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When My Husband's Mistress Became My Maid Novel Cover

When My Husband's Mistress Became My Maid

One lipstick exposed the lie I'd been living for ten years. I found it on his pillow—Rouge Noir, a shade I'd never wear. "Thessaly?" my husband called, his voice uncertain as I took a photo of the evidence. At dinner, his phone buzzed. The smile that crossed his face told me everything. That night, I called the private investigator. Then my family attorney. Finally, I reclaimed the name I'd abandoned: Whitmore. The woman who discovered her husband's affair was a perfect, invisible wife. The woman who would destroy him? A billionaire heiress they never saw coming.
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Chapter 1

The kitchen timer chimed softly as I pulled the roast from the oven, its golden-brown surface glistening under the warm light. Ten years of marriage had taught me exactly how Gideon liked his dinner—medium-rare beef, roasted vegetables arranged just so, and a glass of his favorite Cabernet waiting at his place setting. I smoothed my apron and glanced at the clock. Six-thirty. He'd be home any minute.

I moved through our dining room with practiced efficiency, adjusting the placement of the silverware, ensuring the candles were lit just right. Everything had to be perfect. It always was.

"Honey, I'm home!" Gideon's voice echoed from the foyer, followed by the familiar thud of his briefcase hitting the marble floor.

"Welcome home," I called back, forcing warmth into my voice. "Dinner's almost ready. How was your day?"

His footsteps approached the kitchen, and I turned to greet him with the same smile I'd worn for a decade. Gideon looked tired, his usually pristine suit wrinkled, his dark hair slightly disheveled. There was something different about him lately—a distraction that seemed to pull his attention away even when he was standing right in front of me.

"Long day," he said, loosening his tie. "I forgot some files upstairs. Mind if I grab them real quick before we eat?"

"Of course." I watched him disappear up the staircase, his steps heavy with exhaustion—or perhaps something else entirely.

I finished plating our meal, arranging everything with the same meticulous care I'd always taken. The dining room looked perfect, like something from a magazine spread. But as I stood there, surrounded by the fruits of my domestic devotion, an uncomfortable feeling settled in my chest. Something felt off, though I couldn't quite place what.

Fifteen minutes passed. Then twenty.

"Gideon?" I called up the stairs. "Dinner's getting cold."

"Just a minute!" came his muffled reply.

I frowned. How long could it take to grab a few files? The uncomfortable feeling grew stronger, morphing into something that made my stomach clench. Without really thinking about it, I found myself climbing the stairs, my heels clicking softly against the hardwood.

Our bedroom door was ajar, and I could see Gideon rummaging through his dresser drawers, his movements hurried and almost frantic. "Did you find what you were looking for?" I asked from the doorway.

He startled, spinning around with wide eyes. "Yeah, just... just looking for that contract from the Henderson deal. Thought I might have left it up here."

But his hands were empty, and the dresser he'd been searching through contained only clothes. I stepped into the room, my gaze sweeping across our perfectly made bed, the pristine nightstands, the—

There. On the white comforter, near Gideon's pillow, lay a small silver tube that definitely didn't belong to me.

My breath caught in my throat. I moved closer, my heart beginning to pound as I recognized the shape, the size. A lipstick. Not just any lipstick—an expensive brand I'd never owned, in a shade of deep red that would look terrible with my complexion.

My fingers trembled as I reached for it, the cool metal foreign against my skin. The label read 'Rouge Noir'—a color I'd never seen in any of my makeup drawers. The tube was warm, recently used, with the faintest trace of the crimson shade visible at the tip.

Behind me, Gideon had gone completely silent.

I turned the lipstick over in my palm, my mind racing. In the space of those few seconds, a thousand tiny details came flooding back with crystal clarity. The way Gideon had been coming home later and later, claiming overtime at the office. How he'd changed his phone password last month, saying something about 'security protocols.' The unfamiliar perfume I'd caught lingering on his shirts—sweet and floral, nothing like the subtle vanilla scent I'd worn for years.

The business trips that seemed to multiply recently. The way he'd started taking calls in the garage, speaking in hushed tones. How he'd stopped looking at me during dinner, his eyes always somewhere else, his mind clearly occupied with thoughts that didn't include me.

"Thessaly?" Gideon's voice sounded strained, uncertain. "What are you doing?"

I didn't answer immediately. Instead, I pulled out my phone with steady hands and took a photo of the lipstick, the white bedding providing a stark contrast that made the evidence impossible to ignore. The camera clicked softly, capturing proof of what I'd suspected but hadn't wanted to believe.

Carefully, I placed the lipstick back exactly where I'd found it, my movements deliberate and controlled. When I turned to face my husband, I found him watching me with an expression I couldn't quite read—guilt mixed with something that might have been relief.

"I was just checking if you needed help finding those files," I said, my voice remarkably steady. "Shall we go have dinner?"

Gideon blinked, clearly caught off guard by my calm response. "I... yes. Dinner sounds good."

We walked downstairs together in silence, the weight of unspoken knowledge hanging between us like a heavy curtain. I reheated the roast while Gideon washed his hands, both of us moving through the familiar routine as if nothing had changed.

But everything had changed.

As we sat across from each other at our elegantly set table, I watched my husband of ten years cut into his perfectly prepared meal. "How was work today?" I asked, taking a sip of wine that tasted like ash in my mouth.

"Oh, you know," he said, not meeting my eyes. "Same old stuff. Meetings, paperwork, the usual."

His phone buzzed against the table. Gideon glanced at the screen, and for just a moment, his entire expression transformed. A smile tugged at the corners of his mouth—genuine, warm, alive in a way I hadn't seen directed at me in months.

He picked up the phone, his fingers moving quickly across the screen as he typed a response. That smile never left his face.

I sat there, fork halfway to my mouth, watching the man I'd loved for over a decade light up for someone who wasn't me. The roast turned to cardboard in my mouth, but I kept chewing, kept smiling, kept playing the role of the perfect wife.

"Everything alright?" I asked sweetly.

"Just work stuff," he said, still staring at his phone. "Nothing important."

But his thumb was already moving again, typing another message, that secret smile growing wider.

I took another sip of wine and began to plan.

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