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My Husband Married His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Married His Mistress

The elevator doors slid open on the thirty-second floor, and I stepped into the familiar hallway of Grant Enterprises. My heels clicked against the marble floor, the sound echoing in the early morning quiet. Something felt off—the usual buzz of activity was missing, replaced by an unsettling stillness. As I rounded the corner to my office, I stopped dead in my tracks. Cardboard boxes lined the wall outside my door, my personal items haphazardly thrown inside. My framed MBA diploma peeked out from one box, the glass cracked down the middle. "Olivia?" Maya's voice came out as barely a whisper. My assistant stood by her desk, clutching a manila folder to her chest like a shield. Her eyes were red-rimmed, darting between me and the elevator as if calculating an escape route. "What's going on?" I asked, though my stomach already knew the answer.
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Chapter 2

The next morning arrived like a death sentence. I'd spent the night staring at the marriage certificate, memorizing every curve of their signatures, every official seal that marked my irrelevance. By dawn, I'd packed my apartment of every trace of Ethan—his spare ties, the coffee mug he favored, the framed photo from our trip to the Hamptons that I'd kept hidden in my nightstand drawer.

I arrived at Grant Enterprises at seven sharp, an hour before Ethan usually showed up. The security guard nodded as I passed, unaware this would be my last morning walking through these doors as anything more than a visitor.

My resignation letter was brief. Two sentences. Six years condensed into forty-three words.

Ethan found me in his office, standing by the windows where I'd discovered the truth just yesterday. He paused in the doorway, his expression shifting from surprise to irritation.

"You're early." He moved to his desk, setting down his coffee—black, two sugars, the way I'd taught him to drink it. "I thought I made it clear about clearing out by noon."

"I'm saving you the trouble." I placed the resignation letter on his desk, directly over the spot where I'd found his marriage certificate. "Effective immediately."

He glanced at the paper without picking it up. A smirk played at the corner of his mouth—that confident, dismissive expression I'd once found charming.

"Really, Olivia? This tantrum is beneath you." He settled into his leather chair, the one we'd picked out together when he'd first leased this office. "We both know you'll be back by Monday. Where else would you go? Your entire career is here."

"My career." The words tasted bitter. "You mean the one I built for you? The connections I made, the deals I closed while you took credit in the boardroom?"

"Don't be dramatic." He finally picked up my resignation, scanning it with the same disinterest he'd show a memo about office supplies. "You were well compensated."

"I wasn't your employee, Ethan. I was—" I stopped. What was I? Not his girlfriend, apparently. Certainly not his partner. Just a convenient resource, now depleted.

"You were what?" He leaned back, fingers steepled. "My secret? The woman I kept hidden for six years? Yes, Olivia, you were. And you accepted that role. Don't pretend you didn't know what this was."

The morning sun caught his wedding ring—when had he started wearing it to the office? Had I been so blind that I'd missed it, or had he hidden it until now?

"You're right," I said quietly. "I did know. I knew you were a coward. I just loved you too much to admit it."

Something flickered in his eyes—annoyance, maybe, or the faintest hint of guilt. But it vanished as quickly as it appeared.

"Love." He laughed, short and sharp. "You think this is about love? Grow up, Olivia. This is business. It's always been business."

I turned to leave, then paused at the door. "The Morrison deal won't close without the relationships I built. Vanessa can wear all the designer dresses she wants to those galas, but she doesn't know the first thing about structuring an acquisition."

"We'll manage." His voice carried that insufferable confidence of a man who'd never truly failed because someone else had always caught him. "We always do."

"No, Ethan. I always did. You're about to learn the difference."

I left him there, sitting in his corner office built on my sweat and sacrifice. As the elevator descended, each floor felt like shedding a layer of the woman who'd disappeared into Ethan Grant's shadow. By the time I reached the lobby, I could almost breathe again.

* * *

Three days later, Chloe dragged me to Kleinfeld's. "Retail therapy," she'd insisted, though we both knew she'd been planning to shop for her wedding dress for weeks. I'd tried to beg off, but she'd threatened to show up at my apartment with wine and tissues if I didn't come.

The boutique hummed with excited energy—brides-to-be twirling in front of mirrors, mothers dabbing at tears, consultants armed with champagne and measuring tapes. I sat on a cream-colored settee, trying to share Chloe's joy as she emerged in dress after dress.

"What about this one?" She spun in a mermaid silhouette that hugged her curves perfectly.

"It's beautiful," I said, meaning it. "James will forget how to breathe."

She studied my reflection in the triple mirror. "Have you heard from him?"

"No." The lie came easily. Ethan had called seventeen times. I'd deleted each voicemail unheard.

"Good." She turned back to admire the dress. "I still can't believe he was married. Six months, Liv. How did we miss it?"

Before I could answer, a familiar voice cut through the boutique's cheerful chatter.

"Oh my God, Olivia? What a surprise!"

Vanessa Parker glided toward us in a cloud of Chanel No. 5, her smile as sharp as the diamonds at her throat. She wore a blush-colored dress that probably cost more than most people's rent, her blonde hair styled in perfect waves that seemed immune to New York's humidity.

"Vanessa." I stood, my body automatically tensing.

"Shopping for your own big day?" Her eyes swept over my jeans and simple blouse with practiced disdain. "Oh wait, that would require someone actually wanting to marry you, wouldn't it?"

