Follow
Chapters
Share
Wife Exposes Husband's Fraud Novel Cover

Wife Exposes Husband's Fraud

I was organizing Ethan's desk when I found them—small blue pills hidden in a velvet pouch at the back of his bottom drawer. My fingers trembled as I held them up to the light, reading the label: "Enhancement Formula." The contradiction hit me like a physical blow. For three years, Ethan had been attending "spiritual retreats" every few weeks, claiming they required celibacy. Three years of him avoiding intimacy with me, telling me his spiritual journey was important to our marriage's health. "I'll be more present when I return," he'd promised each time he left. "This is for us, Melissa." Us. The word echoed hollowly in my mind as I stared at the pills. I heard his key in the front door and quickly slid the drawer closed, my heart racing. I moved to the living room, the pills burning a hole in my pocket. "Ethan," I said, trying to keep my voice steady as he entered.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I was organizing Ethan's desk when I found them—small blue pills hidden in a velvet pouch at the back of his bottom drawer. My fingers trembled as I held them up to the light, reading the label: "Enhancement Formula." The contradiction hit me like a physical blow.

For three years, Ethan had been attending "spiritual retreats" every few weeks, claiming they required celibacy. Three years of him avoiding intimacy with me, telling me his spiritual journey was important to our marriage's health.

"I'll be more present when I return," he'd promised each time he left. "This is for us, Melissa."

Us. The word echoed hollowly in my mind as I stared at the pills.

I heard his key in the front door and quickly slid the drawer closed, my heart racing. I moved to the living room, the pills burning a hole in my pocket.

"Ethan," I said, trying to keep my voice steady as he entered. "We need to talk."

He glanced at me distractedly, loosening his tie. "Can it wait? I've had a long day."

"No," I said, firmer than I intended. "It can't."

I pulled out the pills and placed them on the coffee table between us. His eyes flickered to them, then back to me, his expression carefully neutral.

"What are these?" I asked.

"They're not mine," he said immediately.

"They were in your desk."

"I'm holding them for a friend." He picked them up casually, returning them to the pouch. "He's having some... health issues. You know how sensitive these things can be."

Something in his dismissive tone made my stomach clench—not just the familiar pain from my ulcer, but something deeper. A warning.

"Ethan," I said carefully, "if you're having problems, we could—"

"I don't have problems," he snapped, then softened his tone. "This isn't about us, Melissa. Let's not make it that way."

* * *

Our wedding anniversary dawned bright and clear. I woke early, my stomach fluttering with anticipation despite Ethan's recent distance. Maybe today would be different.

"I have a surprise for you," I told him over breakfast, which he barely touched before checking his phone.

"That sounds nice," he murmured, not looking up. "I might be late tonight. Meeting with investors."

"Tonight?" I couldn't hide my disappointment. "But it's our anniversary."

He finally looked at me, something like irritation flashing in his eyes. "I'll make it up to you tomorrow."

He left without another word, and I spent the day preparing for an evening alone at Bella Notte, our favorite restaurant. I'd reserved a table weeks ago.

At seven, my phone chimed with a text.

"Sorry, stuck in traffic. Running late."

At eight: "Meeting running over. Don't wait up."

At nine, when I was still sitting alone at our reserved table, the waiter's pitying looks burning into my back: "Found this little something for you. Blessed by monks in Tibet. Thought of you immediately."

Attached was a photo of a small wooden trinket—cheap, mass-produced, the kind sold at tourist traps.

I drove home in a daze, the restaurant's untouched champagne still bubbling in my memory. Our bedroom was empty when I arrived.

Later that night, unable to sleep, I scrolled through social media. A post from a luxury boutique caught my eye: "Celebrating special occasions with our favorite customers! #blessed #luxuryliving"

In the background of the photo was Ethan, smiling broadly as he held up a diamond necklace. Next to him stood a woman with sleek dark hair, her hand possessively on his arm.

I zoomed in on the date stamp: today.

* * *

Two days later, curiosity—or perhaps desperation—drove me to follow Ethan's car. He'd mentioned a business meeting at the lakefront property Gray Enterprises was developing.

The lakeside estate was secluded, surrounded by dense trees. I parked down the road and approached on foot, keeping to the shadows of the pines.

Voices drifted from the private dock—intimate, playful. I moved closer, my heart pounding.

"You're sure she doesn't suspect anything?" A woman's voice, cultured and confident.

"Melissa?" Ethan laughed, the sound slicing through me. "She's too busy running my company to notice anything else."

I peered around a tree trunk and froze. Ethan had his arms wrapped around a stunning woman with dark hair—the same one from the social media photo. Scarlett Cole. His college sweetheart.

"When are you going to tell her?" Scarlett asked, leaning into him.

"Soon," Ethan said, kissing her neck. "Once we've milked her for everything she's worth."

Scarlett laughed—a sound like breaking glass. "That pathetic little wife of yours. Still thinking you're off praying while you're with me."

They embraced tighter, and I pressed my hand against my mouth to stifle any sound.

"The prenup was genius," Scarlett murmured against his lips. "She'll walk away with almost nothing."

"And we'll have everything," Ethan replied.

