
Revenge at the Birthday Party
Chapter 3
Late nights became my investigation hours. After Gabriella fell asleep and the house settled into silence, I'd open Morgan's forgotten tablet—the one he'd left charging in the kitchen drawer before his trip. His auto-saved passwords were a gift I hadn't expected.
The first discovery made my stomach lurch. A second email account, one I'd never known existed. Messages to Jasmine filled one folder, but another folder contained correspondence with someone named Madalyn Perez. The tone was identical—intimate, romantic, full of promises about their future together.
"Can't wait to see you when I'm back from this trip," he'd written to Madalyn just two days before sending a nearly identical message to Jasmine. "My divorce should be final soon, and then we can be together properly."
I cross-referenced the dates with his calendar, his credit card statements, his travel records. The pattern emerged like a photograph developing in solution. Dinner with Jasmine on Tuesday, drinks with Madalyn on Thursday. Business trips that weren't entirely business. A jewelry purchase for $1,800—another pendant, different style, charged the same week he'd bought Jasmine's necklace.
Madalyn Perez. I found her LinkedIn profile easily—she worked at Davidson Financial, Morgan's consulting firm. Young, ambitious, with dark hair and serious eyes behind stylish glasses. Her Instagram was more professional than Jasmine's, but recent posts showed glimpses of an expensive lifestyle that didn't match her entry-level salary. A designer handbag here, a high-end restaurant there, always tagged with vague captions about "grateful for the good things in life."
I began documenting everything with the methodical precision of a prosecutor building a case. Screenshots of messages, photographs of receipts, spreadsheets tracking dates and expenses. I researched divorce attorneys, reading reviews and noting which ones specialized in asset protection and complex financial arrangements.
The deeper I dug, the more elaborate Morgan's deception became. He maintained separate phone numbers for each woman, used different email signatures, even created fake business trip itineraries to explain his absences. To Jasmine, he was the devoted father fighting a vindictive ex-wife. To Madalyn, he was the successful businessman finally escaping an emotionally unstable marriage.
My hands shook as I read his description of me to Madalyn: "She's become increasingly erratic since I asked for the divorce. Refuses to work, won't let me see our daughter without supervision. I'm worried about Gabriella's wellbeing, but my lawyer says I have to be patient."
Everything was a lie. I'd never refused him access to Gabriella. He'd never asked for a divorce. And the only reason I didn't work full-time was because he'd insisted I stay home to manage our household and care for our daughter.
By the time I met Jasmine for our third coffee date, I carried the weight of Morgan's deceptions like a stone in my chest. She arrived fifteen minutes late, apologizing profusely while checking her phone.
"Morgan's been terrible about communication lately," she confided, stirring her latte with agitated movements. "I texted him yesterday and still haven't heard back. Sometimes I wonder if there's someone else."
I chose my words carefully, letting concern color my voice. "That's hard. Have you ever thought about... I don't know, checking if he's being completely honest?"
She looked up sharply. "What do you mean?"
"Oh, I don't mean to plant doubt," I said quickly, then paused as if considering whether to continue. "It's just—my friend Sarah went through something similar. Her boyfriend claimed to be divorced, but it turned out he was seeing multiple women. They all thought they were the only one."
Jasmine's face paled slightly. "That's different. Morgan's not like that."
"Of course not," I agreed. "I just meant, you know, some men today maintain dating profiles even when they're in serious relationships. It's awful, but it happens more than you'd think."
I watched her process this information, saw the tiny crack appear in her confidence. She touched her necklace unconsciously, the gesture I now recognized as her nervous habit.
"I trust Morgan," she said, but her voice lacked its usual certainty. "We've talked about everything. About his ex, about his daughter, about our future."
"I'm sure you have," I said gently. "You seem really happy together."
But as we parted ways, I noticed how she lingered in her car, staring at her phone. The seed was planted. Now I just had to wait for it to grow.
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