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When My Husband’s Mistress Slapped Me at Work Novel Cover

When My Husband’s Mistress Slapped Me at Work

After three years of a cold marriage, Seraphina is stunned when her billionaire husband’s mistress publicly assaults her at her workplace. This humiliating confrontation shatters her remaining illusions about their union. Realizing her devotion was met with betrayal, she decides to stop playing the role of the submissive wife. As she initiates a high-stakes divorce, she must reclaim her dignity and navigate a future free from his shadow.
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Chapter 1

The apartment was quiet the way only a New York apartment can be quiet—full of traffic hum, building breath, the dishwasher clicking through its cycle in the kitchen. I was on the couch with my feet tucked under me, a half-cold cup of tea on the side table. Grayson was in his office down the hall. I could hear the low murmur of a call. Something about numbers. Something about margins.

I opened Instagram without thinking. Just thumb, screen, habit.

His profile picture stopped me.

It was new. A black-and-white shot from the chest down—shirtless, abs lit from the side, one hand hooked into the waistband of dark jeans. Moody. Polished. The kind of picture a man takes when he wants a stranger to swipe.

I stared at it a long time.

Then I tapped his page. Scrolled.

A rooftop bar in SoHo. A matte-black watch on his wrist. A weekend in the Hamptons, alone at the edge of a dock. A caption that said only, "Building something bigger." Smile lines. Cuff links. The small, careful performance of a man who wanted to be found.

I kept scrolling.

No me. Not in the last photo. Not in the one before. Not in any of them. I kept going, further back, the little square thumbnails blurring under my thumb. A year. Fourteen months. When I finally landed on a picture of the two of us—my cheek against his shoulder at someone's engagement party—he had archived everything above it. Scrubbed me clean.

I set the phone face down on the table.

My pulse did not spike. My breath did not catch. Something else happened instead. A small, cold sound inside my chest, like a lock turning over. Once. Clean.

I heard his office door open. I heard his bare feet on the hardwood. He came into the living room in sweats and a gray T-shirt, hair damp at the temples, phone already back in his pocket.

"You still up, love?" He bent and kissed the crown of my head. He smelled like his cologne and, faintly, like something else—something sweet and floral I had never bought.

"Just reading," I said.

"Don't stay up too late." He rubbed my shoulder, twice, that distracted little squeeze he'd always used. "Early call in the morning."

"Mm."

He padded toward the bedroom. I watched him go. His shoulders were tan. The back of his neck was freshly shaved. Every detail I had loved for two years was suddenly evidence.

I waited until his breathing thickened.

The clock on the microwave read 1:47 when I slipped out of bed. I pulled jeans on over my sleep shirt, stepped into sneakers in the hallway, and took the spare fob off the hook by the door. I did not take the elevator. I took the service stairs. Seven flights down, the concrete cold through the soles of my shoes.

The parking garage was fluorescent and hollow. A single sedan idled somewhere I couldn't see. His car sat in its usual slot, dark and waxed and indifferent.

I unlocked it. Slid into the driver's seat first. Ran my hand under the seats. Nothing. Glove compartment—insurance, registration, a pack of mints. Center console—loose change, a phone cable, a receipt from a restaurant on the Upper East Side I had never been to.

I folded the receipt into my back pocket.

Then the trunk.

It opened with that soft pneumatic sigh. Spare tire kit. A gym bag. A set of jumper cables coiled neatly. I lifted the gym bag out. Under it, the carpeted floor looked the way every trunk floor looks. Clean. Seamless.

But there was a seam.

I ran my fingernail along the edge, and the carpet lifted on a hinge I hadn't noticed. A shallow compartment, maybe two inches deep, cut into the factory panel. Custom work. Expensive work.

I held the flashlight of my phone over it and went very, very still.

Bottles of body lotion, the kind that came in frosted glass with gold lettering, three of them lined up like a window display. A silk pouch—I didn't have to open it to know what was inside, but I did anyway, and the lace that slid out was black and small and tagged in a size I had never worn. Two more pouches behind it. And behind those, stacked like ammunition, four unopened boxes of condoms. Different brands. As if he had options. As if he had preferences.

My hands stayed steady. That was the part that surprised me later, when I thought back. Not the finding. The steadiness.

I took the photographs one by one. Wide shot first, then close. The brands. The sizes. The tiny boutique sticker on the underside of one of the lotion bottles—a store on Madison with a name in French. I photographed the hinge. The seam. The layout of the items, from every angle, the way a surveyor maps a foundation.

Then I put everything back. Exactly. Bottle angled the way it had been. Pouch tucked where it had been. I lowered the panel. I replaced the gym bag. I closed the trunk with both hands, softly, so the latch would click and not thud.

I took the service stairs back up.

He was still asleep. Mouth slightly open, one arm thrown across my pillow like he missed me. I slid in beside him and lay on my back and looked at the ceiling until the light turned gray.

In the morning he kissed my forehead over coffee.

"You're quiet," he said.

"Tired." I reached for the pot and refilled his cup before he could ask. "Big week at the office."

"Mmm." He caught my wrist as I set the pot down. Squeezed. "You work too hard, love."

"Someone has to," I said, and smiled, and let him kiss me on the mouth.

He tasted like toothpaste and the last word of a sentence I was no longer listening to.

By noon, I had three names on a legal pad and a shortlist of two. I wasn't looking for the fastest investigator. I was looking for the one whose evidence would survive a courtroom. I read the reviews of a man whose office was in Midtown East, above a dry cleaner, and whose testimonials all used the same word in different ways: thorough. I called from a café on 52nd, using a number that didn't belong to me, and we scheduled for the following morning.

He was older than I expected. Gray at the temples. He slid his contract across the table rather than hand it to me, and when I signed it he nodded once, like a man confirming a measurement.

"Two weeks," he said.

"Take what you need," I said. "I want it right."

The preliminary report arrived in thirteen days.

I opened it at the kitchen table, alone, with one lamp on and a glass of Barolo I had poured and not yet touched. The folder was slim. Manila. Unmarked.

It was worse than I had let myself imagine.

Four women. Sustained contact. Separate zip codes, separate social circles, the same boutique gift repeated across them like a signature. A rotation as organized as a construction schedule. Hotel receipts. Time-stamped photographs. A map, literally, of his week.

And then, on the fifth page, a name I knew.

Jasmine Fox.

I read it twice. Then a third time, because my eyes kept skipping over it as if my brain refused to let it register. Jasmine Fox. Forty-second floor. Midtown. The executive whose flagship tower our firm had been courting for months. The client whose quarterly review I was scheduled to attend on Thursday. The woman whose signature approved invoices my team lived on.

According to the PI, she had been with Grayson for almost two years.

Almost exactly as long as Grayson had been with me.

I set the folder down. I picked up the wine. I took one slow sip, and then another, and watched the light from the lamp catch on the surface of the glass.

I did not cry.

I thought instead about load-bearing walls. About the points in a building where stress concentrates. About how, if you understand a structure well enough, you don't have to bring it down all at once. You find the single beam holding the weight. You apply pressure. You wait.

I read every page twice. I closed the folder. I finished the wine.

Then, in the quiet, in my own kitchen, in a marriage that no longer existed except on paper, I began to draw.

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