
My Husband’s Mistress Is Carrying Quadruplets
Chapter 2
Harrison is in the kitchen when I get home, sleeves rolled up, stirring something that smells like garlic and wine. He looks up when I walk in, and his smile is the same one that made me say yes five years ago—warm, easy, like I'm the only person in the world who matters.
"There's my brilliant wife." He crosses the room to kiss my cheek. "How was the lab?"
"Routine." The word tastes like ash. "Paternity cases. Nothing exciting."
He returns to the stove, and I watch the way he moves through our kitchen—our space, our life—like he hasn't just detonated it from the inside. The marble countertops we picked out together. The wine rack he built. The framed photo from our honeymoon in Santorini, both of us laughing, child-free and infinite.
"I'm going to catch up on some paperwork," I say, already moving toward my home office.
"Don't work too late. I made your favorite."
I close the door and lean against it, counting my breaths. Five in. Seven out. The technique my therapist taught me after the ectopic pregnancy, when the panic attacks started. When I'd wake at three AM feeling the phantom pain of rupture, reaching for a husband who was never there.
My laptop boots up with a soft chime. I navigate to the hospital portal, entering credentials I haven't used since February. The records load slowly—admission time, surgical notes, discharge summary. Dr. Foster's signature at the bottom, her handwriting noting "patient presented alone, no family support available."
Admission: 7:43 PM, February 14th.
Surgery start: 9:15 PM.
I open our joint credit card account in another window. Harrison doesn't know I set up alerts for every transaction over fifty dollars. He thinks I'm too busy with work to notice his spending.
I scroll to February 14th.
8:47 PM: The Carlisle Hotel. Valentine's Suite. $1,200.
9:30 PM: Cristal champagne, room service. $400.
11:15 PM: Tiffany & Co. $3,800.
While I was on an operating table, bleeding into my abdominal cavity, Harrison was buying diamonds for the woman carrying his child. The child he told me he never wanted. The child we agreed would derail everything we'd built.
I screenshot everything. Save it to an encrypted folder. My hands don't shake.
The grief I've been carrying since February—the loss of the pregnancy I didn't plan but mourned anyway, the loneliness of recovering alone, the guilt of feeling relieved it was ectopic because at least I didn't have to choose—all of it crystallizes into something sharp and useful.
I pull up our tax returns, bank statements, investment accounts. Everything I've meticulously organized because Harrison is brilliant at making money but terrible at managing it. I download five years of financial records onto a thumb drive, then delete my browser history.
Tomorrow, I'll find a forensic accountant. Tonight, I'll eat Harrison's osso buco and smile across the table and let him think everything is fine.
Because the thing about being a DNA analyst is that you learn patience. You learn that the truth reveals itself in layers, one marker at a time. You learn that the most devastating evidence is the kind that's irrefutable.
And I'm very, very good at gathering evidence.
---
The café is in Fremont, far enough from downtown that I won't run into anyone from Harrison's firm. I chose a corner table with a view of the door, my leather portfolio open in front of me. The forensic accountant—recommended by a colleague who went through a messy divorce—arrives exactly on time.
Robert Chen is fiftyish, gray at the temples, wearing a suit that's expensive but not showy. He orders black coffee and gets straight to business.
"Estate planning, you said on the phone."
"That's the cover story." I slide the thumb drive across the table. "I need to know if my husband is hiding assets. And if so, where the money is coming from."
His expression doesn't change. "You think he's having an affair."
"I know he's having an affair. She's pregnant. I need to understand the financial picture before I file for divorce."
He pockets the drive. "This will take about a week. My retainer is five thousand."
I write the check from my personal account, the one Harrison doesn't have access to. The one I opened three years ago when his spending started escalating and he got defensive when I asked questions.
"One more thing," I say. "I manage a genetic testing lab. If this goes to court, I can't have any suggestion that I've compromised my professional ethics. Everything you find needs to be obtained legally."
"I only work with documentation you have legal access to as a spouse." He stands, tucking the check into his jacket. "I'll be in touch."
I watch him leave, then sit alone with my coffee, staring at the dregs. Across the street, a young couple pushes a stroller, laughing about something. I feel nothing.
My phone buzzes. Harrison: "Dinner tonight? That new sushi place you wanted to try?"
I type back: "Perfect. Can't wait."
And I mean it.
---
Robert calls six days later. His voice is carefully neutral. "We need to meet. In person."
Same café, same corner table. This time he brings a laptop and a manila folder thick with printouts. He doesn't waste time on pleasantries.
"Your husband has been embezzling from his firm for approximately eighteen months." He opens the laptop, showing me a spreadsheet that makes my stomach drop. "He's created three shell companies—LLCs registered in Delaware—and has been routing funds through them to mask the transfers. Total amount: approximately $2.3 million."
The number sits between us like a bomb.
"Where's the money going?"
"A penthouse apartment in Belltown. Lease in the name of one of the shell companies. Monthly rent: $8,500. Also: jewelry purchases, a BMW lease, and regular transfers to an account belonging to"—he checks his notes—"Leyla Hartwell."
Leyla. Now I have her last name.
"If I divorce him now," I say slowly, "and his firm discovers the embezzlement..."
"You could be liable for half the debt in the divorce settlement. Worse, if they pursue criminal charges, your assets could be frozen during the investigation. Your reputation, given your position, would be compromised by association."
I close my eyes. Open them. "So I need to separate my assets from his before anyone finds out."
"Ideally, yes. And you need to do it in a way that doesn't alert him or his firm." Robert leans back. "This is going to require strategy, Mrs. Myers. And time."
"I have both." I take the folder, feeling its weight. "And it's Ms. Gordon. I kept my name when we married."
His smile is thin. "Smart woman."
I drive home with the evidence locked in my trunk, my mind already three steps ahead. Harrison thinks he's won—the mistress, the baby, the secret life funded by stolen money. He thinks I'm too focused on my career to notice, too trusting to question.
He's wrong.
And by the time I'm done, he'll understand exactly what it costs to betray someone who knows how to read the data.
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