
I Sold My Husband’s Secrets to His Mistress
Chapter 2
I found out about the Plaza on a Tuesday.
Nola called the concierge at 11:14 a.m. I know the exact time because I was sitting at my desk eating a salad and my phone was face-up on the table, and when it lit up with her name I almost let it go to voicemail. Almost.
Something made me pick up.
I didn't say anything. I just listened. Nola was in full operational mode — warm, efficient, completely certain she was saving her son's marriage one hotel booking at a time. She confirmed the suite under Tristan's corporate account. She confirmed the dinner reservation. And then, in the same cheerful tone she used to discuss braised short ribs, she confirmed the relaxation tonic.
"Just something to take the edge off," she told the concierge. "He's been so stressed. Add it to his pre-dinner drink order. The sparkling water, not the wine — he always starts with sparkling water."
The concierge said of course, Mrs. Lawson.
Nola said wonderful, and hung up.
I sat there for thirty seconds. The salad went untouched. Outside my window, a cab leaned on its horn for a long time and then stopped.
I picked up my phone and texted Daphne.
*Suite 1408. Thursday night. He'll be alone and in a generous mood. You're welcome. $1,000 this time.*
Her reply came in under a minute.
*Done.*
I put the phone down, pulled the salad back toward me, and finished my lunch.
---
Thursday evening, I arrived at The Plaza forty minutes before the retreat dinner was scheduled to begin.
I was not on the guest list. I didn't need to be. I knew the layout of the ground floor from a charity event Tristan and I had attended two years ago, and I knew that the pre-dinner drinks were staged in the Champagne Bar, which had two entrances and a service corridor that connected to the kitchen. I also knew, because I had spent three weeks building a very thorough user manual, that Tristan always arrived early and always started with sparkling water.
The drink was already on the bar when I got there. A tall glass, ice, a wedge of lime. Waiting for him like a small, obedient trap.
I swapped it for a clean glass from the service station. It took about eight seconds. No one looked at me. I was wearing a black dress and the particular expression of a woman who belongs wherever she is standing, which is the most effective disguise I know.
On my way out through the lobby, I stopped at the front desk.
"I have an envelope for a guest," I said. "Daphne Cook. She's checking in this evening."
The woman at the desk smiled and took it without a question.
Inside the envelope was a keycard to Suite 1408, which I had arranged that afternoon through a contact who owed me a favor and asked no follow-up questions. Also inside: a handwritten note with a single line.
*He'll be there by nine. Don't be late.*
I walked out through the revolving door onto Fifth Avenue. The evening air was cool and smelled like exhaust and something faintly floral from the park. I took a cab home, opened my laptop, and sent an anonymous text to a number I had pulled from Janiyah's very enthusiastic description of the Page Six stringer who had broken three Manhattan social scandals in the past eighteen months.
The text contained two things: Suite 1408, and a check-in time.
Then I poured a glass of wine, put on something I'd been meaning to watch for weeks, and went to bed at a reasonable hour.
---
The photos ran at 6:47 a.m.
I know because my phone started buzzing at 6:49 and didn't really stop after that. I was already awake. I'd made coffee, opened the Page Six app out of what I told myself was professional curiosity, and there they were.
Tristan in a rumpled shirt, jacket over one arm, the particular look of a man who has not slept and is not happy about being photographed. Daphne beside him in last night's dress, dark hair slightly undone, one hand raised toward the camera like she could stop it.
The headline read: *Lawson Real Estate Heir's Late-Night Exit.*
The subhead was more specific.
I read the whole thing twice. Then I closed the app and refilled my coffee.
Nola called at 8:03.
I let it ring once, just to be polite about it, and picked up on the second.
"Kyla." Her voice was thick. She had been crying, or was very close to it. "Have you seen — did you —"
"I know," I said. "It's awful."
A sound came through the phone that was somewhere between a sob and an exhale. "I don't understand. I don't understand how this happened."
I looked out the window. The morning light was doing something nice to the buildings across the street, turning the glass a pale, clean gold.
"These things are hard to predict," I said.
"He's going to call you," Nola said. "He has to call you. He has to explain —"
"Nola." I kept my voice gentle. "Let's just take a breath. Okay? We don't have to figure everything out this morning."
She made another sound. Gratitude, maybe. Or grief. With Nola, the two were often indistinguishable.
We stayed on the phone for another four minutes. I said the right things in the right order. I was very good at that.
After we hung up, I opened my laptop.
I navigated to the spreadsheet, found the *Timeline* tab, and entered a single note in the next available row.
*Phase two: complete.*
Then I opened a new tab, pulled up Sylvia Chen's contact information, and started drafting an email.
It was time to talk to my lawyer.
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