
Stolen Wife's Revenge
Chapter 2
The divorce papers lay spread across my hotel room bed, a roadmap of betrayal. Three years. He had divorced me three years ago without my knowledge or consent. The forgery of my signature was just another brushstroke in Marcus's masterpiece of deception.
I needed more evidence. Concrete, irrefutable proof that would make even Eleanor Finch, the skeptical attorney I'd consulted yesterday, believe me.
"Mrs. Sterling, these are serious allegations," she had said, her eyes scanning my trembling hands rather than meeting my gaze. "Mr. Sterling is a powerful man with connections throughout the judicial system. Without solid evidence, your claims will be buried before they see the light of day."
I opened my laptop and accessed Marcus's assistant's email. I'd known Diane's password for years—she'd shared it during a company trip when she needed me to send a document while she was in meetings. Marcus never suspected his wheelchair-bound wife would have any reason to spy on him.
My fingers flew across the keyboard, downloading his calendar for the past six months. There it was—a pattern so obvious it made me sick. Every evening from 6:30 to 8:30 PM, Monday through Thursday: "Sterling Family Dinner" at an address in Greenwich, Connecticut.
Family dinner. The words burned like acid.
Two days later, I was in Connecticut, my heart pounding as I watched the sprawling estate from the back of a rideshare. The Tudor-style mansion was everything Marcus had once promised we would build together—after I recovered.
"You're with the catering service?" the driver asked, glancing at my outfit.
"Yes," I lied, adjusting the borrowed uniform. "They're hosting a dinner party."
The lie had worked on the security guard too, who barely glanced at the fake ID I'd created. My wheelchair had been left behind—I could walk short distances with my cane now, though it exhausted me. Tonight, that weakness was my disguise. No one would connect the limping server with Isabella Sterling.
I slipped through the kitchen entrance, nodding to the actual catering staff who were too busy to question my presence. Positioning myself near the dining room, I activated the recording app on my phone and slid it partially into my pocket.
"Daddy!" A child's voice, bright and clear, echoed from the dining room. "Look what I made!"
"That's wonderful, buddy." Marcus's voice—the same voice that had whispered "I love you" to me just last week—now colored with genuine warmth I rarely heard. "You're getting so good at drawing."
"He gets his artistic talent from me," came a woman's voice—Vanessa. The woman who had stolen my husband, my name, my life.
"Of course he does," Marcus laughed. "Just like he gets his stubborn streak from me."
Their casual intimacy felt like knives sliding between my ribs. I pressed my back against the wall, breathing through the pain as I recorded their dinner conversation—proof of the family that existed in parallel to my sham marriage.
Three nights later, I waited until 3 AM before entering our Manhattan penthouse with the key I still possessed. Marcus was in Connecticut—Thursday night was always "family night" according to his calendar.
The security room was tucked behind his office, a space I'd never had reason to enter before. The door opened with Marcus's birthday—the code hadn't changed in years. Inside, monitors displayed feeds from every room in the apartment.
I found the digital archive easily enough, scrolling back through months of footage. And there it was—Marcus entering our home on a Sunday morning, cradling a sleeping toddler while speaking quietly on his phone: "Yes, I'll bring him back before she notices he's gone. Isabella's physical therapy runs until four."
He had brought his son—our replacement—into our home while I was gone.
I copied the footage onto a flash drive, my hands shaking with fury and something else—a cold, calculating resolve I'd never felt before.
A noise from the hallway froze me in place. Footsteps approached—Jenkins, our butler, making his nightly rounds. I switched off the monitor and slid beneath the desk, hardly daring to breathe as the door creaked open.
The beam of a flashlight swept the room, pausing briefly where I hid. One discovery, and Marcus would know I was investigating him. Everything would be erased, just like my marriage had been.
The light moved on. The door closed. I waited ten more minutes before crawling out, my legs screaming in protest.
As I slipped out of the penthouse, the flash drive burning a hole in my pocket, I realized that gathering evidence wasn't enough. I needed to understand the full extent of what Marcus and Vanessa had done to me.
And when I did, they would pay for every lie, every moment of my stolen life.
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