
Husband's Fall, Wife's Rise
Chapter 2
My phone buzzed with yet another notification. I knew I shouldn't look, but my thumb moved of its own accord, opening Instagram to Isabella's latest story. The Manhattan skyline glittered behind her as she posed on the terrace of my husband's five-million-dollar gift, champagne flute raised toward the camera. Her caption burned into my retinas: "Assistant to CEO's wife in five days! #blessed #levelup #newchapter."
The comments section overflowed with congratulations from Manhattan's elite—people who had sat across from me at charity dinners, never knowing I was the anonymous donor behind their foundations. People who were now celebrating my replacement.
I tossed my phone onto the worn couch of my modest one-bedroom apartment—the place Ryan had insisted was "perfectly adequate" for me while he worked late nights at the office with Isabella. The same nights I'd been secretly making calls to ensure his company secured the Henderson contract or the Wilson investment.
"Five days," I whispered to the empty room. "Five days to replace five years."
My leather sketchbook lay open on the coffee table, filled with designs for community art centers I'd hoped to fund in Ryan's name—another gift he would never appreciate. I grabbed it, crumpling the pages in my fists until the thick paper protested. Then, as suddenly as the rage had come, it subsided.
I smoothed the pages carefully, staring at the creases I'd made. Like the wrinkles forming around my eyes from crying nights away, they couldn't be undone. But they could be repurposed.
I straightened my spine and wiped away the last tear I would ever shed for Ryan Mitchell. The woman who had hidden her wealth and power for love was gone. In her place stood someone new—someone with nothing left to lose and everything to reclaim.
My phone rang. Eleanor Vance. Perfect timing.
"I can meet you in thirty minutes," I said without preamble.
---
The Blackbird Café sat nestled between a boutique bookstore and an antique shop in a part of Manhattan that Ryan would consider beneath him—which made it the perfect meeting place. The weathered wooden tables and mismatched chairs offered more comfort than any of the sterile, modern restaurants he preferred.
Eleanor was already waiting, her tailored navy suit a stark contrast to the bohemian surroundings. She looked up from her laptop as I approached, her expression giving nothing away.
"You look different," she observed as I took the seat across from her.
"I feel different," I replied, setting my bag on the table. "Thank you for meeting me on such short notice."
She nodded once. "I was surprised to hear from you. After yesterday's meeting with Mr. Mitchell, I assumed you'd be..." She paused, choosing her words carefully. "Taking time to process."
"I've had five years to process who Ryan Mitchell really is," I said, my voice steadier than it had been in months. "Now I need your help."
Eleanor's eyebrow raised slightly. "My help?"
I leaned forward. "Ryan believes I'm a small-town nobody who contributed nothing to his success. He's offering me a broken-down cabin while giving Isabella a penthouse worth millions."
"That's the settlement he proposed, yes," Eleanor confirmed, her professional mask firmly in place, though I caught a flicker of something—perhaps respect—in her eyes.
"What if I told you that I'm not who he thinks I am?" I opened my bag and removed a flash drive, sliding it across the table. "And that I have documentation proving that every major business connection, every significant contract, and every important investment in his company came through my anonymous intervention?"
Eleanor's fingers hovered over the flash drive. "That would significantly alter the divorce proceedings."
"I don't want a battle," I said. "I want a signature. I want him to sign divorce papers that transfer every marital asset to me, without realizing what he's signing."
"You want to use his arrogance against him," Eleanor said, a hint of admiration creeping into her voice.
"I want justice," I corrected. "And I'm willing to pay your private consultation fee to ensure it happens outside your firm's knowledge."
Eleanor picked up the flash drive, turning it over in her fingers. "What you're suggesting is... unconventional."
"So is discarding your wife of five years for your assistant," I countered. "Can you help me?"
Eleanor tucked the flash drive into her jacket pocket and opened her laptop. "Let's draft a blueprint for this settlement," she said, her fingers poised over the keyboard. "One that Mr. Mitchell won't bother to read before signing."
As she began typing, I felt a strange sense of calm wash over me. Ryan had always underestimated me. Now, that would be his downfall.
You may also like





