Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

The test sat on the edge of the sink like an accusation.

I bought two. I always buy two. I stood in the bathroom of my Brooklyn brownstone at six in the morning with the window cracked and the city just starting to breathe outside, and I looked at the first one for a long time before I picked up the second.

Same result.

I sat down on the tile floor. The grout was cold through my pajama pants. I put my back against the cabinet under the sink and pulled my knees up and looked at the ceiling.

The math was not complicated. I did it anyway, twice, the way I do everything — methodically, without flinching. Six weeks, give or take. The night at this kitchen table. The wine. The conversation about laksa and Chicago and nothing that mattered and everything that did.

Julien.

I sat with that for a while. The ceiling didn't offer anything useful.

I called Mercy at six forty-three.

---

She arrived at seven fifty with two bags of groceries and said nothing when I opened the door. She came in, put the bags on the counter, and started unpacking them — orange juice, crackers, a container of soup she'd clearly grabbed from the place on Atlantic Avenue that I'd mentioned once, months ago. She moved around my kitchen like she'd been doing it for years, which she had.

I sat at the table and watched her.

When she finally sat down across from me, she reached over and put her hand on top of mine. She didn't say it was going to be okay. She didn't say anything for a while. That was why I'd called her.

"The gala is six weeks out," I said.

"I know."

"I'm not changing the plan."

She looked at me. Her eyes were steady, the way they always were when she was deciding whether to push. She decided not to.

"I know," she said again.

We sat there in the kitchen with the morning light coming through the window and her hand over mine, and I breathed. In. Out. The same way I'd been breathing through everything for months — carefully, deliberately, like each breath was a small act of will.

I was not going to raise this child inside a lie. That was the only thing I was certain of. Everything else could wait. The gala could not.

---

I told no one else.

Not Reid. Not Sienna — not yet, not until I needed to. I booked my first prenatal appointment under a different name, paid in cash, and sat in the waiting room of a practice on the Upper West Side that had no connection to anyone in my life. The doctor was efficient and kind and asked no questions I couldn't answer.

I added the appointment to my private calendar. I added the pregnancy to my internal timeline, the one I kept in a notes file that was encrypted and backed up in three places.

Six weeks to the gala. I updated the column.

I was not scared. I told myself that every morning while I made coffee and reviewed my calendar and moved through the penthouse like a woman who had not decided to burn everything down. I was not scared. I was organized. There was a difference.

I straightened the pen beside my notepad and went to work.

---

The rooftop bar was Mercy's idea — a Thursday evening, a client she wanted me to meet, a reason to be somewhere that wasn't the penthouse or the office. I wore the black dress I kept at the brownstone and took a car across the bridge and told myself it would be a quiet night.

I saw them from across the terrace.

Reid first. Then Karsyn beside him, her hand on the back of his chair, laughing at something he'd said. She was wearing a dress I recognized — deep green silk, a wrap style, the kind of thing that photographs beautifully. Reid had given it to me eight months ago. I'd left it in the penthouse closet when I moved my things to the guest room. She'd told me, when I asked about it two months back, that she'd returned it.

She had not returned it.

Mercy saw my face. She put her hand on my arm.

"We can go," she said quietly.

"No."

I crossed the terrace. I was calm. I was always calm. I stopped in front of their table and looked at Reid, and then at Karsyn, and then at the dress.

"That's mine," I said.

Karsyn tilted her head. Her expression was soft, slightly confused — the performance she'd been running for months. "Lorelei, I —"

"Lorelei." Reid's voice was low, controlled, the boardroom voice he used when he wanted to manage a situation without appearing to. "You're making a scene."

I looked at him.

"Go home," he said. "Calm down. We can talk about this later."

The terrace was not loud. The people around us were not pretending not to listen. I could feel them — the slight stillness, the angled attention, the particular quality of a social circle watching one of its own get cut down.

I looked at Reid's face. The careful patience in it. The faint embarrassment — not for what he'd done, but for the inconvenience of being confronted with it in public.

I looked at Karsyn. She had picked up her wine glass. She was watching me over the rim with an expression that was almost sympathetic, and her eyes were not sympathetic at all.

I said nothing.

I turned and walked back across the terrace. Mercy fell into step beside me without a word. We took the stairs down to the street and walked half a block before either of us spoke.

The night air was warm and smelled like exhaust and someone's takeout and the particular smell of a New York summer that I had always loved and would always love regardless of what happened inside it.

"Tell me what you need," Mercy said.

I looked straight ahead. The last thread — the one I hadn't known I was still holding — had snapped so cleanly I'd barely felt it go.

"The photos," I said. "The recordings. Everything."

