
My Husband Hid Millions with His Mistress
Chapter 2
Her name was Claire Donovan, and she had been my executive assistant for four years. Four years of board meetings, client dinners, and strategy sessions where she watched me build the firm's legal infrastructure while Eithan took the credit. Four years of seeing my contributions minimized, my voice quieted, my presence made smaller. She had seen it all, and she had never said a word. Until now.
I was reviewing the Q2 financials when she appeared in my doorway, holding a thin manila folder. The office had emptied for the evening, and the fluorescent lights cast everything in a harsh white glow that made her expression look carved from stone.
'I thought you might want to see these,' she said, placing the folder on my desk. Her voice was as professional as always, but there was something in her eyes—a flicker of something that looked like vindication.
I opened the folder. Inside were three documents: a flagged email chain from last year's merger, meeting minutes from the Peterson acquisition, and a spreadsheet tracking Aylin's system access. Each document had been annotated in Claire's precise handwriting, highlighting moments where my work had been attributed to Eithan, where my proposals had been repurposed under his name, where Aylin had been granted clearance to financial systems she should never have been able to touch.
'These are from your personal archive,' I said, looking up at her. 'You've been keeping these?'
Claire's mouth was a straight line. 'For eighteen months. I started after the Singapore deal. When he took credit for your entire strategy in front of the investors. I thought... I thought you should have a record. Just in case. I keep copies offsite.'
I stared at her, this woman who had watched me shrink myself for years and had finally decided to do something about it. She hadn't been asked. She hadn't been directed. She had simply chosen a side, long before there was a war to fight.
'Thank you,' I said, and my voice was steady, but something warm and sharp moved in my chest. 'This is exactly what I need.'
She nodded once and turned to leave, then paused at the door. 'There's more. When you're ready. I've been tracking the transfers. They're small, but they're consistent. And they all route through the same place.'
I watched her walk away, her footsteps quiet on the carpet, and felt something shift inside me. I was no longer alone in this.
Three weeks into my compliance review, the pattern emerged.
I was cross-referencing vendor payments when I saw it—a series of transfers, each just under the automatic flag threshold, routing through a shell company called Vantage Meridian Partners. The timing was methodical: every third Thursday, like clockwork. I pulled up the registration records.
The registered agent was listed as M. Vasquez.
I sat back in my chair and looked at the name for a long moment. Then I ran the incorporation date.
Two weeks before Aylin was hired.
The numbers on the screen blurred slightly as I stared at them. This wasn't opportunistic. This wasn't a crime of passion or even simple greed. This was calculated. Planned. A scheme set in motion before Aylin had even walked through our doors.
I looked at the ceiling for exactly four seconds—the same amount of time I'd spent making my decision in that hospital room. Then I opened a new document and began building a timeline. Each entry was precise, sourced, unassailable. The kind of document that could end careers.
The next evening, Claire appeared again. This time, the folder was thicker.
'You'll want to see this,' she said, her voice as quiet as the hum of the air conditioning. Inside were three additional wire transfer records she'd flagged independently, plus a board meeting minute from eight months ago. I read it twice, my eyes catching on the key phrase: 'restructuring equity allocations for operational efficiency.'
The proposal would have reduced my stake by 34%. It had been tabled due to quorum issues—not because anyone had objected to the substance, but because not enough people had shown up to vote.
I peeled off the Post-it note from the folder. 'You'll want to see this,' Claire had written, and I folded the note carefully and put it in my pocket.
I looked up at her, this woman who had chosen to fight a battle that wasn't hers, and felt something harden in my chest. 'Claire,' I said, 'we need to talk about the quarterly board meeting. I think it's time we made some changes to the agenda.'
She nodded, and in her eyes, I saw the same quiet certainty I'd been carrying since that night in the hospital. We were no longer just gathering evidence. We were building a weapon.
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