes, and she actually took a step back at what she saw there. "I want them to lose everything."

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