
Revenge on My Husband for His Affair
Chapter 3
I was reviewing classified documents when Liam walked into my home office without knocking. The smell of his cologne—new, expensive—hit me before he did.
"Evie, we need to talk," he said, leaning against my desk. His tone was casual, as if he were asking me to pick up milk on the way home.
I set down my pen. "I'm working."
"This is important." He glanced at the documents, then back at me. "I need fifty thousand dollars."
The words hung in the air between us. I blinked, certain I'd misheard.
"Fifty thousand," I repeated slowly. "And this is for...?"
"Yasmin's birthday is next month." He shifted, straightening his tie. "I want to get her something special."
Something special. The phrase echoed in my mind as I stared at my husband of seven years.
"Her birthday," I said, my voice eerily calm even to my own ears. "You want me to give you fifty thousand dollars for your colleague's birthday gift."
"It's an investment, actually." Liam's tone took on that condescending edge I'd grown to hate. "Her family has connections in Geneva. The ones hosting that conference I told you about."
I leaned back in my chair, studying him. The man I'd married had been replaced by someone I barely recognized—someone who could ask for our savings with a straight face while dismissing my concerns with a wave of his hand.
"Our savings," I said quietly. "The money we've been putting aside for the house renovation. For our future."
"I'll pay it back," he said, as if it were the most reasonable request in the world. "Six months, tops. Once this business deal goes through."
"Business deal," I repeated, tasting the bitterness of the words.
"Don't be naive, Evie." He sighed, checking his watch. "Not everything is black and white like your military regulations. Sometimes you have to invest in relationships."
Relationships. The word was a knife twist.
---
I waited until Liam left for work the next morning before I began.
My laptop sat open on the kitchen table, a new folder created on my secure drive. I labeled it "Family Documents"—nothing suspicious there—though what I was compiling was anything but family-friendly.
First, screenshots. Yasmin's Instagram posts, carefully arranged by date. The diamond bracelet from Tiffany. The weekend getaway. Each image paired with the corresponding credit card charge.
Then photographs of our statements. I used my phone's camera, making sure the dates and amounts were clear. $287 at Le Bernardin. $350 at the hotel. $1,500 at Tiffany.
I created a timeline, methodical and precise. Just like the briefings I prepared for my superiors.
"March 12: Dinner at Le Bernardin, $287."
"March 19: Hotel in Manhattan, $350."
"April 3: Tiffany & Co., $1,500."
Each entry was a small betrayal, a piece of evidence in the case I was building against my own husband.
I wasn't crying. I was working.
---
The phone rang at 2:17 AM.
Liam stirred beside me but didn't wake. His phone lit up on the nightstand—Yasmin's name flashing on the screen.
I should have let it go to voicemail. I should have pretended to sleep.
Instead, I reached over and answered.
"Hello?" My voice was steady, professional.
Silence, then a soft laugh. "Is Liam there?"
"I'm afraid he's unavailable," I said, sitting up slowly. "Can I take a message?"
"Oh, I don't think so." Her voice was smug, confident. "We were in the middle of something."
"Something important, I imagine."
"Very." The smile in her voice was unmistakable. "But since you're up... tell me, does Liam ever talk about me when you're together?"
I didn't answer.
"I thought not." She laughed again, lower this time. "He says you're boring, you know. All those military stories and your grandfather's war medals. He needs someone who understands him."
The phone felt heavy in my hand.
"He told me about your little obsession with your military family," she continued, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "How you keep that Purple Heart on your desk like it's some kind of shrine. It's sad, really."
I heard rustling in the background, then Liam's voice, groggy but unmistakable.
"Yasmin? What time is it?"
"Late," she replied, not covering the phone. "Your wife answered."
A pause, then Liam again, clearer now. "Evie? Why are you answering my phone?"
"She wanted to know if we were in the middle of something," Yasmin said, laughing. "I told her we were."
More rustling, then what sounded like kissing.
"Tell her about the other night," Yasmin murmured. "Tell her how much better I am."
My hand trembled as I held the phone, listening to my husband and his mistress discuss their intimacy while I sat in our bed, in our home, surrounded by the ghosts of my family's service and sacrifice.
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