
The Invisible Wife
Chapter 2
The next morning, I woke at 5:47 AM—three minutes before my alarm. Daniel's side of the bed was cold, the sheets barely disturbed. He'd left early for a breakfast meeting, leaving only a note on the nightstand: "Client presentation at 8. Don't wait up tonight."
I showered, dressed in black leggings and an oversized sweater, and descended to the kitchen. The house felt cavernous in the early light. I made coffee I barely tasted and opened my laptop at the breakfast bar, pulling up the financial software Daniel thought I used only for household budgets.
The joint account stared back at me—$847,000 in readily available funds.
I transferred $3,000 to the account I'd opened yesterday under my maiden name, Elena Martinez. Small enough to avoid triggering alerts. I'd do it again tomorrow. And the day after. Slowly draining what was rightfully mine anyway—I'd been the one managing our investments for a decade.
My phone buzzed. Sophie's Instagram story: a photo of takeout coffee cups, two hands almost touching across a café table. Daniel's watch was visible in the frame, the Patek Philippe I'd given him for our fifth anniversary.
"Early strategy session," the caption read, with a winking emoji.
I screenshotted it. Added it to the folder labeled "Evidence—Personal."
Then I went to work.
***
For two weeks, I became a ghost in my own life. I haunted our house at night, my movements precise and deliberate. While Daniel slept—or pretended to—I photographed documents in his study. Tax returns showing unreported income. Emails discussing insider trading disguised as "market research." Text chains between him and Sophie that grew increasingly explicit.
I backed everything up to three separate encrypted drives.
During the day, I played my role flawlessly. I answered Daniel's texts within minutes. I had his suits dry-cleaned, his favorite meals prepared. When he asked me to review a contract, I annotated every clause, catching the liability issues his own lawyers had missed.
"You're amazing," he said absently, not looking up from his phone.
"I know," I replied.
He didn't hear me.
Sophie's presence in our home grew bolder. She stopped by on Tuesday evening, ostensibly to discuss "the Q4 marketing strategy." I opened the door to find her holding a bottle of wine, her dress cut low enough to be deliberate.
"Elena! I hope you don't mind me crashing your dinner."
Mind. The word was a formality, not a question.
"Of course not," I said, stepping aside. "Daniel's in the study. I'll set another place."
I made pasta carbonara, the dish Daniel always requested for important clients. Sophie praised every bite while her foot traced patterns along Daniel's calf under the table. I watched it happen through my peripheral vision, my expression serene.
"Your wife is such a good cook," Sophie said, her voice dripping with false admiration. "It must be nice to have someone who stays home."
I refilled her wine glass, the Cabernet splashing against crystal. "It gives me time to focus on what's truly important."
Sophie's smile faltered, uncertain whether she'd been insulted.
Daniel, oblivious, launched into a story about landing a major investor. Sophie laughed too loudly at his jokes, touched his arm too often. He preened under her attention like a peacock.
After dinner, they retired to his study for "just an hour or two of work." I cleared the table, loaded the dishwasher, and wiped down counters that were already clean. Through the closed door, I heard Sophie's laughter, musical and calculated.
I returned to my office and opened my laptop. A new email from Daniel's CFO discussed accelerating the IPO timeline to capitalize on "current market enthusiasm." Between the lines, I read the truth: they were rushing before anyone discovered the accounting irregularities I'd already documented.
I forwarded the email to Marcus Rodriguez with a single line: "They're moving faster than expected. Are you ready?"
His response came within minutes: "Say the word."
Not yet, I typed back. Timing is everything.
Footsteps on the stairs. Sophie's heels clicking against hardwood, Daniel's deeper tread behind her. I minimized the window and pulled up a recipe site.
"Elena?" Daniel appeared in my doorway, his shirt partially untucked. "We're finished. I'm walking Sophie out."
"Drive safely," I called after them, my voice pleasant.
Through my office window, I watched them stand too close beside Sophie's car, watched his hand linger on her waist, watched her kiss his cheek in a way that promised more.
When Daniel returned, I was in bed, eyes closed, breathing steady.
He slid under the covers, smelling of Sophie's perfume, and fell asleep within minutes.
I lay awake until 3 AM, then rose and transferred another $3,000 to my separate account.
The folder on my desktop had grown to 847 files.
I was almost ready.
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