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My Husband Bought His Mistress a Mansion with Company Funds Novel Cover

My Husband Bought His Mistress a Mansion with Company Funds

The silence in our penthouse was usually the expensive kind. It was the hush of soundproofed glass overlooking the San Francisco Bay, the quiet hum of a Sub-Zero wine fridge, the stillness of a life that had supposedly made it. Tonight, though, the silence felt heavy, like the air before a thunderstorm breaks. Evan was in the shower. I could hear the rhythmic thrum of the water against the slate tiles, a sound that used to comfort me. I sat at the kitchen island, the marble cool against my forearms, reviewing the quarterly projections for Starlight Tech on my tablet. Old habits died hard. Even at 11:00 PM on a Friday, I was optimizing, strategizing, building. Then, the vibration. A harsh, insect-like buzz against the stone countertop.
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Chapter 1

The silence in our penthouse was usually the expensive kind. It was the hush of soundproofed glass overlooking the San Francisco Bay, the quiet hum of a Sub-Zero wine fridge, the stillness of a life that had supposedly made it. Tonight, though, the silence felt heavy, like the air before a thunderstorm breaks.

Evan was in the shower. I could hear the rhythmic thrum of the water against the slate tiles, a sound that used to comfort me. I sat at the kitchen island, the marble cool against my forearms, reviewing the quarterly projections for Starlight Tech on my tablet. Old habits died hard. Even at 11:00 PM on a Friday, I was optimizing, strategizing, building.

Then, the vibration. A harsh, insect-like buzz against the stone countertop.

Evan’s phone. He’d left it face-up next to the fruit bowl. I usually ignored it—we respected each other’s digital privacy as a rule of our trade—but the screen lit up, illuminating the dim kitchen with a harsh white glow. The preview notification lingered just long enough for the words to burn themselves into my retinas.

*Can't wait for our anniversary trip to the Riviera, Daddy. She doesn't suspect a thing.*

My breath hitched, a sharp, physical pain striking the center of my chest. The tablet pen slipped from my fingers, clattering loudly against the marble. *Daddy? Riviera? Anniversary?*

My hand moved before my brain could process the ethics. I snatched the phone. It was locked, of course. I stared at the keypad, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I typed in *0912*. September 12th. The day Starlight Tech went public. The day we rang the bell at Nasdaq, hands clasped, on top of the world.

The lock screen slid open.

I didn't just find a text. I found a parallel life. I scrolled, my thumb trembling, through a thread that stretched back four years. Four years. While I was pulling all-nighters to fix our server architecture, Evan was sending heart emojis to a contact named "Charleigh M." While I was negotiating with venture capitalists to keep our valuation afloat, Evan was booking suites at the Ritz.

Photos loaded on the screen. A young woman with blonde waves and wide, adoring eyes—Charleigh Mills. Our summer intern. I saw her wearing a diamond necklace I recognized from a credit card bill Evan had claimed was a "client gift." I saw them in *our* Aspen cabin. I saw intimate selfies taken in this very kitchen while I was away at conferences.

The bathroom door clicked open. A cloud of steam rolled out, carrying the scent of sandalwood and betrayal.

Evan walked out, a towel slung low around his hips, drying his hair with a casual, arrogant grace. He stopped when he saw me. He saw the phone in my hand. He saw the devastation on my face.

He didn't freeze. He didn't pale. He didn't scramble for an excuse.

Evan Scott, the man who had held me while we ate ramen in a dorm room, simply sighed. It was a long, exhaling sound of relief.

"Well," he said, tossing his damp towel onto a barstool. "I suppose that saves me the trouble of bringing it up."

I stood up, my legs feeling like they were made of lead. "Four years, Evan? Charleigh? She was twenty-two when you hired her."

"She makes me feel alive, Rosalie," he said, walking to the fridge to grab a bottle of sparkling water. His calm was psychopathic. "She looks at me like I’m a hero. Not a spreadsheet that needs auditing."

"I was your partner," I whispered, the fight draining out of me, replaced by a cold shock. "We built this life together. We are a team."

He turned, the bottle cap hissing as he twisted it off. His eyes were hard, devoid of the warmth I had spent a decade seeking. "That’s exactly the problem. You're a partner. A business partner. Even in bed, you're analyzing, optimizing. You're too clinical, Rosalie. You're too... much."

He took a sip of water, watching me over the rim of the bottle. "I need a woman who needs *me*. I need fragile, feminine love. I need to be the man, not the co-CEO of a marriage."

The words were precise, designed to dismantle my self-worth with the same efficiency I used to dismantle code. He didn't want an equal. He wanted a fan.

The night blurred into a sleepless gray morning. I sat in the living room, watching the fog roll over the Golden Gate Bridge, wrapping the city in a shroud. I hadn't moved for hours.

The sound of a zipper cut through the silence. Evan walked into the living room, two Louis Vuitton duffels packed and waiting by the door. He was dressed in his travel linen, looking fresh, unburdened.

"I'm not cancelling the trip," he announced, checking his watch—the Patek Philippe I bought him for his thirtieth birthday. "Charleigh has never seen the South of France. We’re going public when we land."

He grabbed the handles of his bags, pausing with his hand on the doorknob. He didn't look back at me. He looked at his reflection in the hallway mirror, adjusting his collar.

"Do me a favor," he said, his voice echoing in the cavernous, empty home we had built. "Have the divorce papers ready by the time I get back. Make it clean, Rosalie. Don't make this difficult."

The door clicked shut. The lock engaged. And just like that, the glitch in my life had been purged, leaving the system entirely crashed.

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