
Wife Exposes Husband's Cheating Livestream
Chapter 3
The pounding rattled the heavy brass hinges of the hotel suite door. I threw off the crisp white duvet, my bare feet hitting the hardwood floor.
"Open up!" Sloane Beckett shouted from the hallway.
I undid the deadbolt. My agent stormed past me, ignoring my unbrushed hair and silk sleepwear. She dropped her silver laptop onto the glass dining table with a loud smack.
"Seventeen," Sloane announced. She tapped the screen with a scarlet fingernail. "Look at the inbox."
I tied the belt of my robe. "Good morning to you, too, Sloane."
"Forget morning. Look at the names."
I leaned over the glowing screen. Prada. Cartier. La Mer. The three luxury holdouts who had ignored my introductory emails for two years.
"They want you," Sloane said, pulling out a chair and sitting down. "All of them. Exclusive contracts. Seven-figure advances."
"Yesterday, Cartier told us I was too 'suburban wife' for their new campaign."
"Yesterday, you were a suburban wife. Today, you are the Ice Queen of Manhattan." Sloane spun the laptop toward me. A video looped on an endless feed. It was my face from last night. The exact fraction of a second before I spoke the words.
"They are calling it the Calloway Pause," Sloane explained, her voice vibrating with aggressive excitement. "The internet is dissecting that micro-expression. You didn't break. You didn't scream. You smiled. They don't want the victim, Wren. They want the woman who watched her husband burn his life down and just wished the world a Happy New Year."
"I wasn't trying to make a statement," I said, walking toward the window. The morning sun glared off the neighboring skyscrapers. "I just wanted the camera off."
"It doesn't matter what you wanted," Sloane argued, following me. "It matters what they saw. Prada wants you to front their new line. Cartier is offering a bespoke diamond collection named after you. They see power, Wren. We need to strike while the iron is blindingly hot."
I turned away from the window and walked into the bathroom. I braced my hands on the cold marble sink.
The mirror reflected a stranger. My eyes were bloodshot. The skin around them was puffy and bruised with exhaustion. But my cheeks were completely dry. Not a single tear track broke the surface of my skin.
Sloane leaned against the bathroom doorframe, crossing her arms. "Damon called me."
I turned the brass faucet. Cold water rushed over the porcelain. "Did he?"
"Three times since sunrise. He wants your room number. He says he needs to explain."
I splashed the freezing water onto my face, the shock waking my nerves. I reached for a thick white towel. "I'll do the meetings. I'll sign the contracts. But I have one condition."
"Name it."
"No one asks about my husband," I said, patting my skin dry. "No interviewers. No brand reps. The topic of Damon Vance is dead."
Sloane nodded, already typing frantically on her phone. "Done. What about Damon?"
"Tell him to save his breath," I replied, tossing the damp towel onto the counter. "From today on, he talks to my lawyer."
***
Thirty minutes later, the espresso machine hissed in the corner of the lobby cafe. The scent of roasted beans filled the air.
Adrian Hale sat in a secluded booth, a leather briefcase resting beside his polished oxfords. I slid into the green velvet seat opposite him.
"Adrian."
"Wren." He pulled a manila folder from his bag and slid it across the polished wood table. "I drafted the preliminary asset division. Considering the highly public nature of his infidelity, we have immense leverage. I listed everything."
I opened the folder. Three pages of dense spreadsheets stared back at me.
"The Tribeca penthouse," Adrian pointed to the top line. "The Hamptons estate. Fifty percent of his talent agency equity. The joint investment accounts. And the jewelry."
I pulled a black fountain pen from my purse.
"He will fight the agency equity," Adrian warned, watching my hand carefully. "But we can force a settlement if we threaten a prolonged discovery phase. We can subpoena his communications with Cressida Lin."
I pressed the pen tip to the paper.
I drew a thick, aggressive line through 'Tribeca Penthouse'.
Adrian frowned, sitting up straighter. "Wren?"
I moved down the page. A sharp slash through 'Hamptons Estate'. Another heavy stroke through 'Agency Equity'. I didn't stop until I crossed out the jewelry collection and the offshore investment accounts.
"What are you doing?" Adrian asked. His professional calm cracked, replaced by genuine alarm.
I flipped to the second page and crossed out two more commercial properties.
"I don't want his money," I said, my voice entirely flat. "I don't want the houses."
"You are entitled to half of the marital estate. He humiliated you."
"He humiliated himself." I found the bottom of the third page. One single line item remained untouched. I circled it twice, pressing hard enough to indent the paper.
I closed the folder and pushed it back across the table.
Adrian opened it. His eyes scanned the ruined spreadsheets, tracking the black lines until they hit the bottom of the final page. He stared at the circled text. His jaw tightened, then unclenched.
"Are you serious?" he asked, looking up at me in disbelief. "You're walking away from at least forty million dollars for... this?"
"I am entirely serious."
"Wren, this is highly unusual. A judge might even question it. People don't trade generational wealth for this kind of asset. You built that empire with him. You deserve the capital."
"Capital can be rebuilt," I countered, leaning forward. "If I take his money, the narrative becomes about a scorned wife getting a massive payout. I become a cliche. I lose the leverage Sloane is currently using to secure my new contracts."
"So you want to bankrupt him in a different way," Adrian observed, a hint of respect entering his tone.
"Make it happen, Adrian."
"He won't give this up easily," Adrian cautioned, tapping the circled word with his index finger. "He values this more than the real estate. It's his pride. It's the cornerstone of his entire public identity."
"I know what he values." I picked up my ceramic mug and took a sip of black coffee. "That's exactly why I want it."
A sharp crash shattered the quiet hum of the cafe.
A busboy had dropped a tray of water glasses near the entrance, but my attention snapped past the mess.
Beyond the glass double doors of the hotel lobby, a crowd of paparazzi pressed against the velvet barricades. Flashbulbs strobed like a violent lightning storm, illuminating the dim morning light.
Standing in the center of the chaos, shoving a photographer's heavy camera lens out of his face, was Damon.
His designer suit was severely wrinkled. His dark hair stood up at odd angles. He looked frantic, his chest heaving as his eyes scanned the expansive lobby.
Then, he turned his head toward the cafe.
His gaze locked onto mine through the thick glass.
Damon froze. The desperate anger in his expression morphed into something brittle and dangerous. His eyes dropped to the table, landing squarely on Adrian Hale.
Adrian followed my line of sight and shifted in his velvet seat. "Is that him?"
Damon planted his hand flat against the glass door, his knuckles turning stark white as he shoved it open.
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