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Wife Ends 20-Year Lie Novel Cover

Wife Ends 20-Year Lie

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed midnight as I rubbed my tired eyes, the blue light of my computer screen casting shadows across my home office. Twenty years of marriage, and here I was, still working late while Richard slept soundly upstairs. I reached for my coffee, now cold, and took a sip anyway. Just one more quarterly report to review before bed. I scrolled through the shareholder distribution document, my eyes scanning the familiar percentages. Richard and I each held 45% of Hayes Construction, with the remaining 10% distributed among our board members. The company was our baby—the one we'd created when we couldn't have children of our own. At least, that's what I'd been told. That's what I'd believed. My finger froze mid-scroll.
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Chapter 3

Three days after hiring Julian Croft, my phone rang at precisely 7:30 AM. I'd been awake for hours, reviewing company documents at my kitchen table while pretending everything was normal whenever Richard appeared. I excused myself to my home office before answering.

"Mrs. Hayes," Julian's gravelly voice came through the line. "I have what you requested."

My heart pounded against my ribs. "How soon can you show me?"

"I can be at your office downtown in an hour."

"Make it the coffee shop across the street. I don't want anyone from the company seeing us together."

I arrived early, choosing a corner table with my back to the wall. Julian was punctual—a thin man with watchful eyes who carried a nondescript briefcase. He ordered nothing, sliding into the seat across from me.

"Before I show you these," he said quietly, "I want to prepare you. What I documented... it's exactly what you suspected."

I straightened the sugar packets in their container, aligning them perfectly. "Show me."

He opened his briefcase and handed me a manila envelope. Inside were dozens of high-resolution photographs, each one a fresh wound. Richard, *my* Richard, arriving at a sprawling suburban home carrying two small backpacks with cartoon characters on them. Richard presenting gift bags with designer logos to a woman whose face I recognized immediately—Sarah Parker, my college roommate. The woman who'd held my hand through failed pregnancy tests. The woman who'd sent me flowers after my sterilization.

"He stayed until dawn," Julian explained as I stared at a photo of Richard kissing Sarah on the porch. "Left at 5:30 AM to catch his flight back to Denver."

Another photo showed Richard with his arm around a boy who looked about fourteen—his spitting image, down to the dimple in his left cheek. Beside them stood a girl of the same age, laughing up at him adoringly.

"Connor and Chloe," I whispered, the names bitter on my tongue.

"According to neighbors, he visits monthly. Always brings gifts. They call him 'Dad.' The neighbors think he works overseas and comes home when he can."

I closed the envelope, my hands surprisingly steady. "Thank you, Mr. Croft. Your invoice?"

"Already emailed. There's more I can do if you need—"

"I'll be in touch." I stood, tucking the envelope into my bag. "This is just the beginning."

Back at my office, I locked the door and pulled the blinds. The photos were damning, but I needed more. I needed to understand the full scope of Richard's betrayal.

I opened my laptop and navigated to our company's secure server. As co-CEO, I had access to everything, though I'd always respected Richard's domain. That courtesy ended today.

I bypassed the standard financial reports and dug into the raw data, searching for patterns, for anomalies. It didn't take long to find them—a $50,000 monthly disbursement labeled simply "Childcare & Estates."

Fifty thousand dollars. Every month. For years.

I traced the payments back to their source. Richard had created a shell company within our corporate structure, siphoning funds that should have gone toward business development. Money that I had helped earn, diverted to support his secret family.

The betrayal was so complete, so methodical, that it left me breathless. While I'd been working sixteen-hour days to grow our company, while I'd been enduring painful and pointless fertility treatments, Richard had been building a parallel life with my former friend.

I downloaded everything, saving multiple copies to secure locations. Then I sent a single text to Evelyn Reed, the divorce attorney whose card I'd kept all these years: *I need to see you. Tomorrow.*

As I gathered my things to leave, my phone lit up with a text from Richard: *Having dinner with potential investors. Don't wait up.*

I checked the company Amex portal. There it was—a ticket to Phoenix, departing in two hours.

"Enjoy your family dinner," I whispered, a cold smile forming on my lips. "It will be one of your last."

I looked down at my wedding ring, the diamond catching the light. Twenty years of marriage built on a foundation of lies. But the architect of this betrayal had made one critical mistake.

He'd underestimated me.

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