
The Lie Behind My Happy Marriage
A suggestive iMessage on the family iPad was the first crack in my perfect life.
I thought my teenage son was in trouble, but anonymous Reddit users pointed out the chilling truth. The message wasn't for him. It was for my husband of twenty years, Anthony.
The betrayal became a conspiracy when I overheard them talking. They were laughing about his affair with my son's "cool" school counselor.
"She's just so... boring, Dad," my son said. "Why don't you just leave Mom and be with her?"
My son didn't just know; he was rooting for my replacement. My perfect family was a lie, and I was the punchline.
Then, a message from a lawyer on Reddit lit a fire in the wreckage of my heart. "Gather proof. Then burn his entire world to the ground."
My fingers were steady as I typed back.
"Tell me how."
Chapters
Share
Chapter 4
Alexandra Wright POV:
For the next week, I played the part of the devoted, slightly fragile wife. I allowed Anthony to fuss over me, bringing me tea, rubbing my shoulders, whispering sweet reassurances. Each touch was a lie, each word a performance. And with every lie he told, the ice around my heart grew thicker, my resolve harder.
While he was busy being the perfect husband, I was busy being the perfect strategist. My days were a blur of clandestine activity, my graphic design studio transformed into a war room.
My laptop was my weapon.
Zara, my assistant, had delivered. She' d sent me a password-protected file that was a masterclass in digital excavation. Katia Shepherd' s entire life was laid bare. Public records, social media accounts, and, most damningly, a link to a private TikTok account she shared with a small circle of 'friends.'
The username was KatiaTheConqueror.
My hands trembled as I clicked the link. The page was a monument to her narcissism and moral bankruptcy. Video after video of her preening in expensive hotel rooms, flaunting designer bags I recognized as gifts Anthony had claimed to be buying for his mother, sipping champagne in bubble baths.
The Atherton, Room 207, was a recurring set.
In one video, she was wrapped in one of the hotel' s plush white robes, holding up a familiar-looking Cartier watch. "When your married man knows your worth," she' d captioned it, with a winking emoji. It was the same watch Anthony had given me for our nineteenth anniversary. He must have bought two.
In another, she filmed him while he was sleeping, his face turned away from the camera. "My silver fox," the text on the screen read. "He thinks he' s in charge, but we know who really runs the show." The comments from her friends were fawning and encouraging. "Get that bag, girl!" "You' re living the dream!"
My dream. My life. She was cosplaying my life and bragging about it to her vapid audience.
The worst video, the one that made me want to smash my laptop, was a 'story time' clip. She sat in front of the camera, a smug look on her face.
"So, my man' s son is, like, totally obsessed with me," she said, flipping her hair. "He' s a sweet kid, but a little clueless. He thinks I' m the coolest thing since sliced bread." She rolled her eyes. "He keeps telling his dad he should leave the 'old ball and chain' for me."
She laughed, a high, tinkling sound that grated on my nerves. "Like, hello? Who do you think put that idea in his head? The best part is, the wifey has no idea. She' s probably at home, organizing his sock drawer or something. Poor, boring thing."
A cold, clean rage washed over me. I wasn' t hurt anymore. I was surgically precise. I downloaded every video, every photo, every incriminating comment. I saved them all to a secure, encrypted drive.
I watched a video of Anthony and Katia laughing together at a Blackhawks game, a game he told me he attended with a client. I saw them celebrating his preliminary award nomination at a Michelin-star restaurant he' d claimed was "too stuffy" for a date night with me. The lies were a vast, intricate web, and I was now the spider at its center.
I took a deep breath, my mind clear and sharp. The videos were the centerpiece of my plan, but I needed more. I needed to control the entire narrative.
That evening, as Anthony was looking over the guest list for the awards gala, I approached him, draping myself over the back of his chair.
"Honey," I said, my voice soft and casual. "I was thinking about the party. We should really invite Jacob' s school counselor, Ms. Shepherd. She' s been such a positive influence on him. It would be a nice gesture."
He froze for a fraction of a second, his back going rigid. It was almost imperceptible, but I saw it.
"Ms. Shepherd?" he repeated, his voice carefully neutral. "I don' t know, Alex. It' s mostly a professional event."
"Oh, don' t be silly," I chirped, running my hand over his shoulder. "It' s a celebration of you, and you' re such a family man. It reflects well on us. Plus," I added, delivering the masterstroke, "we should invite her parents, too. And maybe Principal Thompson? Show the school how much we appreciate them. It' s good for our community standing."
I could see the panic behind his eyes. He was trapped. To refuse would be to arouse suspicion. He was the great Anthony Ortiz, the community-minded family man. How could he possibly object to honoring the educators who were shaping his son' s future?
He swallowed hard. "That' s… a very thoughtful idea, Alex." His smile was strained, a tight, painful grimace. "Of course. I' ll have my assistant add them to the list."
He thought I was being a thoughtful, clueless wife. He had no idea he was helping me load the gun he would soon be staring down the barrel of.
He turned back to his list, but I could see the tension in his shoulders. He was cornered. And he didn't even know the shape of the cage that was closing in around him.
I walked away, a faint, cold smile on my lips. The guest list was set. The evidence was compiled. The stage was waiting. All I had to do was wait for the curtain to rise.
You may also like

