
My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 3
The suite at the Ritz was silent, save for the rhythmic clinking of a silver spoon against fine porcelain. I sat by the window, watching the city below scuttle like ants in a rainstorm. It was a vantage point I had never been allowed to occupy—looking down instead of looking up.
A sharp knock at the door broke the quiet. I didn't need to check the peephole. I knew that knock. It was the impatient, entitled rap of a boy who had never been told "no."
I opened the door to find Chase and Skye standing there. They looked disheveled, their usual polished veneer cracked by panic. Skye was wringing her hands, her eyes darting around the opulent hallway as if calculating the cost per square foot.
"Mom!" Chase breathed, pushing past me into the room without waiting for an invitation. "Thank God. We've been worried sick. Dad was... well, you know how he gets. He didn't mean it."
Skye followed, offering a tight, trembling smile. "We just wanted to make sure you were okay, Giselle. Family sticks together, right? Even when things get messy."
I closed the door slowly, leaning against it. "Messy," I repeated. The word tasted like ash. "Is that what we're calling it?"
Chase laughed nervously, pacing the length of the Persian rug. "Look, everyone was stressed. Dad's business is... complicated. But we're here now. Actually, I was thinking—since you've come into some, uh, liquidity—I have this incredible opportunity. Crypto. Ground floor. Five million buy-in, but the returns are projected to triple by Q4."
He turned to me, his eyes shining with the same greed I had seen in his father's face for thirty years. He didn't see me. He saw an ATM with a pulse.
"Five million," I said softly.
"It's an investment, Mom! For the family future!"
I walked over to the desk where Reese had left a folder. I pulled out a single sheet of paper—a spreadsheet I had compiled the night before. I held it out to him.
"What's this?" Chase frowned, snatching the paper.
"Tuition. Room and board. The car. The spring break trips to Cabo. The bail money from that incident sophomore year," I listed, my voice steady. "That is the itemized bill for your existence, Chase. The 'Bank of Mom' is permanently closed. Consider your debt forgiven, but your credit line is terminated."
Chase’s face went slack. Skye let out a small gasp. "You can't be serious. You have millions now!"
"And I intend to keep them," I said, pressing the button on the wall for security. "Get out."
Two burly men in dark suits appeared at the door moments later. As they escorted my son and his wife out, Chase screamed something about filial duty, but the heavy oak door swallowed his voice, leaving only silence.
***
An hour later, the silence was broken again, but this time by the sterile rustle of documents. Reese sat across from me, next to a man with wire-rimmed glasses and the intense focus of a predator—Mr. Vance, the forensic accountant.
"It's worse than we thought," Vance said, sliding a stack of papers across the coffee table.
I picked up the top sheet. It was a loan agreement for three million dollars, secured against the house. At the bottom, next to Saul's jagged scrawl, was a signature.
*Giselle Evans Jordan.*
It looked like my handwriting. It had the same loop on the 'G', the same slant on the 'J'. But I had never seen this document in my life.
"There are three more," Vance said, his voice void of emotion. "Totaling ten million. High-risk, short-term loans from private lenders. The kind who break kneecaps when you miss a payment. He used your credit, your name, and your assets as collateral. If he defaults—and he will—they won't just come for him. They'll come for your inheritance."
The room seemed to tilt. The air conditioning hummed, but sweat prickled the back of my neck. Saul hadn't just discarded me. He had strapped a bomb to my chest and walked away, planning to let me detonate while he started over with Daniela.
"He set me up," I whispered. The realization wasn't a sharp pain; it was a cold, heavy stone settling in my stomach. "He was going to leave me with nothing but his debt."
Reese leaned forward. "We can fight this in court, but it will take months. Unless..."
I stood up. The red blazer I had bought yesterday hung on the back of the chair. I pulled it on. It felt like armor.
"Unless I kill the monster before he wakes up," I finished. "Call the car."
***
Jordan Enterprises occupied the top three floors of a steel monolith downtown. I hadn't been inside in five years. The receptionist, a young girl with bright eyes, moved to stop me as I strode toward the double glass doors, flanked by Reese and two of the hotel’s security detail.
"Ma'am, you can't go in there! Mr. Jordan is in a meeting!"
I didn't break stride. I pushed the doors open with both hands, the glass slamming against the stops.
Saul was at the head of the conference table. Daniela was sitting on the edge of the desk next to him, laughing at something he was showing her on his phone. The laughter died instantly.
"Giselle?" Saul stood up, his face flushing a mottled purple. "What the hell are you doing here? Security!"
"Sit down, Saul," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but it cut through the room like a whip.
Daniela slid off the desk, smoothing her skirt. "This is private property, Giselle. You're embarrassing yourself."
I ignored her completely. I walked to the table and threw the file Vance had given me onto the polished wood. The papers fanned out, revealing the forged signatures.
"Fraud," I said, locking eyes with my husband. "Bank fraud. Identity theft. Wire fraud. Ten million dollars' worth."
Saul’s eyes darted to the papers, then to Daniela, then back to me. The color drained from his face. "I... I can explain. Those were bridge loans. For the company."
"With my name on them?" I leaned over the table, planting my hands on the surface. "I have the forensic report, Saul. I have the handwriting analysis. I have the FBI on speed dial."
Reese stepped forward, placing a single document on top of the pile. "This is a new divorce agreement. It states that you, Saul Jordan, assume one hundred percent of all marital debt, known and unknown. It states that Giselle walks away with her inheritance untouched and zero liability."
"I can't sign that," Saul sputtered, sweat beading on his forehead. "That debt... it would crush me."
"Then I make the call," I said, pulling my phone from my pocket. "Federal prison, Saul. Minimum fifteen years. Daniela won't wait for you. Will you, dear?"
I glanced at the mistress. She was looking at Saul with wide, horrified eyes, backing slowly toward the door.
Saul looked at his phone, then at the pen Reese held out. His hand shook violently as he took it. The scratching of the nib on the paper was the only sound in the room—the sound of a rat chewing its own leg off to escape a trap.
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