
My Husband’s Mistress Livestreamed His Betrayal at the Gala
Chapter 3
The restaurant in the West Village was the antithesis of everything I had known for the last decade. There were no white tablecloths, no hushed whispers of corporate mergers, and absolutely no pretension. It was loud, smelling of garlic and roasted tomatoes, the walls plastered with vintage posters peeling at the corners.
Caleb sat across from me, his sleeves rolled up to his elbows. We weren't just eating; we were participating. A massive wheel of pecorino cheese sat on a cart beside our table, and Caleb was deftly tossing hot pasta inside the hollowed-out rind, the steam rising around his face like a veil.
"You're doing that with suspicious competence," I said, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears. It lacked the guarded polish I used for board members.
"My nonna didn't believe in idle hands," Caleb grinned, plating the cacio e pepe with a flourish. "She said if you can't feed yourself, you can't feed your soul."
He pushed the plate toward me. For the first time all night, I noticed his phone was nowhere in sight. No vibrations on the table. No glancing at a smartwatch. He was entirely, terrifyingly present.
I picked up my fork, but my hand hesitated. I was waiting for the interruption. The crisis. The call from the PR team.
Caleb’s smile faded into a look of gentle assessment. "You keep checking the door, Jenna. Expecting the FBI?"
I set the fork down, smoothing a napkin over my lap to hide the tremor in my fingers. "Not the FBI. Just... reality."
"You're safe here," he said, his voice dropping an octave, cutting through the clatter of silverware around us. "But you're tense. Like you're waiting for the ceiling to collapse."
I looked at him—really looked at him. His eyes were dark and steady, offering anchor in a storm I hadn't realized I was drowning in. "I'm going through a transition," I admitted, the euphemism tasting like ash. "My life is currently under renovation."
"Renovations are messy," Caleb said, reaching across the table to pour more wine into my glass. "But they're how you build something that actually stands up."
I laughed then. It wasn't a social titter; it was a rough, genuine sound that started in my chest. "To structural integrity," I toasted.
Later, outside under the hazy glow of a flickering streetlamp, the air was cool against my flushed cheeks. Caleb didn't loom over me like Maximus did; he leaned in, bridging the gap slowly, giving me every second to pull away. When his lips brushed mine, it wasn't a claim of ownership. It was a question. And for the first time in years, I answered.
***
The next morning, I sat on the floor of the pre-war apartment I’d leased under my maiden name. It was sparsely furnished, smelling of lemon polish and dust, but the sunlight hitting the hardwood felt cleaner than anything in the Upper East Side townhouse.
My phone buzzed. A link from Lilly. *Don't panic. Just watch.*
I clicked it. TikTok opened to a video that already had two million views.
Sapphire Chavez filled the screen, her face filtered to perfection. "Story time, guys," she chirped, applying lip gloss. "So, when your high-profile CEO boyfriend says he's 'working late,' but he's actually just hiding from his ice-queen wife..."
The camera panned. She wasn't in a hotel. She was in the corner office of Bryant Holdings. I recognized the jagged skyline view through the floor-to-ceiling windows. I recognized the limited-edition Basquiat print on the wall—a gift I had bought Maximus for our fifth anniversary.
*#CEO #BryantHoldings #SideChickEnergy*
I switched apps to the market watch. Bryant Holdings stock was down four percent in pre-market trading. The comment section was a bloodbath, amateur sleuths tagging the company, the board members, and Maximus.
A dark, cold satisfaction settled in my gut. Maximus wanted to play games with his image? He just lost the first round.
***
Buoyed by the schadenfreude, I walked into the showroom of a boutique office supplier in SoHo that afternoon. I needed a desk. Not a mahogany fortress, but something glass, transparent—something that hid nothing.
"This one," I told the sales associate, running my hand over a sleek, modern drafting table.
"Excellent choice," he beamed. "And for delivery?"
"As soon as possible." I pulled out my Black Amex, the heavy titanium card that had been my passport to the world for ten years.
The associate swiped it. He frowned. He swiped it again. Then he typed something into the terminal.
The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. The people in line behind me shifted their weight.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Bryant," the associate said, his voice dropping to a pitying whisper. "It's declined. Code 05. Do you... do you have another card?"
Heat scorched my neck. It wasn't a mistake. It was a message. Maximus had frozen the joint accounts. He was cutting off the oxygen.
I took the card back, my knuckles white. "One moment."
I stepped away, dialing Marcus. My assistant answered on the first ring.
"He froze them, didn't he?" Marcus asked, skipping the hello.
"Everything," I whispered, staring at my reflection in a decorative mirror. I looked pale, but my eyes were hard. "I can't pay for the desk, Marcus. He's trying to starve me out."
"Jenna, listen to me," Marcus said, his voice calm and professional. "Remember the 'Consulting Fees' we've been diverting to the separate LLC account for the last three years? The one under your mother's maiden name?"
I blinked. The rainy-day fund. The money I had earned from my own networking consulting, which Marcus had insisted we keep separate from the Bryant estate.
"Is it active?" I asked.
"Fully funded and liquid," Marcus said. "I'm transferring the operating capital to your digital wallet now. You're not destitute, Jenna. You're independent."
A chime sounded on my phone. A notification. *Funds Received.*
I walked back to the counter, head high, the shame evaporating into cold resolve. I held up my phone to the contactless reader.
"I'll use a different account," I told the associate, my voice ringing clear through the store. "The old one has expired."
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