Follow
Chapters
Share
I Sold My Husband’s Secrets to His Mistress Novel Cover

I Sold My Husband’s Secrets to His Mistress

Nola Lawson held my hand the entire elevator ride up. She had picked me up herself that morning — not sent a car, not texted directions — shown up at our apartment door in a cream blazer with a thermos of coffee she'd made at home, like she was dropping her kid off at kindergarten. Which, I suppose, was exactly what she thought she was doing. "This is going to be so good for you two," she said, squeezing my fingers as the elevator climbed. "Shared purpose. That's what every marriage needs. I told HR to put you in the office right next to his." "That's so thoughtful," I said. And I meant it. Nola was genuinely thoughtful. That was the thing about her — she wasn't performing warmth, she just had it in abundance, aimed in entirely the wrong direction.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Tristan called me into his office at 9:17 a.m.

I know the exact time because I had just finished updating Daphne's weekly invoice and was about to close the tab when his assistant knocked on my door with that particular look people get when they're delivering bad news they didn't create.

"He'd like to see you," she said.

"Of course," I said.

I saved the document, straightened my jacket, and walked down the hall.

His door was already open. He was standing at the window with his back to me, which was a choice — the kind of staging a man does when he wants to control the first impression. The city spread out behind him, gray and indifferent. He turned when he heard me come in, and I could see it immediately: the jaw set too tight, the eyes doing that thing where they go very flat and very still. Not guilt. Not remorse. Fury at the inconvenience of being seen.

"Close the door," he said.

I closed it.

He didn't offer me a seat. I sat down anyway, crossed my legs, and waited.

"The photos," he started, then stopped. Recalibrated. "The photos are misleading."

I nodded slowly, like I was considering this.

"Daphne and I have a complicated history." He said it the way people say things they've rehearsed — smooth on the surface, hollow underneath. "It's not what it looks like."

"Okay," I said.

He blinked. He had been expecting something else. Tears, maybe. Questions. The particular kind of wifely distress that would let him stay in the role of the man managing a difficult situation rather than the man who caused it.

"The board is going to have questions," I said. "Probably by end of week. Do you want me to draft a statement? I can keep it vague — focus on the professional relationship, emphasize the corporate account angle. It won't hold forever, but it buys time."

The silence that followed was one of my favorites. The kind where a person is trying to locate the conversation they thought they were having.

"No," he said finally.

"Alright." I stood. "Let me know if you change your mind."

I walked back to my office, sat down, and reopened the invoice.

I changed the weekly rate to eight hundred. The pregnancy announcement, when it came, would be worth at least that.

---

Janiyah found me at the coffee station at 4:52 p.m. with the expression of a woman carrying information she was physically struggling to contain.

"You're going to want to hear this," she said, in a voice pitched just below the ambient noise of the office.

"I usually do," I said.

She glanced over her shoulder. "Daphne told him she's pregnant."

I poured my coffee. Added a splash of oat milk. Stirred it once.

"This afternoon?" I asked.

"Like an hour ago. Apparently she went into his office and closed the door and was in there for forty minutes." Janiyah's eyes were very wide. "Word is she said the baby is his. Said it was a sign. Said they couldn't keep pretending." She paused. "I'm paraphrasing, but I have a source."

"You always do," I said. "Thank you, Janiyah."

She hovered for a moment, clearly hoping for more. I smiled at her and picked up my coffee.

She took the hint and went back to her desk.

I stood at the coffee station for another few seconds, looking out at the open floor. Tristan's office door was closed. The light under it was on. Somewhere in there, a man was sitting with the specific weight of a situation he had walked into with his eyes open and was now pretending had happened to him.

I thought about the photo in his desk drawer. The one from the Georgetown alumni newsletter, 2015. His hand at the small of her back. Her face turned up toward his.

I thought about the first year of our marriage, when I had still been paying attention to things like that.

Then I finished my coffee, rinsed the mug, and went back to my desk.

---

I called Sylvia at 7:30 that evening from my kitchen, standing at the counter with a glass of wine I hadn't touched yet.

"Tell me the timeline still works," I said.

"It works better than it did this morning." Sylvia's voice had the particular quality of a woman who had been waiting for this call and had already done the math. "Page Six gives us documented evidence of the affair. The pregnancy announcement — even unverified — establishes a pattern of conduct that strengthens your position considerably. The settlement terms you drafted six months ago?"

"Yes."

"Conservative," she said. "We can do better."

I picked up the wine. "How much better?"

She told me.

I set the wine back down.

"File," I said.

"I'll have the papers ready within forty-eight hours. His team won't know what hit them — they haven't retained a divorce specialist yet. I checked this afternoon."

"Of course you did."

"That's what you pay me for." A pause. "Kyla. Are you sure?"

It was the only question Sylvia ever asked me that wasn't strictly legal. She asked it every time we spoke, in different words, and I had always given her the same answer.

"I've been sure for two years," I said. "I was just waiting for the paperwork to catch up."

She made a sound that might have been a laugh. "Forty-eight hours."

"I'll be here."

I hung up and stood in the kitchen for a moment. The apartment was quiet. Tristan wasn't home yet — he had a dinner, or said he did, and I had stopped tracking the difference between his real schedule and his cover story months ago because it no longer mattered.

