
Husband's Deceptive Game
Chapter 3
I stumbled back into the penthouse just before dawn, my body numb but my mind racing. The recording on my phone felt like a ticking bomb. Seven years of marriage built on lies. Seven years of believing I was special, unique—the only woman who could touch him without triggering his supposed condition.
My hands trembled as I sat at my desk, the city lights still glittering outside our floor-to-ceiling windows. Gabriel wouldn't be home for hours—he was still with her. With Charlotte. With their baby.
I opened my laptop, the screen's glow harsh in the dim room. Without allowing myself to hesitate, I composed an email to Eleanor Vance, the divorce attorney Olivia had recommended years ago when a mutual friend went through a messy separation.
"I need to meet urgently. My husband has been lying about a medical condition for our entire marriage while carrying on an affair with my half-sister, who is now pregnant with his child. I have video evidence. How soon can we talk?"
I attached the video, then hit send before I could change my mind. The quiet whoosh of the email departing felt like the first step in dismantling the elaborate prison my life had become.
A notification popped up on my phone—a login alert for my email account from an unfamiliar device. My blood ran cold. He was monitoring me. Of course he was. A man who could maintain such an elaborate lie for seven years would never leave anything to chance.
Moving quickly, I changed every password I could think of—email, banking, social media—creating new combinations so complex I had to write them down. The paper I tucked into my wallet, away from prying eyes.
My phone felt contaminated now. I forwarded the video to a new email account I created, then downloaded it onto a flash drive I found in my desk drawer. This small piece of plastic now held the evidence of my shattered life.
I texted Olivia: "Need to see you. It's worse than we thought."
Her reply came instantly: "My door is always open."
An hour later, I was in her apartment, the flash drive hidden in the false bottom of an old jewelry box she'd had since college.
"He's monitoring my accounts," I explained, my voice sounding strange even to my own ears—too calm, too detached. "If he finds out I know..."
"He won't," Olivia's eyes flashed with protective fury. "We're going to destroy him, Mads. Him and your psycho sister."
I shook my head. "I just need to get out. Safely."
"Eleanor Vance is the best. She'll help you nail his balls to the wall."
I managed a weak smile at her characteristic bluntness. "She already responded. We're meeting tomorrow."
Back at the penthouse, I showered, scrubbing my skin raw as if I could wash away the betrayal. I was just wrapping myself in a robe when I heard the front door open.
"Madison?" Gabriel's voice echoed through our home—no, his home. A stage set for his elaborate performance.
I steeled myself, arranging my features into what I hoped was a neutral expression as I stepped into the living room.
"There you are," he smiled, that devastating smile that had once made my heart race. Now it just made my stomach turn. "I was worried when I woke up and you weren't there."
"Couldn't sleep," I said, the half-truth bitter on my tongue. "Thought I'd get an early start."
His eyes narrowed slightly, studying me. Had he always been this scrutinizing, or was I only noticing it now that I knew the truth?
"You've been acting strange since dinner last night," he said, moving closer. "What did Olivia say to you?"
I felt my pulse quicken. "Nothing important."
"You're lying." His tone remained gentle, but there was an edge to it now. "You've never been good at hiding things from me, Madison."
The irony was almost enough to make me laugh. Instead, I took a deep breath and crafted another lie to add to the tangled web between us.
"Fine. I was going to surprise you, but... I'm flying to Chicago next week. Potential client for the gallery. It's a big opportunity, and I didn't want to overshadow our anniversary."
His posture relaxed slightly, but his eyes remained watchful. "Chicago? For how long?"
"Just three days," I said, the fictional trip already taking shape in my mind. Three days might be enough time to set my escape plan in motion.
Gabriel's phone buzzed in his pocket. He glanced at it, and I caught the flicker of something in his eyes—anticipation? Anxiety?
"Another business emergency?" I couldn't keep the edge from my voice.
He slipped the phone back into his pocket without checking it. "Nothing that can't wait. You're more important."
As he pulled me into an embrace, I forced myself to relax against him, to not recoil from the touch that now felt like poison. Over his shoulder, I watched his phone light up again on the counter where he'd placed it.
The name on the screen was clearly visible: Charlotte.
I closed my eyes, letting him hold me while my mind raced ahead to tomorrow's meeting with Eleanor Vance—the first step toward freedom from this beautiful, poisonous lie.
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