Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Sold Our Home for His Lover Novel Cover

My Husband Sold Our Home for His Lover

After years of marriage, a devoted wife is shattered to discover her husband has secretly sold their family home to finance a lavish lifestyle for his mistress. Left with nothing but betrayal, she must navigate the emotional wreckage of his ultimate deception. As the truth behind his double life emerges, she struggles to reclaim her dignity and future. This modern drama explores the painful fallout of infidelity and a woman's journey toward justice.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I called him on a Tuesday morning. Mac was at school. Mom was resting. The house was as quiet as it ever gets, just the oxygen machine and the wind off the street and my own breathing.

Emmett picked up on the second ring.

"Mavis." Careful. Not warm.

"I want a divorce."

I had rehearsed it a hundred times in my head, but saying it out loud felt different than I expected. Not like relief. Like stepping off a ledge.

He didn't answer right away. Three, four seconds of silence—the kind that isn't empty. The kind where someone is deciding what version of themselves to be.

Then his voice came back. Lower. Flatter. The voice he uses in negotiations, the one I used to hear him practice on the drive to dinners, the one I always thought was reserved for other people.

"Okay," he said. "We can do that."

I waited.

"But you need to understand how this works," he said. "I've been carrying this family for years, Mavis. The mortgage. Your mother's care. Mac's everything. That doesn't just disappear because you decide you're done."

"We built those assets together—"

"You haven't worked in six years."

He said it simply. No cruelty in his voice. Just arithmetic.

"The condo is in both our names," I said.

"The condo was bought with my income. The savings account runs on my direct deposit. If you want to fight that in court, you can try." A pause. "Or you can walk away clean. No ugliness. No lawyers dragging Mac into it. You get a fair monthly support figure and we both move on."

"That's not fair."

"It's practical." He exhaled. "Think about it. You've got enough on your plate without a legal battle. Take the time you need."

The line was quiet.

"Take it," he said.

I set the phone down on the counter. Outside, a delivery truck rumbled past the window. The oxygen machine hummed its one soft note.

I stood there for a long time.

---

I spent the next two days at the kitchen table.

I had a yellow legal pad and three pens and my laptop and I didn't answer the phone except when it was Mac's school or Birdie. I pulled up the county property records. I logged into the joint bank portal I had access to and had never really used. I went through the investment account statements Emmett had always summarized for me in round numbers at the dinner table, as if I were a child who found the specifics confusing.

The condo on Rittenhouse had appreciated forty-two percent since they bought it.

The savings had grown to a number that made me sit very still.

I wrote everything down in two columns. What we had. What I would keep if I believed him. The second column was a very short list.

I went to the state bar website and read the Pennsylvania equitable distribution statute three times, slowly. I read two law review articles and one family law blog written by a Philadelphia attorney who explained everything in plain language, bless her.

The law was clear enough. Marital assets acquired during the marriage belonged to both parties. Length of marriage mattered. Contribution to the household mattered. Six years of unpaid caregiving for his child and his mother-in-law, the article said, absolutely counted as contribution.

But evidence mattered more.

Documented assets. Documented misconduct. A clear paper trail.

I didn't have that yet. Not in the shape a courtroom needed.

If I filed now, angry and empty-handed, it would be his word against mine. His lawyer against whatever I could scrape together. Mac caught in the middle while the bill climbed.

I tore the legal pad page out carefully and folded it into quarters and put it in my coat pocket.

On the third morning I called Emmett back.

I had made coffee first. I had washed my face. I had sat in the kitchen and breathed until the thing inside my chest that wanted to scream had gone quiet and flat.

"I've been thinking," I said. My voice was soft. Careful. The voice I used when Mac was sick and frightened and needed to believe everything would be fine.

"Yeah?" I could hear him exhale already, bracing.

"I don't want a divorce." I let it sit for a beat. "I was scared and I was grieving and I said the wrong thing. What Paige did—coming to the house, what happened to Mom—it broke something in me. And I took it out on us."

Silence.

"I want to try," I said. "I want to save this. I don't want Mac to grow up without both parents under the same roof."

Emmett was quiet for a moment longer than he should have been. Calculating. Deciding whether to trust the gift.

"Mavis."

"I mean it, Emmett."

He let out a long breath. "I—yeah. Okay. Yeah." Something loosened in his voice, something that might have been relief or might have been satisfaction. I wasn't sure he could tell the difference anymore. "I knew you'd come around. I knew you wouldn't just throw everything away."

"I just need things to be different," I said.

"Of course. Absolutely. We'll figure it out."

"Thank you," I said.

I set the phone down and sat very still at the kitchen table. The morning light came through the window in a long flat stripe across the floor. My coffee had gone cold.

I poured it down the drain.

---

Birdie arrived on a Thursday with two suitcases and a carry-on and the same expression she'd had at our father's funeral—jaw set, eyes clear, already looking for what needed doing.

I didn't say anything when I opened the door. I just stepped back to let her in.

She walked through the house the way she always did, room to room, quiet, her eyes taking inventory. She checked on Mom first. She stood in the doorway of Mac's room and looked at the plant on the sill, at the drawings on the desk, at the dinosaur on the pillow. She went to the kitchen and opened the cabinet where I kept the medications and spent five minutes just reading labels and comparing them against the schedule I'd taped inside the door.

"This timing is off," she said, pointing to the Wednesday column. "The blood pressure one should be two hours before the other two, not after."

"I know," I said. "I kept meaning to fix it."

