
Wife Exposes Husband's Fraud
Chapter 2
The door felt heavy under my fingertips. My heart hammered so loudly I was certain everyone in the hallway could hear it. I pushed gently, the door swinging open with a soft click that seemed to echo in my ears.
Time stopped.
Nathaniel had Morgan pressed against his desk, her legs wrapped around his waist. His shirt was unbuttoned, her blouse pushed up. They were kissing—passionately, desperately—like they were alone in the world.
"God, you're incredible," Nathaniel murmured against her neck, his hands tangled in her hair.
I must have made a sound because they suddenly froze, turning toward the door in unison. Nathaniel's face drained of color.
"Alexandra—" he started, but I couldn't bear to hear whatever lie would follow.
I backed away, my hand covering my mouth to stifle the sob threatening to escape. But then Morgan spoke, her voice smug and entitled.
"Don't worry, we'll be done soon. Nathaniel was just helping me prepare for the presentation."
"Presentation?" I echoed, confusion momentarily replacing my pain.
Nathaniel stepped away from Morgan, hastily buttoning his shirt. "Alexandra, this isn't—"
"'Love Falls into Eternal Night,'" Morgan interrupted, reaching for a folder on the desk. My folder. My screenplay. "Nathaniel thinks it's perfect for my debut. The investors are going to love it."
The room tilted beneath my feet. Not just my husband—my work. Six years of my life, my passion project, the screenplay I'd poured every ounce of myself into.
"That's my screenplay," I whispered.
Morgan laughed, the sound like glass breaking. "Was your screenplay. Nathaniel transferred the rights to me last week. Didn't he tell you?"
I looked at Nathaniel, searching for any sign of remorse or shame. There was none—only irritation at being caught.
"You can't—" I began, but the words died in my throat.
"Alexandra," Nathaniel said, his tone condescending, "it's just business. Morgan has the connections to make this work. Your name wasn't opening the right doors."
I backed away, unable to process the double betrayal. My marriage and my career—both stolen from me in a single moment.
"Don't forget the presentation is Friday," Morgan called after me as I fled. "You should come! Watch me take your little story and make it something special."
I ran. Through the office, past the receptionist who pretended not to notice my tears, into the elevator and out into the street. The bright afternoon sunlight felt wrong against my skin, too cheerful for the darkness spreading inside me.
My hands shook as I pulled out my phone. I needed Brooklyn.
"Alex?" she answered on the first ring. "What's wrong?"
"He's cheating," I managed, my voice breaking. "And they took my screenplay."
"What? Who? Nathaniel?"
"Yes. With some intern. And they're passing off 'Love Falls' as her work."
There was a brief silence before Brooklyn's voice came through, fierce and protective. "Where are you? I'm coming to get you."
Twenty minutes later, we sat in a quiet corner of the coffee shop three blocks from Nathaniel's office. My hands still trembled as I pushed the lingerie package across the table.
"This was delivered today," I explained, showing her the note. "'Little Cupcake.' That's what he calls her."
Brooklyn's eyes narrowed as she examined the package. "That bastard."
"And then I went to his office and..." I couldn't finish the sentence.
"You don't have to explain," Brooklyn said, reaching across the table to squeeze my hand. "I know what you saw."
"The screenplay," I whispered. "They're presenting it Friday. As hers."
Brooklyn's expression hardened with determination. "We're going to destroy them, Alex. Both of them."
She pulled out her phone, dialing quickly. "David? It's Brooklyn. I need you to investigate someone... No, make that two people."
I watched as my best friend transformed into a force of nature, making call after call. Private investigator David Chen would gather evidence of the affair and any financial irregularities. Entertainment lawyer Sarah Kim would prepare for both divorce proceedings and copyright infringement claims.
"He's been embezzling company funds to buy her gifts," Brooklyn explained, hanging up from yet another call. "David found hotel receipts, jewelry purchases—all paid through company accounts."
I nodded numbly, trying to process everything.
"Sarah will meet us tomorrow," Brooklyn continued. "She's the best in the business. By the time we're done, they won't just lose their jobs—they'll wish they never heard your name."
I stared out the window at the people passing by, going about their normal lives while mine collapsed around me.
"What do I do now?" I asked.
Brooklyn's hand covered mine again, warm and steady. "Now you go home and act normal. Let them think they've gotten away with it. While you're playing the oblivious wife, we'll be gathering everything we need to bury them."
As I walked home later, I felt something shift inside me. The pain was still there, raw and bleeding, but underneath it grew something new—something hard and cold and determined.
Friday couldn't come soon enough.
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