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Husband's Betrayal Costs Her All Novel Cover

Husband's Betrayal Costs Her All

I needed to check tomorrow's court schedule, and my phone was dead. Nothing unusual about borrowing my husband's phone on a Tuesday night after ten years of marriage. "Stet, can I use your phone? Mine's charging," I called out from our home office, already reaching for his device on the desk. "Sure, go ahead," Stetson's voice floated in from the living room, casual and unconcerned. That should have been my first clue. My husband, the man who once password-protected his fantasy football accounts, had left his phone unlocked. As I opened his calendar app, a notification slid down from the top of the screen. Cleo: *Can't wait to see you tomorrow. Wearing that thing you like...* My finger hovered over the message.
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Chapter 2

The conference room felt smaller than usual as I settled into my chair for our weekly partners meeting. The mahogany table that had once symbolized our shared success now seemed like a battlefield, with Stetson positioned at the head like a conquering general.

"Before we dive into case assignments," Stetson announced, his voice carrying that practiced charm I'd once found attractive, "I want to recognize some exceptional work from our newest rising star."

My coffee cup grew warm between my palms as I watched him gesture toward the door. Cleo Sanders entered with theatrical timing, her blonde hair catching the morning light streaming through the windows. She wore a navy blazer that looked suspiciously similar to one hanging in my closet.

"Cleo's victory in Morrison vs. TechCorp demonstrates exactly the kind of innovative thinking Pierce & Associates is known for," Stetson continued, his eyes practically glowing with pride. "Her strategy was nothing short of brilliant."

My knuckles whitened against the ceramic as David Chen led the applause. Margaret Hayes, our senior partner, nodded approvingly while scribbling notes. The same colleagues who'd worked alongside me for years now celebrated the theft of my own work, oblivious to the elaborate deception playing out before them.

"The client was so impressed," Cleo said, her voice honeyed with false modesty, "they've already referred two additional cases to the firm. Sometimes fresh perspective is exactly what complex litigation needs."

Fresh perspective. My jaw clenched as she delivered my own closing argument philosophy with practiced innocence. I forced myself to take a measured sip of coffee, the bitter liquid matching the taste in my mouth.

"Lucille," Stetson's voice cut through my thoughts, "as Cleo's supervising attorney, you must be proud of her development."

Every eye in the room turned to me. The silence stretched like a taut wire, waiting for my response. I set my cup down with deliberate precision, the soft clink echoing in the suddenly quiet space.

"Exceptional work indeed," I said, my voice steady as courtroom marble. "Quite... impressive for someone so new to complex litigation."

Cleo's smile faltered for just a moment, but Stetson beamed as if I'd delivered a glowing endorsement. The meeting continued around me, but I barely heard the discussion of upcoming cases and billing targets. My mind was calculating, planning, preparing for what came next.

---

The gymnasium echoed with the squeak of sneakers and the bounce of basketballs as I climbed the bleachers to find a seat for Orion's game. I'd promised him I'd be here, despite the Morrison case files still demanding my attention back at the office.

That's when I saw them.

Stetson sat in our usual family section, but he wasn't alone. Cleo perched beside him, wearing a Pierce High School hoodie and cheering enthusiastically as the teams warmed up. My signature red lipstick—Tom Ford's Cherry Lush, the one I'd worn to every important court appearance—painted her lips as she laughed at something my husband whispered in her ear.

The sight hit me like a physical blow, stealing the breath from my lungs. She wasn't just sleeping with my husband or stealing my cases. She was infiltrating my family, sitting in my seat, wearing my colors, cheering for my son.

"Go Orion!" Cleo's voice carried across the gymnasium as my seventeen-year-old son sank a practice shot. He turned toward the stands and waved, his smile bright and genuine as he spotted them.

Not me. Them.

I gripped the metal bleacher beneath me, the cold steel grounding me as my world tilted further off its axis. How long had this been going on? How many games had I missed while working late, only to have this woman slide seamlessly into the space I'd left empty?

The game began, but I couldn't focus on the action. Instead, I watched Cleo lean into Stetson during timeouts, watched her cheer with maternal enthusiasm for a boy who wasn't hers, watched my husband's hand rest casually on her knee as if they were the married couple and I was the interloper.

When Orion scored the winning basket, Cleo jumped to her feet, clapping and shouting with genuine joy. My son's eyes found them immediately, his face lighting up as he pointed toward their section.

I left before the final buzzer, my heels clicking against the gymnasium floor as I walked past families celebrating their children's victories. The parking lot felt like sanctuary, the cool evening air filling my lungs as I sat in my car and stared at the building where my replacement was probably congratulating my son on his game.

My phone buzzed with a text from Stetson: "Great game! Celebrating at Meridian with the team parents. Don't wait up."

Meridian Restaurant. The upscale place where we'd celebrated our fifth anniversary, where Stetson had proposed making me a full partner. Now it would be the site of another celebration I wasn't invited to.

I started the engine, but instead of heading home, I turned toward downtown. Some celebrations required uninvited guests.

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