8.3
I was the long-lost Donovan heiress, finally brought home after a childhood in foster care. My parents adored me, my husband cherished me, and the woman who tried to ruin my life, Kiera Reese, was locked away in a mental facility. I was safe. I was loved.
On my birthday, I decided to surprise my husband, Ivan, at his office. But he wasn't there.
I found him at a private art gallery across town. He was with Kiera.
She wasn't in a facility. She was radiant, laughing as she stood beside my husband and their five-year-old son. I watched through the glass as Ivan kissed her, a familiar, loving gesture he’d used with me just that morning.
I crept closer and overheard them. My birthday wish to go to the amusement park had been denied because he’d already promised the entire park to their son—whose birthday was the same day as mine.
"She’s so grateful to have a family, she’d believe anything we tell her," Ivan said, his voice laced with a cruelty that stole my breath. "It's almost sad."
My entire reality—my loving parents who funded this secret life, my devoted husband—was a five-year lie. I was just the fool they kept on stage.
My phone buzzed. It was a text from Ivan, sent while he stood with his real family.
"Just got out of the meeting. So exhausting. I miss you."
The casual lie was the final blow. They thought I was a pathetic, grateful orphan they could control.
They were about to find out just how wrong they were.

8.8
I discovered I was pregnant with twins from my marriage to Ell Steele, the ruthless CEO of the Steele Group. But he saw me as a gold-digging nobody, unworthy of his heir.
He stormed into our penthouse with his lawyer, slamming down abortion consent forms and a divorce NDA, offering five million to terminate and vanish. "You're not fit to carry my child," he spat, gripping my jaw.
I refused the abortion, signed the zero-payout divorce to keep my company insurance for my dying mom's ICU bills, but stayed on as an admin assistant. Brittany, his mistress, spilled coffee on my reports, got me demoted to the dusty sub-basement sorting old files.
She framed me for attacking her, security dragged me out, slamming me into doorframes that cramped my belly. Trapped in a sabotaged freight elevator, I nearly miscarried in the dark, gasping for air while Ell rescued me—only to find my prenatal pills and rage.
At the gala, I warned Brittany the Angel's Tears necklace—Georgina's flawed design—was cracking. She accused me of theft; Ell ordered me stripped and searched publicly. It snapped anyway, shattering the diamond, but he blamed me, firing and blacklisting me on the spot.
Beaten down, humiliated, body aching from their cruelty—how could my husband, who I once loved, destroy me without a shred of doubt? What made him so blind to my pain?
Dragged from our home in the rain, a black Rolls-Royce Phantom pulled up. The butler bowed: "Madame Aura, your suite awaits." As Ell watched from his Maybach, I initiated the hostile takeover—time to bankrupt them all.

