
My Husband Sold My Family Heirlooms to His Mistress
Chapter 2
The morning sun filtered through our penthouse windows as I prepared Theron's coffee exactly how he liked it—two sugars, a splash of cream, served in the Hermès porcelain cup his mother had given us for our wedding. My hands were steady as I arranged fresh orchids in the crystal vase, every movement the picture of domestic perfection.
"You're up early," Theron said, padding into the kitchen in his silk pajamas. He looked tired, probably from his late night at the "auction house."
"I wanted to make you breakfast before your big day." I smiled, the expression feeling like glass against my face. "I know how important the Pemberton estate auction is."
He kissed my cheek absently, the same perfunctory gesture I'd grown accustomed to. "You're too good to me, El."
Too good. If only he knew.
After Theron left for work, I waited exactly thirty minutes before making the call I'd been planning since 3 AM.
"Morrison Investigations," came the gravelly voice on the other end.
"This is Elowen Ashford. I need a comprehensive background check on someone. Money is no object, and I need it fast."
Jack Morrison had handled discrete matters for the Ashford family before—cheating spouses of business partners, corporate espionage, the occasional blackmail situation that required delicate handling. He knew how to be thorough and silent.
"How fast we talking, Mrs. Ashford?"
"Forty-eight hours. I want to know everything about Sable Winters. Where she came from, her employment history, her personal relationships—and most importantly, I want to know exactly when her relationship with my husband began."
The silence on the other end stretched for a heartbeat. "I'll get right on it."
Two days later, Morrison's report arrived via encrypted email. I opened it in my private study, the same room where I'd spent countless hours sketching jewelry designs while Theron worked late at the "office."
The first page made my coffee cup rattle against its saucer.
Sable Winters had been hired at Meridian Auction House three years and two months ago. According to Morrison's meticulous timeline, her first recorded dinner with Theron had occurred exactly one week after her employment began. Hotel receipts, credit card statements, even parking garage surveillance footage—it was all there, a three-year chronicle of deception laid out in devastating detail.
But it was page fifteen that made my blood turn to ice.
Morrison had somehow obtained access to Sable's design portfolio—the one that had earned her recognition as a "rising star" in the jewelry world. I stared at the images on my laptop screen, my vision blurring with rage.
There was my butterfly pendant design from two years ago, the one I'd sketched during our anniversary trip to Tuscany. Sable had claimed it as her original work and won the Young Designer's Award from the International Jewelry Guild.
My art deco bracelet concept from eighteen months ago—now featured in Vogue as "Sable's signature style."
My grandmother's vintage ring redesign, the one I'd been working on as a surprise for my mother's birthday—somehow transformed into Sable's "breakthrough piece" that had landed her a gallery showing in SoHo.
Page after page of my stolen creativity, my stolen dreams, paraded around under another woman's name while I played the perfect wife.
I reached for my design journal with trembling hands, flipping through pages of sketches I'd shared with Theron over intimate dinners, during quiet Sunday mornings, in moments when I'd foolishly believed we were building something together. He'd always shown such interest, asking detailed questions about my techniques, my inspirations.
Now I knew why.
The final pages of Morrison's report contained transcripts from audio surveillance—conversations between Theron and Sable recorded in various hotel suites over the past six months.
"Elowen's so naive," Theron's voice seemed to mock me from the printed page. "She actually thinks I care about her little hobby. But those designs of hers? They're worth more than she realizes."
"You're terrible," Sable's laughter followed. "But brilliant. She has no idea we've been using her sketches?"
"None at all. She's too busy playing house to notice. You know what she said last week? That she hopes her designs might be good enough for a local craft fair someday. A craft fair! Meanwhile, you're winning international awards with her work."
"What about the new collection we're planning? The joint venture with Cartier?"
"Already in motion. I've selected twelve of her best pieces from the past two years. Once we launch the Blackwell-Winters collaborative line, we'll be set for life. And the best part? She'll never know. Elowen's too trusting, too... simple."
I closed the laptop with surgical precision, my hands no longer trembling. The rage had crystallized into something far more dangerous—clarity.
Walking to my design desk, I pulled out my phone and photographed every sketch in my journal, time-stamping each image. Then I opened my filing cabinet and retrieved the original drawings, each one dated and signed in my distinctive hand.
Sable's "award-winning" butterfly pendant stared back at me from the Jewelry Guild's website. I placed my original sketch beside the screen and took a photograph, the similarities impossible to deny.
"The statute of limitations for theft is three years," I murmured to the empty room, my voice steady as steel. "Still plenty of time."
My phone buzzed with a text from Theron: "Working late again tonight. Don't wait up."
I typed back: "Of course, darling. I'll keep dinner warm."
But instead of heading to the kitchen, I returned to Morrison's report, focusing on the final page—the one that had made my heart stop entirely.
Theron and Sable weren't just stealing my designs. They were planning something bigger. According to intercepted emails, they'd scheduled a meeting with Cartier's head of acquisitions for next week. The subject line read: "Blackwell-Winters Collaborative Collection - Exclusive Partnership Proposal."
They were going to sell my entire life's work to one of the world's most prestigious jewelry houses. Under their names. With my husband positioned as the "established industry expert" and his mistress as the "visionary young talent."
I laughed, the sound sharp and bitter in the afternoon silence. They thought I was too naive to notice, too simple to fight back.
Opening a new document on my computer, I began typing:
"Revenge Plan - Phase Two: Professional Destruction"
Theron wanted to see real ambition? Sable thought she could build a career on stolen dreams?
They were about to learn exactly what three generations of Ashford cunning could accomplish when properly motivated.
And this time, I wouldn't be playing the perfect wife. I'd be playing to win.
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