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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 3

The gynecologist's office smelled like antiseptic and waiting. I sat in the paper-covered chair and told Dr. Reyes — not Diana, a different one, a stranger — that I'd been having some discomfort. Minor. Probably nothing. But I wanted a note, just in case, because my husband worried.

She didn't blink. She wrote it out in thirty seconds.

I folded the note into my purse and walked back to my car in the November cold, and I thought: that's it. That's the one variable I couldn't solve any other way.

I'd lain awake three nights running, turning the problem over. Everything else had a workaround. The money trail, the recording device, the screen-mirroring software — all of it was manageable, executable, clean. But Elliott still reached for me sometimes in the dark, and the thought of letting him made my skin feel like it belonged to someone else. I couldn't fake that. I'd tried, once, two nights after I heard him say her name, and I'd had to get up and stand in the bathroom with the water running until my hands stopped shaking.

So I got a note.

I showed it to Elliott that evening over dinner. He was making pasta — something with a name I couldn't pronounce, photographed from three angles before he plated it. He read the note with his brow furrowed in that practiced way, the concerned-husband expression he'd perfected over three years.

"Oh, sweetheart," he said. "Why didn't you tell me you weren't feeling well?"

"I didn't want to worry you."

"You should always tell me." He squeezed my hand across the table. His palm was warm. "We'll just take it easy until you're better."

He went back to his pasta.

That was it. No questions. No follow-up. Not a single detail about what kind of infection, how long, what the doctor had said. Three years of marriage and he accepted the explanation the way you accept a weather forecast — noted, filed, forgotten.

I picked up my fork and ate my dinner and thought: he never paid attention. Not once. The elaborate dinners, the social media devotion, the performative tenderness — none of it was ever about me. It was about the image. I was just the frame he hung it on.

I should have felt something about that. I didn't. I felt useful information clicking into place.

---

Three days later, Elliott took a long shower after coming home. He always did, lately. I'd stopped asking myself why.

I had eleven minutes, maybe twelve. I'd timed his showers twice that week.

His tablet was on the kitchen counter where he always left it. I picked it up, opened the settings, and started the install. Nikolai had walked me through it twice — once verbally, once over text with screenshots. The software was invisible once installed, a background process that mirrored the screen to a linked device. Legal in New York. One-party consent covered it.

Four minutes and seventeen seconds.

I set the tablet back exactly as I'd found it — same angle, same distance from the fruit bowl — and moved to the other side of the kitchen. I opened my phone. Pulled up the mirroring app.

Elliott's tablet screen appeared on my phone in real time. His email. His calendar. A browser tab he hadn't closed.

I set my phone face-down on the counter and started making tea.

The shower shut off. Elliott came out in a cloud of steam, toweling his hair, and smiled at me from the hallway.

"Smells good," he said.

"It's just tea."

"Still." He disappeared into the bedroom.

I stood at the counter and waited for the kettle to finish and felt nothing. Not triumph. Not grief. Not the particular sick satisfaction I might have expected. Just clarity — the same cold, focused clarity I'd felt at 4 AM with the spreadsheet. The feeling of a woman who has stopped waiting to feel better and started moving instead.

---

Nikolai's apartment was the same every time. Clean lines, controlled light, the city spread out behind the windows like evidence of something. He always had water poured before I arrived. He was always exactly on time to his own home, which I found both absurd and completely unsurprising.

We met every few days. We sat at his dining table, which was always covered in the same organized spread of documents, and we worked. He talked through legal strategy in the same flat, precise register he probably used in depositions. I asked questions and took notes and pushed back when something didn't track. He never condescended. He also never let anything slide.

It was, objectively, the most functional working relationship I'd had in years.

I didn't let myself think about what that meant.

The third meeting, he pulled up the financial records on his laptop and angled the screen so we could both see. I leaned in. Our shoulders were maybe four inches apart. I was aware of it the way you're aware of a sound you can't identify — not alarming, just present, just there at the edge of everything else.

He walked me through the transfer pattern. The deliberate irregularity of the amounts. The timing, always within a day or two of a large joint deposit, small enough to read as noise.

"He's not doing this alone," Nikolai said. "The structure is too considered. Elliott doesn't think this way."

"Eileen," I said.

"Almost certainly."

I stared at the screen. Fourteen months of small, careful thefts, designed by a woman who had already stolen seven years from me and apparently decided that wasn't enough.

"How much longer?" I asked.

"Until we have the transfer to the private account on record. The spreadsheet is circumstantial. We need him to move money while we're watching."

"And then?"

Nikolai looked at me. In the lamplight, his expression was unreadable in the way it always was — controlled, deliberate, giving nothing away. But there was something underneath it. Something that had been there every time I walked into this apartment and every time I left it, patient and unspoken.

"Then we take everything back," he said.

I nodded and looked back at the screen.

Outside, the city hummed its indifferent hum. The documents spread between us like a map of everything that had been done to both of us, and we sat in the careful silence of two people who had learned, separately and at great cost, not to say the thing they were actually thinking.

I was very good at this.

So was he.

That was the part that scared me.

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