
Two Mistresses, One Husband
Chapter 1
The Riesling felt cool against my lips as I lifted the crystal glass, savoring this rare moment of solitude in our Manhattan penthouse. Daniel would be home soon from his board meeting, and I wanted everything perfect—the soft amber glow of the floor lamps, the gentle hum of jazz from the sound system, the way the city lights painted our living room in shades of gold and shadow.
I'd spent the afternoon arranging white orchids in the Baccarat vase, their pristine petals a stark contrast to the dark mahogany of our dining table. Tonight felt special somehow, charged with possibility. Maybe it was the way Daniel had kissed my forehead this morning before leaving, or how he'd promised we'd finally take that trip to Tuscany we'd been planning for months.
The smart hub's gentle chime made me glance toward the entertainment center. The massive television screen flickered to life, its sleek black surface suddenly blazing with color and movement. I frowned, reaching for the remote. Daniel must have accidentally triggered something from his phone again—he was always struggling with the synchronized devices.
But as the image sharpened, my blood turned to ice.
A woman's face filled the seventy-five-inch screen, her blonde hair tumbled across bare shoulders, her lips parted in breathless gasps. The surround sound amplified every whisper, every moan, every ragged breath as she arched her back against silk sheets I didn't recognize.
"Daniel," she breathed, her voice husky with desire. "God, Daniel, yes..."
The wine glass slipped from my nerveless fingers.
Crystal exploded against marble, the sharp crack echoing through the apartment like a gunshot. Riesling spread in a golden pool at my feet, seeping between the veins of the white stone. I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't tear my eyes away from the screen where this stranger—this beautiful, young stranger—called my husband's name like a prayer.
The front door's electronic lock beeped, its familiar sound now sinister. Daniel's footsteps echoed in the foyer, his keys jingling as he set them on the console table.
"Elena? I'm home," his voice carried from the entryway, warm and casual, as if the world hadn't just imploded.
He appeared in the living room doorway, loosening his silk tie, his dark hair slightly mussed from the October wind. The smile on his lips died the moment he saw the screen. His face went ashen, his briefcase hitting the floor with a dull thud.
"Shit. Elena, I—" He lunged for the entertainment center, fingers fumbling with buttons and switches. "It's not—this isn't—"
The woman's moans continued, obscene and intimate, filling our home with her pleasure. Daniel's panic was almost comical as he jabbed at the remote, cursing under his breath. Finally, mercifully, the screen went black.
Silence stretched between us like a chasm.
I stood among the broken glass and spilled wine, my cream silk blouse spotted with alcohol, my bare feet dangerously close to the sharp fragments. The metallic taste of shock coated my tongue. Somewhere in the distance, a siren wailed through the Manhattan streets, but it sounded muffled, unreal.
"When she was screaming your name," I said, my voice unnaturally calm, "was I just mishearing her?"
Daniel's face crumpled. "Elena, please. Let me explain—"
"Explain?" The word came out as a laugh, high and brittle. "Explain what, exactly? How your phone accidentally video-called your whore while she was in bed? How the smart home system just happened to broadcast it on our television?"
"She means nothing!" He stepped toward me, his hand outstretched. "Elena, you have to believe me. You're my wife. You're everything to me."
I stared at that hand—the same hand that had slipped a three-carat diamond on my finger five years ago, the same hand that had traced my spine just this morning as I dressed for work. Now it seemed foreign, contaminated.
"Don't." I stepped back, glass crunching under my heel. "Don't you dare touch me."
"This is exactly why I—" Daniel's jaw clenched, his remorse already morphing into something uglier. "You're so cold, Elena. So goddamn distant. When was the last time you looked at me the way she—"
"The way she what?" My voice rose, months of suppressed frustration finally erupting. "The way she spreads her legs for a married man? The way she whispers sweet nothings to someone else's husband?"
"At least she makes me feel alive!" The words exploded from him, raw and vicious. "At least she doesn't treat me like some trophy to display at charity galas. At least she wants me!"
The accusation hit like a physical blow. "I gave up everything for you. My career, my friends, my—"
"No one asked you to sacrifice anything!" Daniel's face was flushed now, his careful composure completely shattered. "You chose to be some perfect society wife. You chose to put on that mask every day, to smile and nod and never tell me what you're actually thinking."
I grabbed our wedding photograph from the mantle—the silver-framed image of our perfect day at the Plaza, my white dress spread like angel wings across the marble steps. For five years, it had sat in this exact spot, a shrine to our supposed happiness.
"This mask?" I raised the frame high above my head. "This perfect marriage?"
The glass shattered beautifully against the marble floor, our smiling faces disappearing under a web of cracks. Daniel flinched as if I'd struck him.
"You'll never understand what I need!" he roared, his voice breaking. "You'll never be enough!"
The front door slammed so hard the windows rattled. His footsteps pounded down the hallway, growing fainter until the elevator dinged and carried him away.
I sank to my knees among the wreckage—broken glass, spilled wine, the fragments of our wedding day scattered like confetti. My sobs came in violent waves, each one tearing through my chest like broken ribs. The city lights blurred through my tears, transforming the view into an impressionist painting of gold and sorrow.
The smart hub chimed again, and for one horrible moment, I thought the screen might flicker back to life. But it remained dark, reflecting only my own fractured image—a woman I no longer recognized, kneeling in the ruins of everything she'd believed to be true.
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