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I Exposed My Husband’s Affair at Our Company Gala Novel Cover

I Exposed My Husband’s Affair at Our Company Gala

I came home a day early. The flight from Chicago landed at six-fifteen, and I didn't tell Reid. I thought about it — typed the text, deleted it. I told myself it was because I wanted to surprise him. That was a lie I was still willing to believe on the cab ride home. The penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The kind of quiet that has weight to it. I set my carry-on by the door and noticed Reid's jacket on the entryway chair, his keys on the console table. Home, then. I walked toward the bedroom.
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Chapter 1

I came home a day early.

The flight from Chicago landed at six-fifteen, and I didn't tell Reid. I thought about it — typed the text, deleted it. I told myself it was because I wanted to surprise him. That was a lie I was still willing to believe on the cab ride home.

The penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The kind of quiet that has weight to it. I set my carry-on by the door and noticed Reid's jacket on the entryway chair, his keys on the console table. Home, then.

I walked toward the bedroom.

The door opened before I reached it.

Karsyn stepped out.

She was wearing Reid's robe — the charcoal one I'd given him for his birthday two years ago. Her hair was wet, dark strands pressed against her neck. And she smelled like me. My perfume. The bottle I kept on the left side of the vanity.

She stopped when she saw me. Something moved across her face — not guilt, exactly. More like recalculation.

"Lorelei." Her voice was soft. It was always soft. "You're back early."

I didn't answer. I looked at her standing in my doorway, in my husband's robe, wearing my scent, and I felt something in my chest go very still. Not cold. Still. The way a room goes still right before the power cuts out.

Reid appeared behind her.

He was in a t-shirt and slacks, barefoot, hair not quite right. He saw me and his face did the thing it always did when he needed a moment to construct something — a brief, almost imperceptible blankness, and then the performance began.

"Lorelei. Hey. I didn't know you were —"

"The bed," I said.

He stopped.

I looked past both of them into the master bedroom. The sheets were pulled back on both sides. Two pillows. The lamp on the right was still on.

I looked back at Reid.

"It was dark," he said. His voice was already in damage-control mode — measured, reasonable, the tone he used in board meetings when a number came in wrong. "I'd been drinking. I thought — Lorelei, I genuinely thought it was you. I know how that sounds, but —"

"How many times?"

The question came out quiet. Quieter than I expected.

He opened his mouth. Closed it.

That pause — three seconds, maybe four — told me everything the answer would have.

Karsyn said nothing. She stood there with her wet hair and my perfume and watched me the way you watch something you've been waiting to see.

I picked up my carry-on from the entryway. I walked to the guest bedroom at the end of the hall. I closed the door. I turned the lock.

---

The room was dark and I didn't turn on the light.

I sat on the edge of the guest bed and looked at the floor and breathed. In. Out. The city hummed forty floors below. Someone was playing music in the building across the street, something with bass that I could feel more than hear.

I did not cry.

I picked up my phone and called Mercy first.

She answered on the second ring. "Hey, how was —"

"I need you to listen," I said.

She listened. I told her in short, flat sentences. When I finished, she was quiet for a moment, and then she said, "I'm going to need you to tell me you're okay."

"I'm fine."

"That's not what I asked."

"Mercy." I straightened the edge of the bedspread with my free hand. "I need the name of the best divorce attorney in Manhattan. Someone discreet."

Another pause. Then: "Sienna Park. I'll text you her number right now."

I called Sienna Park at seven forty-three in the evening. She answered herself, which told me something about her. I gave her the short version. She asked three questions — precise, no wasted words — and then she said she could see me Thursday at noon.

I said Thursday worked.

After I hung up, I sat in the dark a little longer. I opened the notes app on my phone and started a list.

---

Breakfast the next morning was a performance I gave for an audience of one.

I came out at seven-thirty in a pressed blouse and poured my coffee and reviewed my calendar on my tablet. Reid came in at seven forty-five, moving carefully, the way people move when they're not sure what they're walking into.

"Lorelei —"

"I have a nine o'clock," I said. "And a call with the Chicago team at eleven."

He sat down across from me. I could feel him watching my face, looking for the crack, the opening, the sign that last night was something we were going to process together. I gave him nothing. I turned a page. I drank my coffee.

By the time I left, he looked almost relieved.

He didn't notice I'd moved my jewelry to the guest room.

---

Sienna Park's office was on the thirty-eighth floor of a Midtown building with no signage in the lobby. The waiting room had no magazines. I appreciated that.

She was in her mid-forties, precise in the way of someone who had stopped tolerating imprecision a long time ago. She shook my hand and we sat and she laid out the architecture in clean, sequential terms. Document everything. Touch nothing jointly held without counsel. Don't move money. Don't change behavior. Wait for the right moment.

I slid a folder across her desk.

She opened it. Went still. Turned a page. Then another.

She looked up. "How long have you been collecting this?"

"Weeks," I said. "Screenshots. Timestamps. Her Instagram posts. Two voicemails he left her that came to my phone by mistake. Or what he said was a mistake."

Sienna studied me for a moment. "You were ready before you knew."

"I knew," I said. "I just needed proof."

She closed the folder and set it on her side of the desk. "Then let's talk about what comes next."

---

The job listing went up on a Tuesday through a third-party HR firm. Blind posting — no company name, no my name. Executive assistant to a senior executive in the private sector. The qualifications were specific. The application window was ten days.

I reviewed the submissions myself. Most of them were fine. Competent. Forgettable.

One wasn't.

The resume was clean and dense with substance — London, then Singapore, fluent in three languages, a track record that moved in a straight line without a single gap or hedge. But it was the cover letter that made me stop. Most cover letters tell you what the applicant wants you to know. This one asked questions. The right questions. About workflow, about communication style, about what the role actually required versus what the posting said it required.

I read it twice.

Then I pulled up the name at the top of the page.

Julien Mendez.

I scheduled the interview myself.

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