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My Husband's Master Wasn't Me Novel Cover

My Husband's Master Wasn't Me

Vera Calloway spent three years being the perfect wife to a man who spent those same years being someone else's devoted submissive online. The day she finds his laptop open—chat logs, nude videos, a flight itinerary—she doesn't cry. She calls her divorce attorney. He expects forgiveness. She serves papers. He expects her to wait. She sells the house. By the time Daniel Calloway realizes what he's lost, Vera is already gone—and the woman rebuilding herself from the wreckage has no interest in being found.
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Chapter 3

"The timestamps align perfectly with my travel schedule," I told Sandra.

I slid my phone across the mahogany conference table. The screen displayed my categorized list.

"October twelfth. March fourth. All dates I was out of the state."

Sandra Okafor did not flinch. She picked up the printed screenshots of the flight itinerary and the chat logs.

"And this chat log?" she asked, adjusting her wire-rimmed glasses.

"That's the trip next Wednesday," I replied. "The trip my husband claimed was a marketing seminar in Chicago."

"But the ticket says Seattle."

"Exactly. And he's bringing someone named Riley Thorne."

Sandra set the papers down. She placed her silver pen perfectly parallel to her legal pad.

"This is overwhelming evidence of fault, Vera," she said.

The tension in my shoulders snapped.

I let out a short, sharp laugh. It echoed in the quiet room.

For three days, the secret had burned a hole in my chest. I had paced the floors of my house alone, staring at the walls, wondering if I was losing my mind. Now, a professional had stamped his actions with a legal term. I wasn't crazy. I wasn't overreacting. Someone finally caught me as I fell.

"Will a judge actually care about the videos?" I asked.

"Judges care about betrayal when it involves marital assets," Sandra stated. "He filmed these in your shared home. He drained a joint portfolio to fund an offshore account. It's textbook dissipation."

"He thinks I'm clueless."

"Most arrogant men do," Sandra noted. "Now, because we can prove marital misconduct, the asset division shifts heavily in your favor."

"What does that mean practically?"

"It means the standard fifty-fifty split goes out the window," Sandra explained. "In this state, documented infidelity influences the judge. Especially concerning property."

"The house," I murmured.

"Yes. Whose name is on the deed?"

"Both of ours."

"And the mortgage?"

My fingers tightened around the edge of the table. A sudden memory surfaced, clear and sharp.

"The mortgage," I repeated. "He had terrible credit when we got married. A failed tech startup ruined his score."

Sandra leaned forward. "So?"

"The loan is entirely under my social security number. He couldn't even qualify for a car loan back then."

"Excellent," she said. "That gives us immense leverage. You hold the financial risk, which means we can petition for you to keep the primary residence outright."

I pulled my phone back. I opened a blank note and typed the remaining balance of the mortgage. *$312,000*.

"We need to establish a timeline," Sandra said. "When exactly does he board this flight?"

"Wednesday morning. Six a.m."

"Then we file on Wednesday afternoon," she decided. "He lands in Seattle, turns his phone off airplane mode, and gets served digitally."

"Just like that?"

"Just like that. But you need to protect yourself today."

"How?" I asked.

"You need to sever his financial access immediately," Sandra instructed. "Any joint accounts, credit cards, revoke his authorized user status. Have you done this yet?"

"No. I didn't want to tip him off."

"Do you have the banking app on your phone right now?"

"Yes."

"Open it," she commanded. "Check the joint checking and savings."

I tapped the blue icon. FaceID bypassed the lock screen.

"Savings is empty," I said, my voice flat. "I knew that. He liquidated the Vanguard portfolio for his 'compound entry fee'."

"Check the recent transaction history on the checking account. Read them to me."

I swiped down the screen.

"Gas station. Dry cleaners. Grocery store," I listed.

Then a line of red text caught my eye.

"Wait."

Sandra stopped writing. "What do you see?"

"A transfer," I said. "Two days ago. Four thousand dollars."

"To whom?"

I squinted at the merchant ID. "Apex Holdings LLC. I have never heard of them."

"Screenshot it," Sandra said.

I pressed the side buttons and captured the image.

"Do you think that's the hotel in Seattle?" I asked.

"Or a retainer for his own attorney," Sandra countered. "Or a payment to this Riley Thorne. We will subpoena the LLC's records during discovery."

"He's siphoning our daily expenses now," I realized. "Not just the investments."

"Which is why we stop the bleeding today." Sandra reached into a manila folder and pulled out a thick stack of stapled paper.

"I have enough to start," she told me. "But I need your authorization to officially file the petition."

She slid the document across the polished wood.

"Sign the first page," she said. "And the last."

I stared at the black text. *Retainer Agreement for Dissolution of Marriage.*

"If I sign this, there's no going back," I said.

"Do you want to go back?" Sandra asked.

"No."

I grabbed the pen from her desk. I pressed the tip hard against the dotted line on the very first page.

Vera Elizabeth Calloway.

"Done," I said, pushing the paper back.

Sandra separated the carbon copy and handed it to me.

"Don't let him know we know," she warned. "Act completely normal until Wednesday."

"Normal," I repeated.

"Let him pack his bags. Let him think he won."

I folded the copy and shoved it into my leather handbag.

"I can do normal."

The morning sun blinded me as I stepped out of the glass office building.

Downtown traffic roared past the sidewalk. I stood near the revolving doors and dug into my bag for my car keys.

My phone vibrated against my knuckles.

I pulled it out. The lock screen showed two unread messages from Daniel.

*Daniel: Where are you today? Your office called the house looking for you.*

My jaw locked. He actually picked up the landline. He was checking up on me.

A second text bubbled up beneath the first.

*Daniel: I booked a table at Le Petit for tonight. We need to celebrate our anniversary properly before I fly out.*

My thumb hovered over the keyboard.

*Anniversary.*

Seven years of marriage. Le Petit was the restaurant where he proposed.

I glanced down into my open handbag. The crisp white edge of the legal retainer poked out from the side pocket.

I could text him back. I could say I was running errands. I could play the dutiful, clueless wife for one more dinner.

Instead, I didn't reply.

I didn't lock the screen. I just let the display stay bright, illuminating his lies.

I dropped the lit phone right next to the divorce papers.

"Happy anniversary, Daniel," I whispered to the busy street.

Let's see what you pack for a romantic dinner when your wife already knows how the story ends.

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