Mercy nodded once.

We kept walking.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

A painful marriage: Mr. CEO, let's get a divorce Novel Cover
8.9
With a contract, she was forcibly dragged into the conflicts of a wealthy family. She was like a bound servant, obeying their orders again and again. For her sister's sake, she endured it, yet she still wanted to fight back. After living under the same roof day and night, she realized she had slowly begun to develop feelings for him. When love and hatred became intertwined, in the end, she chose to run away.
After His Secretary Caused My Miscarriage, I Divorced Him Novel Cover
9.6
On my birthday, my husband's secretary brought me a bouquet of flowers. Unfortunately, I was allergic to the pollen, which led to the loss of the baby I was carrying. A colleague called my husband, but he was indifferent. "What's with all the drama? I already sent her a gift. Now what is this fuss about?" he grumbled. When the doctor required a family member's signature, he was equally dismissive. "It's just an allergy, isn't it? Do I really need to show up for this?" he scoffed. I vaguely overheard him comforting his tearful secretary.
Divorce After Deception Novel Cover
9.2
I was in the middle of a tough labor, bleeding heavily, and my husband, Leo Wilson, who had promised to be the first to welcome our baby, was nowhere to be found. The doctor looked around the room with concern. “Where’s Mr. Wilson? Without his signature, there's a risk of serious complications.” I gathered my strength to call Leo, only to hear his ex-girlfriend’s voice on the line. “Leo, you’re amazing.” Leo snapped at me, annoyed. “Women go through childbirth all the time. Stop being so dramatic.” “Rory’s depression is worse. As her doctor, I can’t just leave her now.” Leo was not just my husband but also the hospital’s director, though his heart belonged to his muse, Rory Simmons. As long as Rory was around, I was invisible.
Escaping My Coldhearted Billionaire Husband Novel Cover
8.7
Ada was eight months pregnant, sitting peacefully in her husband's Manhattan estate, looking at a baby nursery catalog. Suddenly, her husband's mistress, Jacklyn, walked in, threw an ultrasound photo on the table, and locked the door. Before Ada could process the betrayal, Jacklyn dragged her to the top of the marble staircase and threw herself backward just as Desmond walked through the front doors. "She pushed me, Desmond! She tried to kill our baby!" Desmond looked at Ada with absolute hatred. He ignored Ada's breaking water and her agonizing screams for help, leaving her to miscarry on the freezing floor while he rushed Jacklyn to the hospital. He sent Ada to a brutal federal prison for three years, where she was tortured and left with a body covered in horrific scars, mourning the baby she was told died at birth. When Ada was finally released, Desmond destroyed her cousin's company to force her back to his estate as a lowly maid. But when Ada saw Jacklyn's three-year-old son, her world stopped. Right in the center of the little boy's palm was a faint crescent moon birthmark. It was the exact same mark Ada had kissed on her own lifeless baby's tiny hand before the doctors took his body away. How did her dead child become Jacklyn's little prince? Looking at the woman who stole her life and the husband who threw her in hell, Ada clenched her scarred hands and swore she would tear their world apart to get her son back.
Ex-Girlfriend's Downfall Novel Cover
9.6
After three years together, Laurel always kept me at arm's length. She claimed her upbringing was strict and that intimacy would have to wait until marriage. However, at Curtis's art exhibition, I was confronted by dozens of provocative portraits of Laurel in various poses, painted from when she was 18 to 25, immortalized on canvas. Fury surged through me, and I nearly tore the paintings to shreds. But Laurel stopped me. “Do you even know what these are? They're art. You're such a small-town guy, out of touch with reality.” I called my mom and canceled the engagement ring I had been planning to use to propose to Laurel. “I agree to the Robertson-Rivera match,” I told her. As soon as I hung up, Laurel caught up with me.
My Groom Took My Mother’s Blood for His Mistress Novel Cover
7.8
The crystal chandeliers of the Pierre Hotel didn’t sparkle; they glared. Under their harsh interrogation, I adjusted the strap of my gown, feeling the silk cling to the cold sweat on my back. This was supposed to be the night Asher and I announced our wedding date. Instead, the air in the ballroom felt thin, insufficient to fill my lungs. I scanned the room for my parents. They weren't at the head table where the place cards read *Family of the Bride*. I found them tucked into a dark corner near the swinging kitchen doors, the draft from the service entrance fluttering the hem of my mother’s modest dress. Dad was staring at his hands, knuckles white as he gripped the tablecloth. Mom looked smaller than I remembered, her skin possessing the translucent, papery quality of dried leaves. A waiter dropped a tray onto their table with a clatter that cut through the string quartet’s melody.