Chloe stepped down from the platform, still in the sample gown. "Excuse me?"

Vanessa's laugh tinkled like breaking glass. "I'm just saying, six years is a long time to wait for a proposal that was never coming. Some of us"—she flashed her wedding ring, the diamond catching the light—"don't have to wait at all."

"Congratulations," I said flatly. "You won. Are we done here?"

"Won?" She stepped closer, her voice dropping to a whisper meant only for me. "Oh, honey. There was never any competition. You were just keeping my husband entertained while I planned our future."

I moved to step around her, but she shifted, blocking my path. The collision was subtle—a shoulder grazing mine, her heel catching on the boutique's plush carpet. But her performance was worthy of an Oscar.

Vanessa cried out as she fell, her arms flailing dramatically. She hit the floor with a thud that drew every eye in the store, her dress riding up to reveal designer shoes that probably cost more than the Morrison project's legal fees.

"My ankle!" She clutched at her leg, tears springing to her eyes with suspicious speed. "She pushed me! Did you see that? She pushed me!"

"I didn't touch you," I said, my voice steady despite the blood roaring in my ears.

"Liar!" She pointed at me with a manicured finger. "You've always been jealous, always trying to steal what's mine!"

The boutique erupted in whispers. Consultants rushed forward, other brides craned their necks to see the drama. Chloe grabbed my arm, her grip tight.

"She's lying," Chloe announced to the gathering crowd. "I saw the whole thing. She ran into Olivia on purpose."

But Vanessa was already pulling out her phone, her fingers flying across the screen. "My husband needs to know about this. About your violence."

Husband. The word hit like a physical blow.

"Olivia didn't do anything wrong," Chloe insisted, but the damage was done. The other shoppers were already choosing sides, some shooting me suspicious glances, others helping Vanessa to a chair.

I should have left then. Should have walked out with my dignity intact. But I stood frozen, watching Vanessa's performance, knowing exactly what would come next.

The boutique's door chimed, and there he was. Ethan, in his perfectly tailored suit, rushing to his wife's side like a knight in Italian armor. He must have been nearby—or maybe he'd been waiting, part of whatever game they were playing.

"Baby, what happened?" He knelt beside Vanessa, his hands gentle on her shoulders.

"She attacked me!" Vanessa buried her face in his chest, her shoulders shaking with practiced sobs. "I was just trying to be friendly, to congratulate her on moving on, and she pushed me!"

Ethan's eyes found mine across the boutique. For a moment, I thought I saw something—hesitation, maybe even doubt. Then his expression hardened into something I'd never seen directed at me before.

Contempt.

"You need to leave," he said, standing slowly. "Now."

"Ethan—" Chloe started.

"I'm not talking to you." His voice carried the authority of boardrooms and billion-dollar deals. "Olivia, get out. If you come near my wife again, I'll have you arrested for assault."

My wife. Not Vanessa. My wife.

The boutique fell silent except for Vanessa's delicate sniffles. Every eye was on me—the other woman, the bitter ex, the violent interloper who couldn't let go.

"She's lying." The words came out quiet, almost resigned. "But you already know that, don't you?"

Ethan's jaw tightened. "What I know is that you're causing a scene in a public place. Security is on their way. I suggest you leave before they arrive."

I looked at him—really looked at him. This man I'd loved for six years, who I'd built an empire with, who knew me better than anyone. He stood there in his expensive suit, playing the protective husband, and I finally understood.

He hadn't just chosen Vanessa. He'd chosen this version of himself—the one who could humiliate me in public, who could look at me like I was nothing more than a problem to be managed.

"You're right," I said finally. "I'll go."

Chloe grabbed her purse, still in the sample dress. "We're both going. And we won't be back."

As we walked toward the door, Vanessa's voice followed us, pitched to carry. "Some women just can't accept when they've lost. It's really quite sad."

I didn't turn around. Didn't give her the satisfaction. But as we stepped onto the sidewalk, Chloe still rustling in tulle and satin, I heard Ethan's voice one last time.

"I'm sorry about this, everyone. My wife and I will certainly compensate the store for any disruption."

My wife and I.

The words echoed as we hailed a cab, as Chloe ranted about lawyers and lawsuits, as the city blurred past the windows. They followed me home, settling into my chest like shards of glass.

But somewhere beneath the humiliation and rage, a different feeling stirred. Because Ethan had just shown me exactly who he was—not the man I'd loved, but the stranger he'd always been.

And for the first time in six years, I was finally free to walk away.

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I twisted my grandmother's silver ring around my pinky finger as I studied the performance reports spread across my desk. The morning light filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of my Manhattan office, casting a soft glow over the sleek, minimalist furniture I'd chosen for my undercover role as HR Director. Six months of intern evaluations lay before me, each folder representing someone's hopes, ambitions, and future at my company—though none of them knew it was actually mine. Madison Wright's file sat open before me. Her metrics were impressive—consistently first to arrive, last to leave, with project deliverables that exceeded expectations. I made a note in the margin: "Shows exceptional promise." Olivia Bennett's file told a different story. Her work was adequate but uninspired, her attendance spotty, with a concerning pattern of arriving late to morning meetings. Yet somehow, she'd managed to ingratiate herself with several senior staff members, particularly in the last month. A soft knock interrupted my thoughts. I looked up to see Olivia herself standing in my doorway, her posture a practiced blend of confidence and deference.
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