
My Husband's Live Stream Affair
Chapter 1
The notification chimed on my phone at exactly 11:47 PM, a sound that would forever divide my life into before and after.
I was in my study, reviewing quarterly reports for three shell companies that Marcus believed were my "little hobby investments." The irony wasn't lost on me—while he thought I was playing with pocket change, I was actually monitoring revenue streams that dwarfed his entire corporation.
The message was from an anonymous number: "Thought you should see what your husband is up to. Link attached."
My finger hovered over the screen. In the eighteen months since I'd married Marcus, I'd received dozens of similar messages. Concerned friends, jealous rivals, opportunistic gossips—they all wanted to be the one to shatter the perfect CEO wife's illusion. I'd ignored them all, not out of naivety, but because I was conducting my own test. A test to see if the man I'd chosen could love me without knowing about the empire I controlled from the shadows.
But something about this message felt different. The timestamp. The clinical brevity. The lack of gleeful malice that usually accompanied such revelations.
I clicked the link.
The page loaded slowly, and then I saw it: a livestream titled "Wife at Home, Cheating More Thrilling." The viewer count in the corner made my breath catch—200,000 people online and climbing.
There, in high definition, was my husband.
Marcus was in what looked like a luxury hotel suite, the city skyline glittering behind floor-to-ceiling windows. He wore the navy Tom Ford shirt I'd given him for his birthday, now unbuttoned and hanging loose. Beside him, writhing with practiced enthusiasm, was Scarlett Chen—the Instagram influencer with 2.3 million followers who specialized in "lifestyle content" and barely-there bikini photos.
"Tell them how good this feels," Marcus commanded, his voice carrying that familiar CEO authority that had once made my pulse quicken. Now it made my stomach turn.
Scarlett moaned theatrically toward the camera. "So much better than being stuck at home with some boring housewife."
The chat exploded with fire emojis and crude comments. "CEO knows how to play!" "This is why rich guys stay winning!" "Poor wife has no idea!"
I should have closed the laptop. Should have walked away. Instead, I found myself trapped in a kind of horrified fascination, watching my marriage dissolve in real-time for the entertainment of strangers.
Marcus grabbed Scarlett's chin, forcing her to look directly into the camera. "This is what a real woman looks like," he said, his eyes glinting with cruel satisfaction. "Not some frigid ice queen who thinks she's too good for her husband."
My hands began to tremble. The careful composure I'd maintained for eighteen months—through his late nights, his unexplained absences, his growing coldness—finally started to crack.
The stream continued for three hours. Three hours of watching the man I'd hoped might prove my father wrong about love systematically destroy every tender moment we'd shared. Marcus didn't just cheat; he performed his betrayal like a master class in humiliation. He told Scarlett intimate details about our private life, mocked my attempts at romance, even laughed about the night I'd cried in his arms after a nightmare about my father's death.
"She actually thought I married her for love," he said during what the chat dubbed "pillow talk time." "Can you imagine? I married her because she was beautiful, well-behaved, and most importantly, completely harmless. The perfect accessory for a man of my stature."
Scarlett giggled, trailing her fingers across his chest. "What if she finds out about tonight?"
"What's she going to do? Cry? Throw a tantrum?" Marcus's laugh was sharp and dismissive. "Isabella is exactly what she appears to be—a pretty, powerless little wife who depends on me for everything. She wouldn't dare leave, and even if she tried, she'd have nothing. I made sure of that in the prenup."
The chat erupted in laughter emojis and comments about "knowing your place." I watched the viewer count climb past 250,000 as clips were shared across social media platforms in real-time.
When the stream finally ended at 2:47 AM, I sat in the darkness of my study, surrounded by the detritus of my former life. The quarterly reports lay scattered across my desk, suddenly feeling like props in a play I no longer wanted to perform.
I stood slowly, my legs unsteady after hours of sitting frozen. On the bookshelf behind my desk sat a Ming dynasty vase—a priceless artifact that had belonged to my father. He'd given it to me on my sixteenth birthday with his typical cold pragmatism: "Beauty is fragile, Isabella. Power is not. Remember which one matters."
I picked up the vase, feeling its perfect weight in my hands. For a moment, I saw my reflection in its lustrous surface—pale, hollow-eyed, looking every inch the devastated wife Marcus believed me to be.
Then I hurled it against the marble floor.
The crash was magnificent, sharp and final. Centuries of craftsmanship reduced to glittering fragments in an instant. I knelt among the pieces, methodically collecting each shard, feeling the edges bite into my palms. The physical pain was almost a relief—something real and immediate to anchor me as my carefully constructed world collapsed.
As I cleaned, muscle memory took over. This was how my father had taught me to process betrayal—with methodical precision, channeling rage into planning. "Emotion is information, Isabella," his voice echoed in my memory. "Use it, don't let it use you."
By dawn, every fragment was gone, the floor pristine. I sat at my desk and opened my encrypted tablet—the one Marcus had never seen, never even suspected existed. My fingers moved across the screen with practiced efficiency, accessing databases and networks that spanned continents.
I began with the livestream itself, tracing the platform's ownership structure, identifying key investors and board members. Then I moved to the viewers—200,000 digital fingerprints that could be traced, catalogued, and leveraged. I compiled comprehensive files on Marcus and Scarlett, mapping their financial holdings, social connections, and digital footprints with surgical precision.
As the sun rose over the city, casting long shadows across my study, I felt something cold and familiar settling over me like armor. The naive wife who'd believed in love was gone, destroyed as thoroughly as the Ming vase. In her place sat the true heir to my father's empire—a woman who understood that power, not love, was the only currency that mattered.
Marcus thought he'd humiliated a helpless housewife for the entertainment of strangers.
He had no idea he'd just declared war on the most dangerous woman he'd never bothered to truly see.
The game was about to begin.
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