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My Husband Hid Millions with His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Hid Millions with His Mistress

The ceiling tiles in Room 412 were the color of old teeth. I had been staring at them for two hours. Maybe three. The IV line in my arm had gone cold, and the nurse who checked on me at midnight hadn't come back. Outside the window, Manhattan was doing what Manhattan always does at 2 a.m. — humming, indifferent, alive in all the ways I wasn't feeling right now. My phone buzzed on the bedside tray. Eithan. I watched it ring for a full four seconds before I picked up. "Where have you been?" His voice was tight.
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Chapter 4

The text came in at 7:14 on a Thursday evening, while I was eating leftover soup at my kitchen table and reviewing a vendor contract that had been sitting in my queue for two days.

*Saw the Hargrove deal closed. That was your structure, wasn't it? The tiered liability clause.*

I set my spoon down.

I read it twice. Not because I didn't understand it — I understood it immediately — but because I needed a second to locate the feeling it produced. It wasn't surprise, exactly. It was something quieter than that. The specific sensation of being seen by someone who wasn't supposed to be looking.

The Hargrove deal had closed on Tuesday. The public filing was dense and technical, the kind of document that most people skim for the headline numbers and ignore the rest. The tiered liability clause was buried in section 14, subsection C. It was the part I was most proud of. It was also the part Eithan had presented to the client as his own thinking.

I typed back: *How did you know?*

Three minutes passed. I ate another spoonful of soup.

*Because Eithan doesn't think in tiered clauses.*

The laugh came out before I could stop it. Short, involuntary, the kind that surprises you because you'd forgotten your face could do that. I pressed my fingers to my mouth and sat with it for a moment — the warmth of it, the unexpected lightness.

Then I set my phone face-down and went back to the contract.

But the feeling stayed. Small and clean, like a window someone had opened in a room that had been closed too long.

---

We met for coffee the following Tuesday. Not by accident this time.

He'd texted the day after: *Coffee sometime? No agenda.* Two words that did a lot of work. No agenda. I'd read it standing in the elevator at the office, and I'd thought about it for longer than I should have before typing back: *Tuesday works.*

The place he chose was a narrow café on West 22nd — corner booth, good light, the kind of background noise that makes conversation feel private. He was already there when I arrived. Of course he was.

We ordered. He asked about the compliance work, and I gave him the version I gave everyone — cross-functional review, Q3 regulatory prep, nothing remarkable. He listened to the whole answer before he responded, which sounds like a small thing and isn't.

'You always did like the part of the work nobody else wanted to read,' he said.

'The fine print is where everything actually lives.'

'I know.' He turned his coffee cup once in his hands. 'That's why I knew it was yours.'

I looked at him across the table. He wasn't performing anything. He wasn't angling toward a point. He was just — present. Sitting in a corner booth on a Tuesday morning, paying attention, asking nothing in return for it.

He told me about the Chicago restructuring case. A mid-size manufacturing firm, three years of tangled debt obligations, a board that had been kicking the problem down the road since before the pandemic. He talked about it the way people talk about work they actually care about — not to impress, just to share. He asked my opinion on a jurisdictional question he was working through. I gave it. He considered it seriously, pushed back on one point, and then said, 'Yeah. That's better than what I had.'

We sat there for an hour. The café filled up and emptied around us and I didn't notice.

When I stood to leave, he said, 'Same time next week?'

I picked up my coat. 'Maybe.'

I meant yes. I was fairly sure he knew that.

On the subway back to the office, I stared at the window and thought about the difference between a man who introduces you to investors as his creative partner and a man who reads a public filing and finds your fingerprints in section 14, subsection C, and gives you the credit directly, with no one watching.

I didn't let myself think about it for too long. I had work to do.

---

What I didn't know, while I was sitting in that corner booth, was that Eithan was already moving.

Claire told me Thursday afternoon. She appeared in my doorway with the particular stillness she got when the information was serious, and she closed the door behind her before she spoke.

'He's called a closed session,' she said. 'Tomorrow. Three board members — Holt, Pryce, and Whitfield. He's proposing an emergency vote on the IP portfolio split before the quarterly meeting.'

I looked up from my screen.

'He wants to move on the equity restructuring before you can act.' Her voice was even. 'If the IP portfolio splits the way he's proposing, your stake gets diluted to the point where your voting rights are effectively ceremonial.'

I sat back in my chair.

So he was done waiting. Aylin had reassured him, or his own impatience had finally outrun his caution — probably both. He'd looked at my silence and read it as surrender, and now he was trying to finish it before I could prove him wrong.

The move was smart, in the way that moves made by overconfident people are sometimes smart: fast, aggressive, designed to exploit a window he thought existed. The problem was the window had closed three weeks ago, in a hospital room at 2 a.m., and he didn't know it yet.

'Derek Holt,' I said.

Claire nodded slowly. 'He's been asking questions. Quietly. He requested a private briefing from the board chair earlier this week — I heard it from the chair's assistant. He didn't say what about.'

I thought about Derek Holt. Twenty-two years on the board. A man who had deferred to Eithan out of habit and comfort, the way institutions defer to whoever has always been at the front of the room. But habit and comfort had limits. And a man who was already asking quiet questions was a man who had already started to doubt.

Eithan was walking into that closed session tomorrow believing he had three votes in his pocket.

He had two.

'Thank you,' I said.

Claire picked up her folder. At the door, she paused. 'The quarterly meeting is in two weeks.'

'I know.'

She left. I turned back to my screen, but I wasn't reading anymore. I was thinking about timing — about the difference between moving too early and moving at exactly the right moment. About the particular patience required to let someone believe they've won, right up until the second they haven't.

Eithan had spent ten years watching me be reasonable.

Two more weeks.

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