
Wife Exposes Husband's Betrayal
Chapter 3
I sat on my kitchen floor, back pressed against the cold cabinets, staring at the empty wine glass in my hand. The house felt too large, too quiet, too full of memories I could no longer trust. My phone buzzed beside me—another message from Cooper claiming he'd be working late. Again.
The doorbell rang, startling me from my trance. For a moment, I feared it might be Veronica, back with more venom and demands. Instead, Sarah's familiar voice called through the door.
"Luna? It's me. Open up."
I hadn't called her. Hadn't called anyone. But Sarah had always possessed an uncanny ability to sense when I needed her most.
When I opened the door, she took one look at my face and stepped inside without a word, grocery bags in both hands. "I brought reinforcements," she announced, pulling out a bottle of expensive red wine and a box of tissues. "You look like you need both."
"I'm fine," I lied, the practiced response slipping out automatically.
Sarah set everything on the counter and turned to face me, arms crossed. "Cut the crap, Luna. I've known you since college. You've been dodging my calls for three days, and your last text message was so perfectly composed it might as well have been written by a robot. What's going on?"
The concern in her eyes broke something inside me. The careful composure I'd maintained since discovering Cooper's betrayal—through confronting Veronica, through sleeping in separate beds, through researching divorce attorneys—suddenly crumbled.
"He's having an affair," I whispered, the words feeling strange on my tongue. Saying it aloud made it real in a way that even the videos hadn't. "With someone named Veronica. She came to our house, Sarah. She stood in my kitchen and told me to step aside."
Sarah's face hardened. Without a word, she uncorked the wine, poured two generous glasses, and guided me to the couch. "Start from the beginning."
So I did. I told her about the AirDrop name change, about Moonlight and Sunshine, about the confrontation at Café Lumière. I told her about the videos I'd found, about moving to the guest room, about Cooper's apparent obliviousness to the fact that I knew everything.
"And the worst part," I said, wiping away tears with the back of my hand, "is that she looks like me. A younger, more polished version, but still... it's like he's trying to replace me with an upgraded model."
Sarah handed me a tissue. "This isn't just an affair, Luna. This is something else entirely."
"What do you mean?"
"Normal mistresses don't show up at the wife's house making demands. They don't create social media accounts to taunt you. They hide. They keep secrets." Sarah leaned forward, her expression grave. "Veronica isn't just sleeping with your husband. She's trying to become you."
A chill ran down my spine as Sarah's words crystallized what I'd sensed but couldn't articulate. "She wants my life."
"Exactly. And that makes her dangerous in ways a typical homewrecker isn't." Sarah refilled our glasses. "This isn't just about sex for her. It's about identity theft—emotional identity theft. She's not just after Cooper; she's after everything you have. Your home, your status, your position as Mrs. Watkins."
I twisted my wedding ring, the familiar nervous habit now feeling like a countdown to its removal. "Cooper's been acting strange lately. Jumpy. Checking his phone constantly."
"Because she's got her hooks in him," Sarah said. "Men like Cooper don't just leave marriages like yours without pressure. She's applying that pressure."
The doorbell rang again, making me jump. Sarah squeezed my hand. "I'll get it."
She returned moments later, her expression a mixture of disgust and vindication, carrying a sleek black box tied with a red ribbon.
"Delivery for Mrs. Watkins," she said, her voice dripping with sarcasm.
I opened the box with trembling fingers. Inside lay expensive red lingerie—La Perla, by the look of it—with a handwritten note: "He prefers me in red. Maybe you should try it before he makes it official. —V"
Sarah took one look at my face and pulled out her phone. "That's it. I'm calling James. He's the best divorce attorney in the city, and you're going to need him."
As she dialed, my phone buzzed with a text from Cooper: "Need to work late again. Don't wait up."
I showed it to Sarah, who rolled her eyes. "Of course he does."
What neither of us knew then was that across town, Cooper was staring in horror at his phone, where Veronica had just sent him a photo of herself standing on the ledge of her apartment balcony, captioned: "If you leave me for her, this is what happens next."
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