
Revenge on My Husband's Betrayal
Revenge on My Husband's Betrayal Chapter 1
I was curled up on our living room sofa, scrolling through my phone with one hand while absently stirring my tea with the other. Benson had left for Seattle yesterday morning—another business trip, his third this month. He'd be gone for three days, meeting with potential clients for the new venture he'd been working on.
"Keep track of your cycle, Aura," he'd said just before leaving. "I downloaded that app you like—MoonCycle. It'll help us plan better."
I smiled at the memory. Three years of marriage, and Benson still surprised me with his thoughtfulness. He was always so considerate, remembering the little things that mattered to me.
I opened the app, more out of habit than anything else. The interface was familiar—pink and white, with little icons marking each phase of my cycle. I scrolled through the recent entries, noting the small details we'd logged together.
Then I saw it.
An "intimate moment" record, logged from Seattle. My finger froze on the screen.
"That can't be right," I whispered to myself.
According to the timestamp, Benson and I had supposedly been intimate last night at 9:47 PM. But that was impossible—he'd been in Seattle since Monday morning. I checked the IP address: 47.157.88.12, clearly showing his location in Seattle.
My heart began to pound. The room suddenly felt too warm, too small. I set my tea down with trembling hands.
"There must be an explanation," I said aloud, trying to steady my breathing. "Maybe he logged it wrong. Or maybe..."
But deep down, I knew. The timing didn't match his schedule. He'd told me he had meetings all day yesterday, followed by dinner with clients. There was no way he could have been with me.
I closed my eyes, remembering all the late nights he'd been working recently. The way he'd been so eager to install the app on his phone. How he'd insisted we share all our intimate moments through it.
"Aura, you're being paranoid," I told myself. "Benson loves you. He's the perfect husband."
But the doubt had taken root. I couldn't shake it.
Before I knew what I was doing, I'd opened my laptop and booked a flight to Seattle. The next available one left in two hours. I used our joint credit card, my fingers moving automatically as I entered the details.
"What am I doing?" I asked myself as I clicked confirm. "This is crazy."
But something inside me needed to know. Needed to see for myself.
The flight was a blur of anxiety and rehearsed conversations. I sat in the back row, away from other passengers, staring out the window as the plane climbed into the clouds.
"What if I'm wrong?" I whispered to myself. "What if there's a perfectly reasonable explanation?"
But then I thought about the IP address. The timestamp. The way Benson had been so eager to track our "moments" through the app.
"Stop lying to yourself, Aura," I said firmly. "You know something's not right."
I rehearsed what I would say when I saw him. How I would confront him. Would I be calm? Angry? Understanding?
By the time the plane landed, my resolve had hardened. I took a taxi directly to the hotel Benson had mentioned—the Westin Seattle.
"I'm looking for Benson Spencer," I told the receptionist, trying to keep my voice steady. "He should be registered here."
The young woman typed something into her computer, then shook her head. "I'm sorry, ma'am. We don't have anyone by that name registered."
My stomach dropped. "That's impossible. He's definitely here. Maybe under a different name?"
"I can check again," she offered, but her expression told me she was just humoring me.
I stepped away from the counter, my mind racing. If Benson wasn't registered under his own name, then he was deliberately hiding something.
A young man in hotel uniform passed by, carrying a stack of towels. I caught his arm gently.
"Excuse me," I said, trying to sound confident. "I need some help finding my husband. I think he might be registered under a different name."
The staff member—David Park, according to his nametag—hesitated. "I'm not supposed to give out guest information, ma'am."
I reached into my purse and pulled out two hundred-dollar bills. "Please," I said quietly. "It's an emergency."
His eyes darted around, then back to the money. He took it quickly, slipping it into his pocket.
"What's your husband's name?" he asked, his voice lowered.
"Benson Spencer," I replied. "He's supposed to be in room 723, but apparently that's not his registration."
David glanced at the reception desk, then back at me. "Follow me," he whispered.
He led me to a quiet corner of the lobby, away from the main entrance.
"Your husband is here," he confirmed, his voice barely audible. "But he's not in 723. He's in the Presidential Suite on the fifteenth floor."
My blood ran cold. "Under what name?"
"John Smith," David replied. "And... there's someone with him. A woman."
The confirmation hit me like a physical blow. Benson had been lying to me all along.
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