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When His Mistress Handed Me a Used Condom Novel Cover

When His Mistress Handed Me a Used Condom

The Hamptons sun felt like a spotlight, and I was center stage whether I wanted to be or not. I stepped out of the town car onto the manicured lawn of the Ashford estate, my Valentino heels sinking slightly into grass so perfect it looked painted. The birthday bash was already in full swing—crystal champagne flutes catching the light, string quartet competing with forced laughter, the usual theater of old money pretending to have fun. Every head turned. Not because I looked stunning—though I did, in a white silk slip dress that cost more than most people's cars—but because they were waiting for the show. Waiting to see if the Grant heiress would finally crack under the weight of her fiancé's very public humiliation. I gave them my mother's smile. The one that revealed nothing. Across the lawn, Cassius Hudson stood with his hand on Bonnie Lopez's lower back, fingers splayed possessively over the cheap fabric of her dress. He didn't even glance my way.
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Chapter 3

The coffee shop Bonnie chose reeked of desperation masquerading as aspiration—one of those Instagram-bait places in SoHo where everything cost twice what it should and tasted half as good. I arrived fifteen minutes late, a calculated discourtesy that would make her feel powerful.

She sat by the window, backlit like she was shooting content. Which, knowing her, she probably was.

"Serena." She didn't stand. A small power play. Amateur hour. "I wasn't sure you'd actually come."

I slid into the chair across from her, set my Birkin on the table between us like a treaty document. "I wanted to apologize."

Her eyes widened. Just slightly, but I caught it—that flash of victory, of vindication. She'd expected tears or threats. An apology was a surrender she could monetize across her social platforms.

"For what, exactly?" She leaned back, arms crossed. Playing coy.

"For making a scene." The words tasted like battery acid, but I kept my expression serene. "You were right. I deserved to know the truth about Cassius. I was just... shocked by the delivery method."

Bonnie's smile spread slowly, like poison in water. "I believe in radical honesty between women."

Radical honesty. From the woman faking a pregnancy with my fiancé's child. The irony would've been funny if it wasn't so pathetic.

I reached into my bag—the real Birkin, not whatever Canal Street knockoff she was carrying—and pulled out the Hermès box. Matte black, tied with their signature orange ribbon. I'd spent forty-three thousand dollars on what was inside. Worth every penny.

"A peace offering," I said, sliding it across the table. "The limited edition Constance bag. Only fifty made worldwide."

Her hands actually trembled as she opened it. The bag was perfect—supple leather in a shade called 'Midnight Confession,' gold hardware that caught the light like a promise. I'd watched her Instagram stories for weeks, knew she'd been lusting after this exact piece, hashtagging #dreamhandbag under photos of bags she'd never afford.

"Serena, I can't—" But her fingers were already stroking the leather, possessive and hungry.

"Please. Consider it a thank you." I let my voice go soft, vulnerable. "You saved me from making a terrible mistake. Marrying someone who doesn't respect me."

She looked up, and I saw the exact moment she bought it. The exact second she decided I was broken, manageable, no longer a threat.

"You're really not going through with the wedding?"

"How could I?" I let my eyes go glassy, like tears were close. "After everything."

Bonnie clutched the bag to her chest. Behind her calculated sympathy, I could practically see her mentally composing the Instagram post. #GirlsSupportGirls #RealFriendship #HermèsGift.

The listening device sewn into the lining was smaller than a button, battery life of six weeks, transmission range of two miles. Victoria had sourced it from a private investigator who owed her favors. Military grade. Undetectable unless you were specifically looking.

And Bonnie Lopez, aspiring influencer, would never think to look.

---

The nights became a ritual. Midnight to four AM, sitting in my bedroom with noise-canceling headphones, listening to Bonnie's life unspool in real-time. Most of it was boring—phone calls with her mother, arguments with her roommate about rent, hours of her filming content and retaking shots until her voice went shrill with frustration.

But on the third night, Cassius came over.

I heard the door open, heard Bonnie's breathy greeting, heard sounds I didn't need to hear. I fast-forwarded through that part, jaw clenched, hands steady on the laptop controls.

Then, in the aftermath, their voices:

"When's the wedding?" Bonnie, petulant.

"Two months. Maybe three if her lawyers keep stalling on the prenup." Cassius sounded tired. Or drunk. Possibly both.

"And then what? She finds out about us and—"

"She already knows about us, baby. The whole city knows." A pause. The clink of glass. "But she'll stay. Her family needs this merger too badly. They're drowning."

"So we just... wait?"

"We wait." His voice went harder. "The second we're married, I'll have access to her trust fund. Twenty-three million liquid, plus the investment portfolio. I'll pull eight million the first month—enough to pay off the loan sharks and keep the creditors quiet."

My hand froze on the laptop touchpad.

"Won't she notice eight million missing?"

Cassius laughed. Actually laughed. "She doesn't even look at her statements. Daddy's princess never had to worry about money. By the time she figures it out, it'll be too late. The prenup makes her liable for Hudson Corporation's existing debts. She'll be legally obligated to keep us afloat."

"God, you're brilliant."

"I'm desperate. There's a difference."

I sat in the dark, listening to them plan my financial execution, and felt something cold and bright crystallize in my chest. Not anger. Anger was hot, reactive, stupid. This was different. This was clarity.

I saved the audio file. Encrypted it. Sent it to Victoria with a single line of text: *Accelerate everything.*

Her response came thirty seconds later: *About damn time.*

---

The auction house was discreet—the kind of place where billionaires liquidated assets without questions or publicity. I stood in the private viewing room, surrounded by pieces I'd collected over years. The Cartier necklace my grandmother left me. The Monet sketch I'd bought at twenty-one with my first trust fund disbursement. The vintage Patek Philippe watch that had been a graduation gift.

Each piece felt like shedding skin.

"The total comes to seven point three million," the appraiser said, his voice carefully neutral. "We can have funds transferred within forty-eight hours."

"Twenty-four," I said. "And I'll take an additional point-two discount."

He blinked. "Miss Grant—"

"Twenty-four hours. Seven million even. Non-negotiable."

He looked at the pieces again—museum quality, some of them. The kind of collection that took decades to build. Then he looked at my face and saw something that made him nod.

"Twenty-four hours."

I walked out of the auction house seven million dollars poorer and infinitely richer in purpose. The money flowed into Phoenix Holdings by midnight. By dawn, Victoria had purchased the first tranche of Hudson Corporation debt—three million in defaulted vendor payments, bought for pennies on the dollar from suppliers who'd given up hope of ever seeing their money.

By the end of the week, Phoenix Holdings owned twelve million in Hudson Corporation obligations.

And the Hudsons had no idea the predator at their door wore Valentino and my face.

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