I walked to my desk, opened the laptop, and pulled up the spreadsheet.

I found the *Timeline* tab. Scrolled to the next available row.

Typed: *Phase three: initiated.*

Then I went back to the invoice, updated the rate one more time, and sent it.

The deposit would clear by morning. It always did.

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

You may also like

After His Betrayal, I Rejected the Bond Novel Cover
9.5
The night before our marking ceremony, Sienna Collins, Lincoln Taylor’s ex-mate, posted an update on Instagram: "Out of millions of possibilities, I’d still choose you." The image showed two hands clasped tightly together. I reported the post for being inappropriate. Lincoln, the Alpha of the Silverfang Pack, instantly called me on FaceTime. With Sienna sobbing in the background, he accused me of being petty and self-centered. Ten minutes later, he commented on her post, saying, "Finally got what I wanted after all this time." In the past, such behavior would have driven me mad. I would have bombarded him with calls, reached out to his Beta and Gamma, and ultimately confronted Sienna for her audacity. I would have been a mess. But this time, I genuinely couldn’t care less. By the time I got back to the pack den, it was late. Lincoln sat on the couch, irritably fiddling with his tie.
After My Husband Planned My Murder, I Fought Back Novel Cover
9.4
Charity-gala hostess Sophie crashes her Mercedes when the brakes fail; she awakens locked-in—fully conscious but paralyzed. From her hospital bed she hears husband Ethan and stepsister Madison gloat that the “accident” guarantees they’ll inherit her fortune in three years, and nightly they fornicate beside her. After weeks of silent practice Sophie regains a single flicker of her left eyelash, then deliberately flutters both lashes during rounds, spiking the monitor. She croaks “Husband…” as Ethan kisses her hand in fake joy—letting them think she remembers nothing while they exchange worried glances.
After My Sister Took My Dowry and Groom Novel Cover
9.4
The iron gates of the George family estate loomed before me, familiar yet strange after three long years. My hands trembled slightly as I clutched the small travel bag containing my few possessions from the convent. Three years of prayer, penance, and punishment—all for my sister's sins. All for a family that had promised me love and loyalty in return. The guard's eyes widened in recognition. "Miss Lillian! You've returned!" "Yes," I said, forcing a smile that didn't reach my eyes. "Is everyone home?" "Everyone's in the ballroom, miss. There's a... celebration today." Something in his hesitation made my stomach tighten, but I nodded and walked through the familiar corridors.
Betrayal in the Penthouse Novel Cover
8.7
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime, revealing the marble foyer of our penthouse. I stepped out, balancing a bag of groceries in one arm and a bouquet of lilies in the other—Marcus's favorite. After three years of marriage, I still believed in grand gestures, in rekindling what had begun to feel like a dying flame. Three years of choosing to see the man I fell in love with, not the increasingly distant stranger who shared my bed. The silence of our home greeted me. Usually, Marcus's assistant would call if he planned to be home early. I placed the groceries on the kitchen counter, arranging the flowers in a crystal vase—a wedding gift from his mother. The salmon would have to wait. First, I wanted to change out of my work clothes, slip into something that might remind my husband why he had once looked at me like I was his entire world. As I approached our bedroom, I heard it—a sound so familiar yet so out of place that my mind refused to process it at first.
My Husband Burned My Lover’s Building to Get Me Back Novel Cover
9.1
The fog didn’t lift gently; it shattered. For two years, my mind had been a room filled with cotton—muffled, white, shapeless. But when I opened my eyes that morning, the world was violently sharp. The intricate plaster molding on the ceiling wasn’t just a blur of shadows anymore; I could trace every acanthus leaf, every crack in the paint. I was Everleigh Brooks. I was twenty-six. And three years ago, I had married Hudson Kelly. The memories of the car accident slammed into me, followed by the humiliating realization of what I had become: a cognitively regressed invalid, a child in a woman’s body. My breath hitched, panic rising in my throat, but the sound of the bedroom door creaking open froze me. Instinct, primal and terrified, forced my eyelids down.
The Billionaire's Accidental Lover Novel Cover
7.2
Still nursing the wounds of a devastating breakup, Olivia turns to online dating When she agrees to meet a charming stranger, she braces herself for awkward small talk and forced smiles. What she doesn't expect is to walk into the wrong date. Embarrassed. Olivia is ready to walk away. But then a perfect stranger Mr. Damian Carrington decided to make it worthwhile. Handsome, confident, and dangerously persuasive, he offers to salvage her ruined evening. One drink turns into two. One laugh turns into a kiss. And one reckless, drunken night leads to a one-night stand she swears she'll forget. Until she walks into work the next morning... and finds out her new boss is none other than Damian Carrington. He remembers everything. And he's not letting her go. Damian is powerful, relentless, and hooked on making Olivia his no matter how many walls she builds or how many times she says no. But Olivia knows the risks. She's already been burned by love, and getting involved with her boss could destroy everything she's worked for. As fate pulls them together and buried secrets begin to surface betrayals, heartbreaks, and truths neither of them are ready to face Olivia must decide: will she protect her heart, or risk it all for a man who could ruin her... or love her beyond reason? When love is born from a lie, can it survive the truth?