
My Husband’s Mistress Destroyed My Life, So I Took Hers
Chapter 3
The private elevator doors didn't just open; they shuddered under the force of Vanessa’s manic hands.
She stormed into the penthouse, stripping away the polished veneer of Manhattan's premier ballerina. Her designer coat hung off one shoulder, and the veins in her neck pulsed against her flushed skin.
"You locked my accounts!" Her voice was a shrill, ugly thing that clawed at the quiet elegance of my living room. "My instructors are threatening to walk! You froze the expansion funds!"
I remained perfectly still in my wheelchair, my hands resting lightly on the padded armrests. The afternoon sun caught the dust motes swirling in her chaotic wake.
"You have no right!" Vanessa lunged forward, her manicured fingers hooked like talons, aiming for the lapels of my silk blouse.
She never made it.
Elena, who had been quietly charting my physical therapy progress in the corner, moved with the sudden, fluid lethality of a striking snake. Her hand clamped around Vanessa’s wrist like a steel vise, halting her momentum so violently that Vanessa’s teeth clicked together.
"Touch her," Elena said, her voice dropping to a gravelly whisper, "and I will break this arm in three places. Nod if you understand."
Vanessa gasped, her eyes darting from Elena’s unyielding grip to my impassive face.
"Let her go, Elena," I murmured.
Elena released her with a shove that sent Vanessa stumbling backward into a glass side table.
"You think you've won?" Vanessa spat, rubbing her wrist, her chest heaving. "Trevor loves me. He's building a future with me!"
"Trevor built an academy with marital assets," I corrected, my voice dropping the temperature in the room by ten degrees. "Every mirror, every barre, every penny in those accounts belongs to a trust bearing my name. You aren't an empire builder, Vanessa. You're a trespasser in a house I own." I pressed the intercom button on my armrest. "Security. There is a trespasser in the penthouse. Remove her."
As the guards dragged a screaming, thrashing Vanessa toward the elevator, I smoothed an invisible wrinkle from my skirt. The first domino had fallen.
Two hours later, the scent of lemon polish and centuries of inherited arrogance hung thick in Margaret Larson’s Upper East Side drawing room.
Margaret sat rigidly on a velvet settee, her posture a masterclass in old-money intimidation. Her fingers rhythmically tapped her signature pearl necklace. Trevor stood by the fireplace, sweating through his custom Tom Ford suit, his tie loosened like a noose he was desperate to escape.
"This vulgar display ends today, Iris," Margaret commanded, the clinking of her teacup against its saucer sharp and final. "The Larson name will not be dragged through a public divorce court over a... temporary lapse in my son's judgment. Withdraw the injunction."
I didn't argue. I didn't raise my voice. I simply retrieved my phone, placed it on the antique mahogany coffee table, and pressed play.
Vanessa’s sickeningly sweet voice filled the cavernous room, bragging about her pregnancy, the trust fund, the replacement of my family. Margaret’s tapping fingers slowed. Then, I swiped to the photos. The tangled bedsheets. The bank transfers. Seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars of Larson capital funneled into Vanessa's vanity project.
Margaret’s face turned the color of old parchment. She slowly stood, the silk of her dress rustling like dry leaves. She walked over to her son, who was staring at the floor, his jaw trembling.
The sharp, echoing crack of Margaret’s palm against Trevor’s cheek startled the absolute silence of the room.
Trevor staggered, a red handprint blooming instantly across his pale skin.
"You squandered our legacy," Margaret hissed, her voice vibrating with a disgust so profound it seemed to suck the oxygen from the room. "On a tacky, social-climbing whore."
Panic—raw, suffocating panic—finally shattered Trevor’s polished facade. The realization that he was losing not just me, but his mother's protection and the family vault, broke his knees. He collapsed onto the Persian rug in front of my wheelchair, grabbing the cold metal of the footrests.
"Iris, please," he begged, tears mixing with the sweat on his face. "I'll fix this. I swear to God I'll fix it all. Just drop the suit."
I looked down at him, a pathetic creature drowning in his own hypocrisy. "Fix it? She is carrying your child, Trevor."
"I'll make her get rid of it!" The words tore from his throat, desperate and vile. "I'll force her to terminate. I'll cut her off completely. She won't get another dime."
My stomach turned, a cold revulsion settling deep in my bones. "And your other child? The one with leukemia?"
"I'll stop the experimental treatments," he babbled, his eyes wide and unblinking, entirely detached from his own humanity. "I'll pull the funding. I'll abandon them. I don't care! I just want you. I just want my life back!"
Beneath the folds of my cashmere shawl, my thumb pressed the screen of my phone. A tiny red dot blinked in the darkness, recording every damning, monstrous syllable spilling from his mouth.
He was willing to sacrifice a sick child and an unborn baby just to save his own skin.
I looked at the man I had once promised to love for eternity, feeling nothing but the icy, euphoric clarity of the executioner.
"Oh, Trevor," I whispered, my voice soft, almost tender. "Your life is already over."
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