
Revenge on My Husband for His Affair
Chapter 2
I couldn't sleep. The discovery of the missing authorization had left me hollow, but it was the credit card statements that kept replaying in my mind like a horror film I couldn't shut off.
I sat cross-legged on our bed, laptop balanced on my knees, scrolling through Instagram. My fingers moved almost of their own accord, typing "YasminKnightOfficial" into the search bar.
Her profile popped up immediately—a perfectly curated feed of glossy photos. I scrolled down, my heart pounding against my ribs.
"There," I whispered, freezing on a photo of a diamond bracelet catching the light. The caption read: "When your colleague knows exactly what you need. #workperks #sparkle"
I checked the date: two weeks ago. Exactly when that $1,500 charge from Tiffany & Co. had appeared on our statement.
My fingers trembled as I scrolled further. A selfie at Le Bernardin, Yasmin's red lips curved into a smug smile. "Best surprise dinner ever. #blessed #workperks"
$287. Last Tuesday.
A weekend getaway upstate. "Sometimes you just need to escape with good company. #weekendvibes"
$350 hotel charge. The night Liam had texted me his car broke down and he was staying with a "colleague."
I kept scrolling, each photo a fresh wound. There was Liam in the background of a rooftop bar selfie, his hand resting casually on the small of her back. Another of them at a concert, her head tilted against his shoulder.
Every photo matched perfectly with charges on our credit card. Every "late night at the office" aligned with their romantic dinners and weekend getaways.
"This isn't paranoia," I whispered to myself, my voice steadier than I expected. "This is evidence."
---
Three days later, I told Liam I had an overnight training seminar. He barely looked up from his phone when I mentioned it.
"Important work meeting," he said distractedly. "Don't wait up."
I nodded, already planning my counter-move.
Instead of driving to the training facility, I circled back home after an hour, parking two blocks away. The house was dark except for a faint glow from the kitchen windows.
I slipped through the side gate, using the key I'd hidden under the loose stone in the garden wall. The backyard was bathed in moonlight, casting long shadows across the lawn my grandfather had taught me to mow when I was ten.
Voices drifted through the partially open kitchen window.
"...need the garlic pressed, not chopped," Liam was saying, his tone patient in a way it rarely was with me anymore.
A feminine laugh—Yasmin's—followed. "I'm not exactly a chef, Liam."
"Just like Grandma used to make," he replied. "Evie loves this sauce."
My stomach twisted as I recognized the recipe—my grandmother's secret marinara, the one passed down through generations. The one I'd shared with Liam on our honeymoon.
I moved closer, peering through the window. Liam was at the stove, stirring a pot with one hand, his other arm wrapped around Yasmin's waist as she leaned against him. The kitchen filled with steam and the rich aroma of tomatoes and herbs.
"Smells amazing," she murmured, turning to press a kiss to his jaw. "You didn't have to go to all this trouble."
"For you? Anything," he replied, words that once belonged to me.
I watched them for an hour—Liam cooking dish after dish, Yasmin sipping wine and occasionally "helping" by stirring something or handing him a spice. They moved around my kitchen like they owned it, like they belonged there more than I did.
---
"You were cooking for her," I said the next morning, my voice dangerously quiet as I stood in our bedroom doorway. "In our kitchen. Using my grandmother's recipes."
Liam froze, his shirt half-buttoned. "What are you talking about?"
"I saw you, Liam. Last night. Making dinner for Yasmin while I was supposedly away."
His face flushed, then hardened. "You're spying on me now? That's pathetic, Evie."
"Pathetic?" My voice rose slightly. "You used my grandmother's recipes—the ones she taught me before she died—to cook for your mistress!"
"She's not my—" He stopped himself, running a hand through his hair. "Look, you're overreacting. Yasmin's going through a difficult time. She needed someone to talk to."
"And that someone had to be you? In our house? Cooking her dinner?"
"I was helping a colleague," he insisted, his voice taking on that condescending tone I'd grown to hate. "If you weren't so obsessed with your work and your family's... legacy... maybe you'd understand what it means to actually care about someone else's problems."
"Don't you dare," I said, stepping closer. "Don't you dare try to make this about me."
Liam's eyes narrowed. "Just admit it, Evie. You're paranoid. You're seeing things that aren't there because you're threatened by anyone who doesn't fit into your perfect military family narrative."
As he brushed past me toward the bathroom, I caught his arm. "Why our house, Liam? Why my recipes?"
He yanked free, his expression cold. "Because they're good recipes. And because it's still my house too."
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