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My Husband Conspired with His Mistress to Destroy Me Novel Cover

My Husband Conspired with His Mistress to Destroy Me

The migraine hit me like a freight train at 2:47 PM on a Tuesday. One moment I was reviewing quarterly projections, the next I was gripping my desk, the numbers swimming before my eyes. Diana, my closest friend at the firm, took one look at me and waved away my protests. "Sloane, you look like you're about to faint. Go home. I'll handle the Peterson meeting." I nodded, grateful for her cover. The truth was, I couldn't remember the last time I'd taken a sick day. The thought of Elliott's face when I walked through the door early—his perfectly arranged surprise, his exaggerated concern—made my chest tight with something that wasn't quite warmth. But that was normal, wasn't it? After three years of marriage, the excitement faded.
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Chapter 1

The migraine hit me like a freight train at 2:47 PM on a Tuesday. One moment I was reviewing quarterly projections, the next I was gripping my desk, the numbers swimming before my eyes. Diana, my closest friend at the firm, took one look at me and waved away my protests.

"Sloane, you look like you're about to faint. Go home. I'll handle the Peterson meeting."

I nodded, grateful for her cover. The truth was, I couldn't remember the last time I'd taken a sick day. The thought of Elliott's face when I walked through the door early—his perfectly arranged surprise, his exaggerated concern—made my chest tight with something that wasn't quite warmth. But that was normal, wasn't it? After three years of marriage, the excitement faded. I told myself that what remained was steadier, better.

The subway ride to Brooklyn blurred past my throbbing temples. I thought about the elaborate dinner Elliott had mentioned cooking tonight—some new recipe he'd found that would "change my life." Another photo opportunity, another performance for his social media. I should have been touched. Instead, I felt a dull ache that had nothing to do with my head.

Our brownstone was quiet when I unlocked the door. Elliott had texted that morning about a client dinner running late—the Henderson account, he'd said. I set my keys on the hallway table with a clatter, kicked off my heels, and padded toward the bedroom in my stockings, peeling off my blazer as I went.

Then I heard it.

Elliott's voice, unmistakable, breathless and reverent from behind our closed bedroom door. Not the voice he used with me—not the carefully modulated tone of a man playing the role of devoted husband. This was raw, unguarded.

"You're incredible, Mrs. Mendez... incredible."

A woman's low laugh followed, husky and amused. "Flatterer. You're not so bad yourself, Elliott."

I froze three steps from the door. My hand went flat against the wall, steadying myself as the room tilted. Mrs. Mendez. The name meant nothing and everything. I should have burst in, demanded answers, screamed. Instead, I stood there, listening to my husband moan another woman's title like a prayer.

I didn't need to see them. The sounds told me everything—the rustle of sheets, Elliott's breath catching, the woman's murmured instructions. My marriage, laid bare in stereo.

I picked up my keys with trembling fingers and walked back to the front door on unsteady legs. The hallway stretched before me like a tunnel, the walls closing in. I made it to my car and sat there, hands gripping the steering wheel, staring at nothing.

Forty-five minutes. I counted every second, watching pedestrians pass, listening to the distant sounds of Brooklyn life going on without me. My phone buzzed—Elliott, probably, checking his alibi. I didn't look.

The next two days passed in a haze of normalcy that felt like drowning. I went to work. I smiled at colleagues. I moved through meetings like a ghost, answering questions I barely heard, making decisions that seemed to come from someone else. At night, I lay beside Elliott, watching his chest rise and fall, wondering how many times he'd come home to me straight from her bed.

But beneath the numbness, something else was building. I had always been methodical—it was what made me good at my job, what had helped me rebuild after London. Now, that methodical nature turned inward. Every spare moment, I searched for "Mrs. Mendez," combing through social media, business directories, anything.

The answer came like a second migraine, hitting harder than the first.

Eileen Mendez. Wife of Matthias Hoffman, billionaire real estate mogul. Mother of Hayley Mendez. And stepmother to—

My fingers went numb. I stared at the screen, the name swimming before my eyes: Nikolai Hoffman.

Nikolai. The man who had destroyed me seven years ago with a voice message I still couldn't fully remember, only the devastation it left behind. The man whose absence had carved a hollow space I'd tried to fill with Elliott's careful performances.

Now I understood why Elliott sometimes looked at me with that strange, calculating gaze. He wasn't just stealing from me—he was finishing what Eileen had started. The perfect revenge, orchestrated by the woman who had already ruined my first love.

At 2 AM on the third night, I sat at our kitchen counter with a pot of cold coffee beside me. The wall clock ticked. My phone lay face-up, open to my contacts. One name stared back at me, a ghost I'd never quite buried.

Nikolai Hoffman.

I picked up the phone with shaking hands. The screen dimmed, then brightened again as I touched it. His number was still there—I'd never deleted it, some masochistic part of me unable to let go completely. I stared at it long enough that the screen dimmed twice more.

Then I dialed.

Two rings. My heart hammered against my ribs.

"Sloane?" His voice was deeper than I remembered, but unmistakable. Not surprised, just... waiting.

"Hello, Nikolai."

A beat of silence. I could hear him breathing.

"I know about Elliott and Eileen," I said, my voice flat, emotionless. "I know what they're doing. I know who she is to you."

Another pause, longer this time. When he spoke, his voice was ice. "I've been waiting for you to call."

"You knew?" The words came out sharper than I intended.

"I suspected. I didn't have proof. Until now."

I closed my eyes, feeling the pieces click into place. "What do we do?"

There was a sound like him setting down a glass, deliberate, controlled. "Let's make them pay."

Four words. Simple, clean, lethal. Exactly what I needed to hear.

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