She fixed it while I stood there. She didn't comment on the fact that I'd been doing it wrong for three months under the weight of everything else. She just fixed it.

After Mac went to bed, we sat in the kitchen. I made tea neither of us particularly wanted.

"Tell me what you need from me," Birdie said.

I wrapped both hands around the mug. I had said it to myself so many times that it came out almost simply.

"Mom's medication and appointments. Mac's drop-offs and pickups. The baseline—just the baseline, running clean. That's what I need you to hold."

"Done."

"I'm going to be traveling some. Back to the city. Maybe more than once."

"Okay."

"I need you to not ask me details yet. When I can tell you, I will."

She studied me across the table. She had Mom's eyes, the same quality of attention that missed nothing and said very little about what it found.

"Are you safe?" she said.

"Yes."

"Is what you're doing legal?"

I looked at her steadily. "Enough of it."

The corner of her mouth moved. Not quite a smile. Something more serious than that.

"Then go," she said.

Outside, the wind pressed against the kitchen window. The house settled around us. Down the hall, the oxygen machine kept its rhythm, steady and slow, the only clock in the room that never stopped.

I drank my tea.

I began to plan.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Husband’s Paris Affair, I Chose His Brother Novel Cover
8.3
When her husband’s betrayal comes to light during a scandalous affair in Paris, a heartbroken wife finds her world shattered. Seeking a way to reclaim her power and heal from the infidelity, she makes a daring and unexpected choice to align herself with his powerful brother. Amidst high-stakes family drama and billionaire secrets, a forbidden romance ignites. She must navigate a web of loyalty and revenge to find a love that is finally her own.
Because You Were Made For Me And No One Else Novel Cover
8.6
Anastasia thought she knew her place in the world... Behind the counter of her bakery, living a quiet and peaceful life with only her brother and little sister as her only concerns, until her quiet life collided with his. The first time she met him he was a stranger with harsh words and looks that left her breathless. The second time he was more harsh and underrated her that left her angry. But nothing prepared her for the night she was contacted to cater for a birthday party, only to discover that the said birthday celebrant was actually the rude stranger. It didn't just end there, he happened to be the nephew of the lovely woman that adored her pastries, the same woman who dreamed of making Anastasia her own daughter-in-law. What she doesn't realize was that her story had already been written long ago. The man she thought was a stranger was no stranger at all. Forced to let her go once, but obsession doesn't die just like that. Now that fate had brought them back together, he isn't planning on letting her go again. Because Anastasia was made for him and no one else.
The billionaire contract bride: from contract wife to his obsession Novel Cover
8.9
Betrayed by the people she trusted most, Ava Lin's perfect life shatters overnight. From losing her mother under mysterious circumstances to being tormented by her stepmother and stepsister, Ava learns early that love in her world comes at a price. But nothing prepares her for the ultimate betrayal,catching her fiancé in bed with her own sister just weeks before their wedding. Humiliated and heartbroken, Ava makes a reckless decision that changes everything: a contract marriage to a stranger. What she doesn't know is that her new husband is Elias Ward,a powerful, cold-hearted billionaire with secrets of his own. Thrown into a world of wealth, power, and hidden enemies, Ava finds herself entangled in a dangerous game of revenge, lies, and unexpected passion. As she rises from the ashes of betrayal, those who once destroyed her will stop at nothing to bring her down even if it means exposing deadly secrets buried in her past. But when love begins to bloom in the most unexpected place, Ava must decide,will she continue fighting for revenge, or risk everything for a second chance at love? In a story filled with scandal, heartbreak, and justice, one woman's pain becomes her greatest strength... and her ultimate weapon.
Caught Between Her Legs and My Love Novel Cover
9.6
In this intense modern romance, a web of secrets threatens to unravel a passionate connection. As a deep love blossoms, the weight of hidden truths and a lingering mystery begin to surface, forcing the protagonists to confront a past they cannot escape. Caught in a delicate balance between undeniable physical attraction and emotional vulnerability, they must navigate a series of revelations that could either solidify their bond or tear them apart forever.
Divorced At Dawn Pregnant With The Ceo's Secret Heir Novel Cover
9.5
On the day she discovers she is pregnant, Amara is handed divorce papers by the man she loved for three years. Betrayed by her husband and her best friend, she walks away with nothing-except the secret growing inside her. But what Ethan Cole doesn't know is that the woman he abandoned is not weak... and not alone. When Amara returns as a powerful heiress, no longer the woman he could control, Ethan begins to regret everything. But as secrets unravel and the truth about her pregnancy comes closer to light, one question remains- When he finally finds out the child is his... will it already be too late?
From Trophy Wife to Scientific Queen Novel Cover
9.4
My husband Julian celebrated our five-year anniversary by sleeping with his mistress. He thought I was a clueless trophy wife, too dim to notice the vanilla and tuberose scent on his expensive suits. He was wrong. For years, I played Mrs. Vance, hiding my brilliance while Julian claimed my patents. An anonymous email confirmed his ultimate betrayal: photos of him and Scarlett Kensington in ecstasy. My heart didn't break; it solidified into ice at five years wasted. I activated "The Protocol" for a new identity and escape countdown. Playing the doting wife, I plotted his downfall, catching him with his mistress selling my work, and publicly snapping his credit card. His betrayals and stolen work ignited a cold, calculated fury. He had no idea the monster he'd created. I was dismantling his empire. I shredded his patent papers, stripping him of his ill-gotten gains. With a final tap, I initiated "Identity Erasure." Mrs. Vance was dead. Dr. Evelyn Thorne had just begun her counterattack.