
My Husband's Live Stream Affair
Chapter 3
The email arrived at 2:47 PM on a Tuesday, marked as urgent from Marcus's assistant. "Mrs. Mills, your husband needs the Whitmore contract documents delivered to the executive boardroom immediately. Floor 32, Conference Room A."
I stared at the message, my fingers tightening around my phone. Marcus had been particularly cold lately, barely acknowledging my presence at breakfast, taking calls in another room when I entered. Part of me wondered if this was his way of reaching out, of including me in his business world again.
The elevator ride to the thirty-second floor felt endless. I clutched the leather portfolio containing the contracts, documents I'd actually helped draft through one of my shell companies. The irony wasn't lost on me—I was delivering papers for a deal I'd orchestrated from the shadows.
The hallway was eerily quiet, my heels clicking against the polished marble. Conference Room A sat at the end of the corridor, its frosted glass doors partially obscured by venetian blinds. As I approached, I could hear voices—Marcus's distinctive laugh, followed by a woman's breathy giggle.
I knocked softly. "Marcus? I have the documents you requested."
"Come in," his voice called, strangely muffled.
I pushed open the door and froze.
Marcus was bent over the conference table, his shirt unbuttoned, his hands gripping the mahogany edge. Behind him, a woman I recognized as Jennifer Walsh from the marketing department was pressed against his back, her skirt hiked up around her waist. Neither of them stopped when I entered.
"Just set them on the side table," Marcus said without looking at me, his voice strained with exertion. "We're in the middle of something."
Jennifer turned her head toward me, her face flushed but her eyes sharp with cruel satisfaction. "Hi, Mrs. Mills," she panted. "Sorry, we're just finishing up a very important... negotiation."
The portfolio slipped from my hands, contracts scattering across the floor. The sound seemed to amuse them both—Marcus's laugh was low and predatory, while Jennifer's giggle was high and theatrical.
"Careful with those papers," Marcus said, finally glancing over his shoulder at me. "They're worth more than your monthly allowance."
I dropped to my knees, frantically gathering the documents with shaking hands. My wedding ring caught the fluorescent light as I reached for a page that had slid under the table, near their feet. The symbolism was devastating—crawling on the floor while my husband performed for another woman.
"You know what, Isabella?" Marcus's voice took on that familiar CEO authority. "Why don't you wait outside? We'll be done in about twenty minutes."
Twenty minutes. He'd timed this, planned it down to the minute.
I stood slowly, clutching the disheveled contracts. "The Whitmore deal closes tomorrow. These need your signature tonight."
"I'll get to them when I get to them." His dismissal was casual, as if I were an inconvenient secretary. "Close the door behind you."
Jennifer's laugh followed me into the hallway, sharp and victorious. I stood outside the conference room for exactly three minutes, listening to their escalating sounds, before walking to the elevator with as much dignity as I could muster.
But the humiliation wasn't over.
Two days later, I received another "urgent" request. This time, it was the Morrison files for Conference Room B. Then the Patterson contracts for the executive lounge. Each delivery was perfectly timed, each encounter more degrading than the last.
By the fourth incident, I understood the pattern. Marcus wasn't just cheating—he was orchestrating a systematic campaign of psychological torture, using his own wife as an unwilling audience to his infidelity.
The breaking point came on Friday afternoon.
I was in my study, ostensibly reviewing charity committee proposals, when my encrypted tablet chimed softly. Hidden beneath the stack of legitimate documents was my real work—monitoring the digital forensics reports on Marcus's activities. What I found made my blood run cold.
Marcus had been recording everything.
Not just the office encounters, but our private moments. Intimate conversations where I'd shared my deepest fears about never having children. Vulnerable admissions about my father's death and how it had shaped my need for genuine connection. Quiet moments when I'd told him about my dreams for our future together.
All of it, catalogued and stored on a private server.
The files were organized with clinical precision: "Isabella_Vulnerability_Sessions," "Pregnancy_Discussions," "Father_Issues_Exploitation." Each folder contained hours of secretly recorded audio and video, our most private moments reduced to data points in what appeared to be a comprehensive psychological profile.
I scrolled through the metadata, my hands trembling. Some recordings dated back to our honeymoon. He'd been studying me, mapping my emotional landscape, identifying pressure points and weaknesses from the very beginning.
One file made me physically sick: "Miscarriage_Trauma_Response." It contained footage from the night I'd lost our baby at eight weeks, when I'd sobbed in his arms about feeling like a failure as a woman. He'd held me, whispered comforting words, promised we'd try again when I was ready.
All while recording my breakdown for future use.
I closed the laptop and walked to the bathroom, barely making it to the toilet before I vomited. The betrayal wasn't just sexual—it was a complete violation of everything I'd believed about human decency. He hadn't just broken my heart; he'd dissected it with surgical precision.
When I finally stopped shaking, I returned to my study and opened a different application on my tablet. If Marcus wanted to play games with recorded evidence, I had resources he couldn't imagine.
Within an hour, I had complete access to his private server. Every file, every recording, every piece of his digital footprint was now mine to examine. But what I found in his recent communications made my previous discoveries look like child's play.
He'd been sharing the recordings.
Not publicly, but with a select group of his business associates and friends. Private viewing parties where my most vulnerable moments were entertainment for men who saw me as nothing more than Marcus's amusing trophy wife.
The guest lists read like a who's who of the city's elite. CEOs, politicians, old money families who'd smiled to my face at charity galas while knowing intimate details about my private pain.
I sat back in my chair, feeling something cold and final settle over me. The naive woman who'd hoped to prove her father wrong about love was truly dead now. In her place sat someone who understood that mercy was a luxury I could no longer afford.
Marcus thought he was documenting my weakness.
He had no idea he was creating the evidence for his own destruction.
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