
When His Affair Exposed My Billion-Dollar Secret
Chapter 2
The night air felt cold against my skin as I stepped out of the taxi in front of Ryan's SoHo loft. The building stood dark and quiet, most of its occupants either asleep or out enjoying New York's nightlife. I'd deliberately taken a late flight, timing my arrival for when Ryan would least expect me. The element of surprise was essential to my plan.
I slid my key into the lock of the building's entrance, the familiar motion now feeling foreign. Everything had changed in the span of a single video. The woman who had left this building three days ago no longer existed.
The elevator ride to the fifth floor was silent, giving me time to steel myself for what I might find. My hand instinctively moved to my abdomen, a protective gesture for the life growing inside me—the "complication" Ryan so callously dismissed.
"We deserve better," I whispered to my unborn child, the first time I'd acknowledged my pregnancy aloud to anyone. "And we're going to get it."
I used my key to enter the loft silently, leaving the lights off. Moonlight streamed through the massive windows, illuminating the open space enough for me to see. The scent hit me first—perfume, not mine, hanging heavy in the air alongside the familiar smell of turpentine and oil paints.
I moved through the space like a ghost, my designer heels in my hand to ensure silence. The main living area was empty, but evidence of their affair was everywhere. An empty wine bottle. Two glasses on the coffee table. A woman's silk scarf draped over the back of the couch.
I made my way to Ryan's studio space at the far end of the loft. The door was partially open, a sliver of light escaping. I pushed it open further, careful not to make a sound.
The studio was empty of people, but Isabella's presence was unmistakable. Her black lace lingerie was draped carelessly over Ryan's easel, like a trophy on display. On the walls hung several new sketches—all of Isabella in various poses, some modest, others explicitly intimate. The dates in the corners revealed they'd been created over months, not days or weeks.
I took out my phone and began methodically photographing everything. The lingerie. The sketches with their damning dates. The wine glasses with lipstick stains. The rumpled sheets on the daybed in the corner of the studio.
As I captured the evidence of my husband's betrayal, I felt strangely detached, as if I were gathering evidence for a business case rather than documenting the collapse of my marriage. Perhaps that's what it was—the end of a business arrangement where I had invested everything and received nothing but lies in return.
The sound of a key in the front door broke my concentration. I quickly finished taking photos and positioned myself in the center of the studio, turning on the main light. I wanted him to find me here, surrounded by evidence of his infidelity.
"Vic?" Ryan's voice called out, confusion evident. "What are you—"
He appeared in the doorway, stopping short when he saw me. Isabella wasn't with him, I noted. His hair was disheveled, his shirt wrinkled. He smelled of alcohol and the same perfume that lingered in the air of the loft.
"You're supposed to be in L.A.," he said, his eyes darting around the studio, taking in what I had discovered.
"Clearly," I replied, my voice unnervingly calm even to my own ears.
Ryan's expression shifted rapidly—surprise to guilt to a calculated innocence that might once have fooled me. "This isn't what it looks like," he began, the lie so predictable it was almost laughable.
"Really? Because it looks like you've been sleeping with your model in our home."
"She's just a model, Victoria. It's art. You're overreacting—you always do this when you're stressed with work." He stepped toward me, hands outstretched in a placating gesture. "You know how artists work. There's a connection, yes, but it's creative, not—"
"Not what, Ryan? Not sexual? Not an affair?" I gestured to the lingerie on his easel. "Is this part of your creative process too?"
His face hardened, the facade of innocence dropping away. "You wouldn't understand. You're always at the office, always focused on your precious company. When was the last time you were really present in this marriage?"
I said nothing, simply taking out my phone and pressing record.
"What are you doing?" he demanded.
"Documenting," I replied simply.
His face flushed with anger. "This is ridiculous. I don't have to explain my artistic process to you." He grabbed his keys from where he'd dropped them. "I need some air. When I get back, I expect you to be reasonable about this."
He stormed out, the door slamming behind him. I stopped the recording and checked to make sure it had captured his non-denial, his attempt to shift blame.
As the sound of his footsteps faded down the hallway, I sent the photos and recording to Eleanor with a simple message: "More evidence for our meeting tomorrow."
Then I settled in to wait for dawn, using the time to catalog every item in the loft that I had paid for—which was nearly everything. The vintage leather couch. The state-of-the-art easel. The rare pigments imported from Italy. All of it purchased with my money, to support his supposed talent.
By the time the first light of day crept through the windows, I had a complete inventory and a clearer picture of just how thoroughly I had been deceived. The woman who had flown from L.A. yesterday was angry. The woman who would meet Eleanor at seven a.m. was something far more dangerous—she was strategic.
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