
Wife Ends 15 - Year Deception
Wife Ends 15 - Year Deception Chapter 1
I spread the credit card statements across the cool marble of our kitchen island, methodically arranging them in chronological order as the morning light streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Manhattan penthouse. This monthly ritual had become second nature over our fifteen years of marriage—a quiet Saturday morning with Earl Grey tea, reviewing our finances while Richard slept in after his 'exhausting week.'
The Platinum American Express was always the one with the most activity. Richard insisted on using it for all his business expenses—for the points, he'd say with that charming smile that had once made my heart flutter. Now I simply nodded and filed it away with the rest of the half-truths I'd accepted over the years.
My finger traced down the column of charges, my photographic memory for numbers immediately flagging irregularities. The Four Seasons in Chicago—$1,200 for a suite upgrade. The Ritz in Boston—$950 for 'in-room dining and entertainment.' The Peninsula in Los Angeles—another suite upgrade and a spa package for two.
I took a slow sip of my tea, the liquid suddenly bitter against my tongue. These weren't standard business accommodations. These were lovers' retreats.
I reached for my phone and pulled up Richard's work calendar—the one his assistant dutifully shared with me 'to keep me in the loop,' though Richard rarely discussed his business trips anymore. My thumb scrolled through the entries, matching dates with the statement charges with clinical precision.
Chicago, February 14-16: 'Midwest Investor Conference.'
Boston, March 3-5: 'East Coast Client Meetings.'
Los Angeles, April 7-9: 'West Coast Strategy Session.'
Each entry lined up perfectly with the extravagant charges. Each weekend away had its corresponding paper trail of luxury and indulgence—not for one, but for two.
I set my teacup down with a soft clink against the saucer. The sound seemed to echo in the vast, empty kitchen that I had designed to be the heart of our family home. A home that had never heard the patter of children's feet—Richard had insisted on getting a vasectomy early in our marriage, claiming he wanted to focus on building our empire first.
Our empire. The thought almost made me laugh. Matthews Enterprises had been built with my family's money, my trust fund, my inheritance. I had willingly stepped back, content to be the supportive wife while Richard took the reins and the credit. I had wanted love more than power, connection more than recognition.
What a fool I'd been.
I gathered the statements and slipped them into my designer handbag. My hands didn't shake. My breathing remained even. The numbness that had been creeping into our marriage for years had finally reached my heart, crystallizing into something harder, colder.
An hour later, I stepped into the gleaming lobby of Matthews Enterprises, the click of my heels against the marble floor echoing in the Saturday morning quiet. The security guard nodded respectfully—one of the few who knew who I truly was.
The elevator ascended to the executive floor, where I knew Richard would be working, as he did most Saturdays. The doors opened to reveal a young woman with sleek dark hair and a dress too tight for office attire, even on a weekend. She looked up from her desk with narrowed eyes.
'Can I help you?' Her tone suggested I was a lost delivery person rather than the woman whose name was on the building.
'I'm here to see Richard,' I said, moving toward his office door.
She stepped in front of me, a saccharine smile spreading across her perfectly made-up face. 'I'm afraid Mr. Matthews is in an important meeting. He doesn't see people without appointments.' Her gaze flicked dismissively over my simple, elegant attire. 'And you are...?'
'His wife.' The words felt strange on my tongue, as if I was claiming a relationship with a stranger.
Something flashed in her eyes—recognition, then contempt, then a smug satisfaction that made my stomach tighten.
'Mrs. Matthews?' She said my name like it was a joke. 'I wasn't aware Richard was... married.' She placed a protective hand on her flat stomach in a gesture so theatrical it would have been comical if it weren't so obviously calculated. 'He never mentioned a wife.'
Before I could respond, the office door opened, and Richard appeared, impeccably dressed in a tailored suit despite the weekend. His expression shifted from confusion to irritation to cold calculation in the space of a heartbeat.
'Victoria,' he said, his voice carrying across the open office space where several employees looked up in surprise. 'What are you doing here?'
I stepped forward, credit card statements in hand, but he moved to block me from entering his office. Instead, he reached into his pocket, pulled out his wallet, and extracted several bills.
'Here,' he said, holding out what looked like ten thousand dollars. 'For housekeeping or whatever it is you need. Now isn't a good time.'
The employees watching didn't bother to hide their curiosity now. One woman's eyes widened in shock.
'Richard,' I said quietly, 'we need to talk about these statements. About these charges.'
He glanced at the papers in my hand, then back at me, his eyes hardening. 'I don't know what you're talking about. And I don't know why my housekeeper thinks she can barge into my office on a Saturday morning.'
The word hung in the air between us: Housekeeper. Not wife. Not partner. Not the woman who had given him everything.
In that moment, fifteen years of marriage evaporated like morning dew under a merciless sun.
Wife Ends 15 - Year Deception of Contents
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