
My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 2
The morning sun hit the kitchen tiles with an abrasive brightness that made my eyes ache. I stood at the island, watching Saul and Chase pick at the remnants of a store-bought coffee cake. The silence between them wasn’t peaceful; it was the smug quiet of men who believed they had already won. Saul didn't even look up from his tablet, his thumb scrolling through stock futures with the casual arrogance of a man who thought he controlled the market, the house, and me.
"Don't just stand there hovering, Giselle," Saul muttered, not breaking his gaze from the screen. "If you're leaving, leave. The Uber is probably charging you for wait time. I assume you have enough in your checking account for a ride to... wherever it is you go when you're obsolete."
Chase snickered, blowing on his coffee. "Maybe Skye can venmo you twenty bucks for lunch, Mom. You know, for old times' sake."
I didn't answer. I just listened to the gravel crunching in the driveway. It started as a low rumble, vibrating through the soles of my sensible flats, then grew into a purr of heavy engines.
Saul frowned, finally looking up. "Is that the garbage truck? They're early."
He stood and walked to the window, coffee mug in hand. His grip on the ceramic tightened, his knuckles turning the color of old parchment. "What the hell?"
I picked up my purse—the old leather one with the frayed strap—and walked past him. Outside, three elongated black silhouettes gleamed in the morning light like sleek, predatory sharks. A team of uniformed drivers, their movements synchronized and sharp, were already stepping out, opening the rear doors with military precision.
"Who is that?" Chase asked, scrambling up to stand beside his father. "Is that... for you?"
I walked to the counter where the unsigned divorce papers lay next to the butter dish. With slow, deliberate movements, I fed the thick document into the shredder I’d bought for Saul’s home office. The machine gnashed its teeth, turning his demands into confetti.
"Giselle!" Saul barked, starting toward me. "Who is paying for this? You don't have a dime!"
I slid my sunglasses onto my face. The world dimmed, becoming cooler, distant. "Goodbye, Saul."
I didn't wait for his response. I walked out the front door, the heels of my shoes clicking a rhythm of finality on the porch steps. A driver took my single, pathetic box of belongings without a word, treating it like it contained crown jewels. As I slid into the leather interior of the lead car, the scent of fresh citrus and expensive leather washed over me, scrubbing away the smell of stale coffee and betrayal.
Through the tinted glass, I saw Saul and Chase standing on the porch, their mouths open, looking smaller and smaller as we pulled away. For the first time in thirty years, I didn't look back to see if they needed anything.
***
The Ritz-Carlton smelled like old money—lilies, polished brass, and silence. I walked across the marble floor of the lobby, my old flats squeaking slightly, but I kept my chin high. A man in a sharp grey suit rose from a velvet armchair near the concierge desk. He looked nothing like the awkward boy I remembered from family reunions decades ago.
"Reese," I said, extending a hand.
"Cousin Giselle." He took my hand, his grip firm and reassuring. He didn't look at my outdated clothes or my tired face. He looked me in the eye. "Everything is prepared. The Presidential Suite is ready."
He handed me a thick leather folio. "The full dossier on the estate sale. The funds are liquid and accessible immediately. And, as discussed, I've taken the liberty of contacting a forensic accountant. If Saul tries to sniff around this money, we’ll be ready."
"He will," I said, the certainty of it sitting heavy in my gut. "He thinks everything I touch belongs to him."
"Not anymore." Reese signaled to the concierge. "Go upstairs. Rest. Then, go shopping. You're a wealthy woman now, Giselle. It's time you looked the part."
Two hours later, I stood in the fitting room of a boutique that didn't have price tags on the clothes. The mirror reflected a stranger. The woman staring back wore a structured blazer in a deep, violent crimson, tailored so sharply it could cut glass. The silk blouse underneath felt like water against my skin. I had spent thirty years wearing beige to blend into Saul’s wallpaper. This red was a scream.
I handed the platinum card to the sales associate. Her eyes widened slightly as the transaction cleared without a hesitation. "Shall I wrap your old clothes, Madam?"
I looked at the pile of polyester blends and sensible knits on the floor. "Burn them."
***
Across the city, in the office that I had decorated but was no longer allowed to visit, Saul was sweating. I could feel it. It was a phantom sensation, like a severed limb itching.
His phone was pressed to his ear, his voice rising an octave in panic. "What do you mean 'large movements'? How large?"
"Seven figures, Mr. Jordan," his lawyer’s voice crackled through the speaker, tinny and anxious. "Maybe eight. The tracking is obscure, offshore trusts mostly, but it’s tied to her social security number. It hit the system this morning. Massive liquidity."
Saul slammed the phone down onto his desk, scattering papers. He stared at the wall, his breathing ragged. Wealth. Real wealth. Not the leveraged, debt-ridden house of cards he had built, but actual, tangible capital. And it was in *my* name.
He didn't see a betrayal. He didn't see a wife he had scorned. He saw an asset.
He snatched his phone back up and dialed Chase. "Where is she?"
"I don't know, Dad," Chase whined on the other end. "She just left in the limo. Skye is freaking out, asking if Mom won the lottery."
"Shut up and listen," Saul hissed, loosening his tie with a frantic jerk. "We aren't divorced yet. Do you understand? Legally, we are still a single financial entity. That money—whatever she stumbled into—is marital property. It's *ours*."
"So... we're rich?"
"We're going to be," Saul said, a predatory grin stretching across his face, though no one was there to see it. "Find her, Chase. Get your mother back in line. Remind her that she's nothing without us. We need to get a piece of that pie before she figures out how to eat it alone."
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