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The Rich Wife Who Had to Survive on Black Friday Discounts Novel Cover

The Rich Wife Who Had to Survive on Black Friday Discounts

My mother-in-law’s pale blue eyes fixed on the shopping bags in my hands. "Chiara." Her voice could have etched crystal. "I see you've been... economizing." The way she said the word made it sound like a terminal diagnosis. "Hello, Eleanor." I shifted the bags, suddenly hyperaware of every discount store logo. "I wasn't expecting you." "Clearly." She stepped aside to let me pass, her gaze cataloging every bag like a customs inspector. "We need to talk." I set my bags on the antique console table, acutely aware of how the cheerful sale tags clashed with the museum-quality surroundings. "Bergdorf's basement level?" Eleanor's tone suggested I'd been caught rummaging through garbage bins. "Really, Chiara. What would people think?" What would people think? I wanted to laugh. What would they think if they knew I'd been slowly selling my jewelry to cover household expenses Rupert deemed "unnecessary" and refused to pay?
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Chapter 3

The silence stretched between us like a taut wire, ready to snap. Ilaria's perfectly manicured fingers drummed against the marble countertop, her dark eyes studying me with the intensity of a predator sizing up potential prey.

"You're insane," she said finally, her voice low but sharp enough to cut glass. "This is some kind of trap, isn't it? You're trying to get me to confess so you can run crying to Eleanor with evidence of the affair."

I almost laughed at the irony. If only she knew how little Eleanor's opinion mattered to me now, how irrelevant her approval had become once I'd seen the truth of my situation.

"Think about it logically," I said, keeping my voice steady and reasonable. "What would I gain from exposing you? A public humiliation that would make me look like the pathetic wife who couldn't keep her husband interested? A scandal that would drag the Vance name through the tabloids?"

Her drumming fingers stilled. I could practically see the gears turning behind those calculating eyes.

"You're comfortable being his secret," I continued, pressing my advantage. "But secrets don't get you wedding rings. They don't get you joint bank accounts or inheritance rights. They don't get you the one thing you actually want—legitimacy."

Something flickered across her face—a flash of vulnerability quickly masked by defiance. "You don't know what I want."

"Don't I?" I stepped closer, close enough to smell her expensive perfume, to see the slight tremor in her hands that betrayed her composure. "You want to be Mrs. Rupert Vance. You want the townhouse, the country club memberships, the social standing that comes with the name. You want to stop sneaking around like some dirty little secret."

Her jaw tightened. "Stay away from me," she hissed, pushing past me toward the door. "And stay away from Rupert. Whatever game you're playing, I won't be part of it."

The door slammed behind her with enough force to rattle the mirror, leaving me alone with the echo of her heels disappearing down the corridor. But I wasn't discouraged. In fact, her reaction told me everything I needed to know. She was interested—terrified, suspicious, but interested. The seed was planted.

Now I just had to wait for it to grow.

That evening, I sat in my empty kitchen again, the silence no longer oppressive but pregnant with possibility. I pulled out my phone and crafted a single text message, each word chosen with surgical precision:

*He's comfortable with the status quo. He will never leave a Vance wife for a mistress unless she gives him no other choice. You need me to be that wife.*

I stared at the message for a full minute before hitting send, watching the blue bubble appear on my screen like a tiny declaration of war. Then I set the phone aside and poured myself a glass of wine—the good stuff, from Rupert's private collection. If I was going to burn my life down, I might as well enjoy the fire.

The response came faster than I'd expected. Three dots appeared and disappeared several times, as if she were writing and deleting multiple responses. Finally, a single word appeared:

*When?*

I smiled, feeling something cold and sharp unfurl in my chest. Victory, perhaps. Or maybe just the sweet anticipation of it.

Two days later, I found myself in a small café in Brooklyn, so far from my usual haunts that I might as well have been in another country. The place was deliberately unremarkable—cracked vinyl booths, fluorescent lighting that made everyone look slightly ill, and coffee that probably came from a can. Perfect for a conversation that needed to stay invisible.

Ilaria arrived ten minutes late, her designer coat looking as out of place as a diamond in a junkyard. She slid into the booth across from me, her movements sharp with nervous energy.

"This is insane," she said without preamble. "I can't believe I'm even here."

"But you are here," I pointed out, signaling the waitress for two coffees. "Which means you've been thinking about what I said."

She didn't deny it. Instead, she leaned back against the cracked vinyl, studying me with undisguised curiosity. "What makes you think I'd trust you? You could be recording this conversation right now."

I pulled out my phone and placed it on the table between us, screen up. "Feel free to check. No recording apps, no hidden wires. Just two women having a business discussion."

"Business." She laughed, but there was no humor in it. "Is that what we're calling it?"

"What else would you call it?" I kept my voice level, professional. "You provide services—specifically, you give Rupert a reason to end our marriage. I provide compensation for those services. It's a transaction."

The waitress appeared with two steaming mugs of coffee that looked strong enough to strip paint. Ilaria waited until she was gone before speaking again.

"What kind of compensation are we talking about?"

I'd been preparing for this question since the moment I'd sent that text. "Three payments. Fifty thousand to start—consider it a signing bonus. Another hundred when your relationship becomes public knowledge. And five hundred thousand when the divorce is finalized."

Her eyes widened slightly. "Six hundred and fifty thousand dollars."

"For services rendered," I confirmed. "Plus whatever settlement Rupert gives you afterward, which I imagine will be substantial once he's free to marry you."

She was quiet for a long moment, staring into her coffee as if it held the answers to all of life's questions. When she looked up, her expression was unreadable.

"How do I know you won't change your mind? Decide you want to fight for him after all?"

The question was so absurd I almost laughed. Fight for Rupert? Fight for a man who'd spent three years treating me like an inconvenient obligation? Fight for someone who'd rather spend his evenings with his mistress than his wife?

"Because," I said simply, "I don't love him anymore. I'm not sure I ever did—not the real him, anyway. I loved the idea of him, the fantasy of what our marriage could be. But fantasies don't pay the bills or respect your dignity."

Something shifted in her expression—surprise, maybe, or recognition. "You really mean it. You actually want out."

"More than you want in," I assured her. "The question is: are you brave enough to take what you want, or are you going to spend the rest of your life waiting for him to choose you?"

She reached into her purse and pulled out her phone, fingers flying over the screen. "What's your account information?"

I slid a piece of paper across the table—routing numbers I'd memorized, account details for the private account I'd opened three days ago. She entered the information with the efficiency of someone who'd made plenty of electronic transfers before.

"Fifty thousand," she said, hitting send. "Consider it an investment in both our futures."

My phone buzzed almost immediately. I glanced at the screen, and there it was—a deposit notification that felt like the first breath of air after drowning. Fifty thousand dollars. More money than I'd had access to in three years of marriage, transferred with the casual ease of someone buying coffee.

"Partners?" Ilaria extended her hand across the table.

I shook it, her grip firm and surprisingly warm. "Partners."

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