
The Rich Wife Who Had to Survive on Black Friday Discounts
Chapter 2
That night, I sat at the marble kitchen island that had never felt like mine, surrounded by the kind of silence that only money could buy. The townhouse was tomb-quiet, each room a testament to wealth that felt more like a prison than a privilege.
I'd dismissed the housekeeper hours ago, claiming I wanted to cook—a lie that would have been laughable if anyone had been around to hear it. The truth was, I needed to think, and I couldn't do that with someone else bustling around, maintaining the illusion that this was a home rather than a mausoleum.
My laptop sat open before me, its screen casting a blue glow across the pristine countertops. For the first time in three years of marriage, I wasn't calculating grocery budgets or hunting for discount codes. Instead, I was researching something far more valuable: New York's equitable distribution laws.
The words swam before my eyes as I read about marital assets, separate property, and the factors courts considered when dividing wealth. Rupert's family money was largely untouchable—old trusts and inheritances that predated our marriage. But his business interests, the properties acquired during our union, the investments made with marital funds... those were a different story entirely.
A bitter smile tugged at my lips as I scrolled through a legal blog about high-net-worth divorces. All those years I'd spent trying to be the perfect wife, believing that love could be earned through sacrifice and patience. What a fool I'd been. The battle was never for Rupert's heart—it was for my freedom, and the financial security to make that freedom meaningful.
I pulled up another tab, typing in the name of Manhattan's most ruthless divorce attorney. Evelyn Reed's website was sleek, professional, and filled with testimonials from women who'd walked away from marriages with eight-figure settlements. Women who'd stopped playing by their husbands' rules and started writing their own.
The kitchen clock chimed midnight, its sound echoing through the empty house. Rupert wouldn't be home tonight—he rarely was anymore. But for the first time, his absence felt like a gift rather than a rejection. It gave me space to plan, to strategize, to transform from victim to victor.
I closed the laptop with a soft click, my mind already racing ahead to Monday morning and my new position at Vance Enterprises. Eleanor thought she was punishing me, forcing me into proximity with my husband's indifference. Instead, she'd handed me the perfect vantage point to gather intelligence, to understand the full scope of what I was entitled to claim.
The transformation had begun.
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Vance Enterprises occupied three floors of a gleaming midtown tower, its glass walls reflecting the ambitions of everyone who worked within them. I'd been here before, of course—company parties, charity galas, the occasional awkward lunch where Rupert would parade me around like a well-dressed accessory. But walking through those doors as an employee felt different. Dangerous. Empowering.
My office was small but strategically located—close enough to the executive wing to observe, far enough to avoid suspicion. Eleanor had arranged for me to work in "strategic partnerships," a deliberately vague title that basically meant I could move freely through the building without anyone questioning my presence.
By my third day, I'd already mapped out the important rhythms of the place. Rupert's schedule, his preferred conference rooms, the times he took his coffee breaks. But more importantly, I'd identified her patterns too.
Ilaria Rossi. Even her name sounded like silk and secrets.
She worked in marketing, though her actual responsibilities seemed secondary to her primary role as Rupert's personal distraction. She was beautiful in that effortless way that made other women simultaneously envious and insecure—long dark hair that caught the light, olive skin that never seemed to need makeup, and a laugh that carried just far enough to remind everyone of her presence.
I watched her from my office doorway as she glided through the halls, noting how conversations paused when she passed, how men's eyes followed her movement with undisguised hunger. She wore her sexuality like armor, wielding it with the precision of someone who'd learned early that beauty was currency.
But it was the moment I caught them together that crystallized everything.
I'd been heading to the copy room when I heard voices from Rupert's office—his door slightly ajar, probably an oversight on their part. Through the gap, I could see them standing close, too close for anything professional. Ilaria's hand rested on his arm, her fingers tracing small circles against the expensive fabric of his suit.
"You worry too much," she was saying, her voice pitched low and intimate. "She doesn't suspect anything."
Rupert's hand covered hers, his thumb stroking across her knuckles with a tenderness I'd never seen him show me. "My mother's been asking questions. About why we don't have children yet."
"Maybe it's time she knew the truth," Ilaria murmured, stepping closer until their bodies were almost touching. "That you're not really married to her. Not in any way that matters."
The kiss that followed was soft, familiar, the kind shared by lovers who'd been together far longer than the three years of my marriage. When they broke apart, Rupert's forehead rested against hers, his eyes closed as if he were memorizing the moment.
"Soon," he whispered. "I promise. Soon we won't have to hide anymore."
I stepped back from the doorway, my heart rate steady despite what I'd just witnessed. Strange—I'd expected to feel something. Anger, betrayal, the sharp sting of confirmation. Instead, there was only a cold, calculating satisfaction. This wasn't heartbreak; it was intelligence gathering.
Over the next week, I studied Ilaria with the focus of a scientist examining a particularly interesting specimen. Her Instagram revealed expensive tastes and carefully curated luxury—designer handbags, five-star restaurants, weekend trips to the Hamptons. But underneath the glamour, I detected something else: ambition wrapped in insecurity, hunger disguised as confidence.
She wanted more than just Rupert's attention. She wanted his name, his status, the unassailable position of being Mrs. Rupert Vance. The same position I was planning to vacate.
Which gave me an idea that was either brilliant or completely insane.
Probably both.
Friday afternoon, I waited in the executive washroom until I heard the click of familiar heels on marble. Ilaria entered alone, checking her reflection in the mirror with the practiced efficiency of someone who'd made a career of looking perfect.
Our eyes met in the glass, and her expression immediately shifted from casual indifference to sharp wariness.
"Mrs. Vance." Her voice was carefully neutral, but I caught the slight tightening around her eyes.
"Ilaria." I turned to face her directly, noting how she instinctively straightened, preparing for battle. "We need to talk."
"I don't think we have anything to discuss." She moved toward the door, but I stepped sideways, not blocking her path but making it clear I wasn't finished.
"Actually, we do." I kept my voice conversational, almost friendly. "Because we both want the same thing."
She paused, her hand on the door handle. "And what's that?"
"For me to stop being Rupert's wife."
The words hung in the air between us like a challenge. Ilaria turned slowly, her dark eyes searching my face for some sign of deception or trap.
"I'm not your rival for his heart," I continued, my tone as calm as if I were discussing the weather. "I'm your partner in a business transaction. You want his name, I want his money. We can help each other."
Her laugh was sharp, disbelieving. "You're seriously suggesting we work together?"
"I'm suggesting we stop wasting time on a game where we're both losing." I stepped closer, close enough to see the calculation flickering behind her beautiful facade. "You've been his mistress for years, Ilaria. Hidden away, given gifts but never legitimacy. How much longer are you willing to wait for him to choose you?"
Something shifted in her expression—a crack in the perfect armor she wore.
"And you?" she asked quietly. "What makes you think I'd trust the woman who's had everything I want?"
"Because," I said, meeting her gaze with steady certainty, "I'm the only person in this building who can give it to you."
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