9.4
Aria Mcgee was the unwanted second daughter of a decaying Long Island family.
To save their bankrupt corporation, her father and older sister drugged her. They shoved her into a town car and delivered her to a ruthless Wall Street billionaire's bed like a piece of meat.
They expected her to be the perfect sacrifice. The original Aria had no access to her own trust fund and was forced to live in a windowless broom closet. Even worse, a cold, synthetic System voice echoed in her skull, demanding she play the tragic, helpless female lead. It ordered her to endure her family's abuse and suffer the billionaire's humiliation to force a pathetic romance plotline.
"Host must follow the tragic trajectory and achieve the ultimate painful romance."
But the soul that woke up in that bed wasn't a weak, frightened girl. She was a dead Hollywood Oscar-winning actress. Why would a top-tier professional ever agree to play the weeping victim in such a garbage, B-list script?
Instead of trembling in fear as the System commanded, Aria looked at the billionaire and smiled. Using her flawless acting skills, she shattered his ego, extracted a hundred thousand dollars, and walked right out the door. Now, she was heading back to the Mcgee estate, ready to rip her money from her father's greedy hands and burn her sister's life to the ground.

8.0
Eloise Ferguson was the legitimate daughter of a powerful Senator, yet she was treated like a hysterical burden by her own family.
In her past life, her parents forced her to marry a sadistic billionaire for political funding.
When she resisted, they locked her in a psychiatric facility, drugged her, and left her to die in restraints while her "fragile" cousin Jaylene stole her life.
She never understood why her mother hated her so fiercely.
Why did her mother treat her brother Cortez and her cousin Jaylene like absolute royalty, while throwing her own flesh and blood to the wolves?
Opening her eyes again, Eloise found herself back at age twenty-two, trapped in a restroom at a charity gala.
Escaping her abuser, she used her awakened mystic abilities to look at her family's life forces.
What she saw made her blood run cold.
Thick, red biological cords connected her mother directly to both Cortez and Jaylene, intertwining in a perfect symbiotic bond.
They weren't cousins. They were illegitimate twins born from her mother's secret affair.
Eloise was the only true outsider in her own home.
The realization hit her like a physical blow. Her entire life of abuse was just a cover-up for a nest of parasites stealing her father's name and her inheritance.
But this time, she refused to be their victim.
Armed with an unchallengeable executive order she blackmailed out of the United States President, Eloise crushed the hidden microphone in her bedroom.
"Game on, Mother."

7.1
To save my family from ruin, I remarried my billionaire ex-husband, Jaxon Lowe. He held my late mother' s locket hostage, forcing me back into a gilded cage where I endured his cold contempt and his very public affair. I played the part of the silent, obedient wife he demanded, building a wall of ice around my heart just to survive.
But my obedience didn't protect me. He abandoned me in a torrential downpour to rescue his mistress, Ivory.
Then, he broke his one promise. He let Ivory have my mother's locket pulled from auction, the very reason for my sacrifice, simply because she found it "unlucky."
That final betrayal led me straight into the hands of his business rival, where I was tortured and left for dead.
But I survived.
Four months later, Jaxon found me. He stood before me, tears streaming down his face, holding the now-repaired locket and begging for forgiveness.
I took back what was mine.
"I want a divorce," I said, my voice calm and final. "And I never want to see you again."

8.5
"Do you enjoy this? Ignoring me like I don't exist? Do you have any idea how humiliating this feels, waiting for you like some fool?"
After three years of a cold, loveless marriage, Selene Henderson finally gathers the courage to walk away from her distant billionaire husband, Sebastian Kingsley.
She's ready to file for divorce... until a tragic accident changes everything.
When Sebastian wakes up with no memory of the woman he once pushed away, Selene finds herself trapped in a marriage she was desperate to escape, this time with a man who suddenly looks at her like she's his whole world.
But can love born from broken memories survive the truth of their painful past?
Or will the secrets she's been hiding destroy them all over again?