
My Husband Planned to Replace Me with His Mistress
Chapter 2
The dossier hit the mahogany desk with a heavy, final thud. It was a thick stack of papers, bound in unassuming manila, but it held the weight of my entire marriage.
"Five million," Marcus Rivera said. His voice was gravelly, devoid of pity. He knew women like me didn't pay him for sympathy; we paid for ammunition. "Funneled over the last eighteen months into three shell companies. 'Consulting fees,' 'interior design retainers,' and 'logistical support.' All of it tracing back to an account held by Amelie Foster."
I sat in the leather wingback chair of my father's study, my hands resting protectively over my stomach. My father stood by the window, his silhouette rigid against the darkening Hamptons sky. He didn't speak. He was letting the numbers bleed me dry so I could rebuild myself with something harder.
"It bought the penthouse on 5th," Marcus continued, flipping a page. "The furnishings. The designer wardrobe. And the medical bills for a high-risk pregnancy specialist."
"Why?" I asked, my voice sounding strange to my own ears—hollowed out. "Why go to these lengths? We have money. He didn't need to steal mine to keep a mistress."
Marcus slid a single sheet of paper across the desk. It was a copy of the Wells Family Trust, a document I had never been allowed to see. He tapped a highlighted paragraph.
"The Grandfather Clause," Marcus explained. "The bulk of the family trust—roughly two hundred million—is locked until the next generation produces a male heir. A direct male descendant carrying the Wells name."
I read the legalese, the cold, archaic stipulations that reduced human life to livestock breeding. My breath hitched.
"We're having a girl," I whispered.
"Exactly," my father said, turning from the window. His face was a mask of terrifying calm. "You and my granddaughter are useless to them, Tiffany. Lucian didn't just cheat. He diversified his assets."
A cold fire ignited in my chest, burning away the last dregs of my heartbreak. I wasn't a wife to Lucian; I was a failed investment.
***
The penthouse was quiet when I returned, the panoramic view of Manhattan glittering like a taunt. I forced myself to move through the motions—checking the roast in the oven, setting the table, playing the role of the dutiful, oblivious wife.
The front door clicked open at eight.
"Tiff?" Lucian’s voice floated down the hall, weary and practiced.
"In the dining room," I called out.
He walked in, loosening his tie. He looked handsome, the picture of the weary corporate warrior. But as he leaned in to kiss my cheek, I smelled it—beneath the notes of sandalwood and scotch, the cloying sweetness of gardenias. Amelie’s perfume.
It took every ounce of my finishing school training not to drive the steak knife in my hand into his chest.
"Sorry I'm late," he sighed, dropping into his chair. " The board meeting was a bloodbath. Old man Henderson wouldn't stop droning on."
I smiled, slicing into my meat with surgical precision. The serrated blade scraped against the china, a harsh, grating sound that made him wince slightly.
"Was it productive, at least?" I asked, my eyes locking onto his. "Did you get what you wanted?"
He blinked, clearly unsettled by the intensity of my gaze, but he recovered quickly with a charming grin. "We're getting there. It's all for us, babe. For the future."
"The future," I echoed. "Yes. I've been thinking about that a lot lately."
***
Sunday brunch at the Wells estate was a performance art piece in hypocrisy. Margaret Wells sat at the head of the table in the solarium, bathed in sunlight that did nothing to warm the chill in her eyes.
"You look pale, Tiffany," she cooed, reaching across the table to pat my hand. Her skin was dry, papery. "Are you resting enough? The third trimester is so taxing."
"I'm managing," I said, taking a sip of water.
"I hope you're keeping up with your supplements," she said, her tone dripping with maternal concern. She pulled my weekly pill organizer from her purse. "I took the liberty of refilling this for you, dear. I noticed you were running low on the prenatal vitamins when I visited last week. I added a little something extra for the swelling—herbal, of course. Very expensive."
I looked at the plastic container. For months, I had thought this was kindness. Now, I saw the spider weaving its web.
"Thank you, Margaret," I said, taking the container. "You're always so thoughtful."
"We have to protect the baby," she said, her eyes flickering to my stomach, then away, dismissive.
I waited until I was in the powder room to open the Tuesday slot. I tipped a single, distinct red capsule into a tissue, wrapping it carefully before sliding it into the hidden pocket of my dress.
An hour later, I was in the back of a black sedan, watching the Wells estate disappear in the rearview mirror. My father’s driver didn't head toward the city, but toward a private medical lab in Jersey City.
I squeezed the tissue in my pocket, feeling the hard shell of the capsule. They wanted a war? They had no idea who they had just armed.
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