
My Husband Used Me as a Shield for His Mistress
Chapter 2
The biometric scanner blinked red twice before accepting my thumbprint.
I stood in the doorway of Maximilian's home office at three in the morning, listening to the silence of our penthouse. He was at the office—always at the office. The study smelled like leather and his cologne, a space I'd been trained to avoid. His sanctuary. His fortress.
Tonight, I was breaching it.
My hands moved with muscle memory, bypassing the secondary lock on his server cabinet. In Kandahar, I'd cracked insurgent communications under mortar fire. This was cleaner. Quieter. The hard drive hummed to life, blue light washing across my face.
I navigated to the folder marked "Compatibility Reports—Confidential."
Ninety-nine files. Five years of data. Five years of excuses.
I opened the first report. Scrolled. Opened the second.
Identical.
My breath caught.
Third report. Fourth. Tenth. Twentieth. Every single file—the same data, the same graphs, the same ninety-nine percent probability of catastrophic outcomes. Copy. Paste. Copy. Paste. A loop of manufactured rejection.
The cursor trembled on the screen. Not from fear. From rage.
He'd built a prison out of numbers. Locked me inside it. Made me believe I was the problem—too hard, too masculine, too damaged—when all along, he'd been running the same script. Waiting. Stalling.
For her.
I downloaded everything to an encrypted drive. Cleared my digital footprint. Locked the cabinet. By the time I left his office, my hands were steady again.
Soldiers don't cry during the mission. Only after.
---
Maximilian announced the Hamptons trip over breakfast three days later.
"Business," he said, not looking up from his phone. "The Vanderbilt account needs personal attention. I'll be back Monday."
"I could come with you." The words tasted like ash.
His thumb paused mid-scroll. "The optics wouldn't be appropriate. This is a sensitive negotiation."
Optics. Always optics.
I watched him leave, his overnight bag perfectly packed, his movements efficient. The moment his car disappeared into traffic, I called Victoria.
"Clear my schedule. I need the weekend."
"Everything okay?"
"No."
I took my own car—the Range Rover I'd bought with my own money, not Harvey family funds. The drive to the Hamptons stretched long and gray, autumn bleeding the color from the landscape. I knew the estate. I'd been there exactly twice in five years, both times for mandatory family gatherings where I'd smiled and played the dutiful wife while Mrs. Harvey's friends whispered about my empty womb.
I parked a mile away and approached on foot, using the service road that cut through the woods. The boathouse sat at the edge of the property, weathered wood and salt-stained windows. I'd done reconnaissance in worse conditions.
Voices drifted across the water.
I pressed myself against the boathouse wall, hidden in the shadow of the eaves. Through a gap in the boards, I could see them on the dock. Maximilian and Melanie, silhouetted against the dying light.
"She suspects nothing?" Melanie's voice carried that breathy quality I'd heard at the gala.
"Dakota?" Maximilian laughed. Actually laughed. "She's too busy playing soldier. The woman thinks in tactical formations, not emotional subtleties."
"You're cruel."
"I'm practical." He moved closer to her. "She served her purpose. The board needed to see stability. My mother needed to see compliance. Dakota was the perfect shield—decorated war hero, impeccable reputation. No one questions a marriage to The Valkyrie."
"And when I'm ready?"
"Your image rehabilitation is nearly complete. Another six months, maybe less. Then I'll file for divorce. Irreconcilable differences. The data will support it—I've been documenting her emotional unavailability for years."
Melanie laughed, soft and musical. "You've thought of everything."
"I always do."
I watched him cup her face. Watched him kiss her with the hunger I'd seen at the gala, the desperate need he'd never shown me. Not once in five years.
I didn't move. Didn't breathe.
I just recorded every word on my phone, the device steady in my hand.
Then I walked back through the woods, got in my car, and drove back to the city. The highway blurred past, white lines disappearing under my tires. I didn't cry. Didn't scream.
I planned.
---
Senator Isaiah Ray's office overlooked Central Park. He stood when I entered, concern creasing his face.
"Dakota. What's wrong?"
I set the encrypted drive and my phone on his desk. "I need a lawyer. The best divorce attorney in New York. And I need you to make some calls."
He listened to the recordings. Watched his face harden with each word.
"That son of a bitch," he said quietly. "I'll destroy him."
"No." My voice came out flat. Tactical. "I need a clean extraction. No scandal. No press. I'm transferring my firm to Seattle. I want out of this marriage and out of this city."
"Dakota—"
"Please, Isaiah."
He studied me for a long moment. Then nodded. "I'll make the calls."
Victoria was waiting when I returned to my office. She took one look at my face and closed the door.
"Start liquidating my personal assets," I said. "Quietly. Nothing that's Harvey money. I want everything I own converted to liquid capital within two weeks."
"You're leaving him."
"I'm leaving everything."
She didn't ask questions. Just pulled out her tablet and started making lists.
I stood at my office window, watching the city I'd called home. Somewhere out there, Maximilian was probably reviewing his fake data, crafting his next excuse. Building his next lie.
Let him.
I was done being his shield. His placeholder. His convenient wife.
The Valkyrie was going to war.
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