I backed away slowly, my world crumbling with each step. The enhancement pills. The spiritual retreats. The blessed trinket.

All lies.

And I had been the fool who believed them.

You may also like

Aching Hearts: Caught Between Two Loves Novel Cover
7.9
Love was never supposed to hurt this much. Lia thought life would be simple-finish school, protect the people she loves, and keep her heart safe. But everything changes when two very different boys step into her world. Jaden is steady, patient, and quietly devoted. The one who understands her silences and stands by her even when she pushes him away. Adrian is intense, unpredictable, and impossible to ignore. The one who sees the parts of Lia she tries so hard to hide. Caught between comfort and chaos, loyalty and desire, Lia finds herself trapped in a love triangle she never meant to create. Every moment with them pulls her heart in two different directions. But love isn't the only thing at stake. As emotions grow stronger, jealousy rises, and secrets begin to surface, the fragile bond between the three of them starts to crack. One wrong choice could shatter friendships, destroy trust, and leave hearts broken beyond repair. Because sometimes, loving two people doesn't just hurt. It changes everything.
After His Affair, I Faked My Wedding Day Death Novel Cover
9.2
I stared at my laptop screen, unable to process what I was seeing. My fingers hovered over the trackpad, trembling slightly as I refreshed Cameron's profile again. The relationship status remained stubbornly, devastatingly changed: "Single." Two weeks before our wedding. Nine years together, and he had changed his status to "single" without even telling me. "This has to be a mistake," I whispered to the empty penthouse, my voice echoing off the pristine white walls that suddenly felt cold and foreign. The Los Angeles skyline glittered beyond our floor-to-ceiling windows, oblivious to my world collapsing. I reached for my phone to call Cameron, but it buzzed in my hand before I could dial. An email notification. From Vanessa Clarke—Cameron's assistant. My stomach twisted as I opened it.
After My Surgeon Husband Chose His Mistress Over Me Novel Cover
9.6
The maître d' approached with that look—pity barely masked by professional courtesy. "Another glass of champagne, Mrs. Montgomery?" I shook my head, forcing a smile that felt like cracked porcelain. "No, thank you. I'm sure my husband will be here any minute." We both knew it was a lie. The anniversary dinner reservation had been for 7:30 PM. The delicate watch on my wrist—a wedding gift from Chris—now read 9:17. Around me, Boston's elite dined in intimate pairs, their laughter and conversation forming a backdrop that only amplified my solitude. The candle between the two place settings had burned down significantly, wax pooling on the pristine tablecloth. The small gift box wrapped in silver paper sat untouched beside my plate, corners perfectly aligned the way Chris preferred things. Beside it lay the cream-colored envelope containing my handwritten letter—words I'd rewritten a dozen times, trying to breathe life back into our marriage. I reached for my phone, tucked discreetly in my clutch beneath the table. No missed calls. No apologetic texts. Just silence—the kind I'd grown accustomed to over three years of marriage. My finger hovered over Chris's name, but pride kept me from calling. Again. Instead, I opened Instagram, a habit born of masochism more than hope. The first post stopped my breath.
Betrayal and Sweet Revenge Novel Cover
9.6
The key turned silently in the lock, just as I'd planned. Three days early from the Singapore conference—I'd wanted to surprise Matthew with his favorite takeout from that little Italian place on Fifth Street. The house felt different the moment I stepped inside, charged with an energy that made my skin prickle. A woman's laughter drifted down from upstairs, light and musical. Not mine. My briefcase slipped from numb fingers, hitting the marble floor with a sharp crack that echoed through the foyer. The sound should have alerted them, but the laughter continued, now joined by Matthew's deeper chuckle—the one he used to reserve for me during our lazy Sunday mornings. I climbed the stairs on autopilot, each step deliberate despite the tremor in my legs. The bedroom door stood ajar, and through the gap, I saw them. Matthew's back, the familiar constellation of freckles across his shoulders that I'd traced countless times during our eight years together.
His Fake Heir, My Undeniable Power Novel Cover
8.0
After fifteen years of marriage and a brutal battle with infertility, I finally saw two pink lines on a pregnancy test. This baby was my victory, the heir that would finally secure my place as the wife of mob capo Marco Vitiello. I planned to announce it at his mother's party, a triumph over the matriarch who saw me as nothing but a barren field. But before I could celebrate, my friend sent me a video. The headline read: "MOB CAPO MARCO VITIELLO'S PASSIONATE NIGHTCLUB KISS!" It was him, my husband, devouring a woman who looked like a younger, fresher version of me. Hours later, Marco stumbled home, drunk and reeking of another woman's perfume. He complained about his mother begging him for an heir, completely unaware of the secret I held. Then my phone lit up with a text from an unknown number. "Your husband slept with my girl. We need to talk." It was signed by Dante Moretti, the ruthless Don of our rival family. The meeting with Dante was a nightmare. He showed me another video. This time, I heard my husband's voice, telling the other woman, "I love you. Elara... that's just business." My fifteen years of loyalty, of building his empire, of taking a bullet for him-all dismissed as "just business." Dante didn't just reveal the affair; he showed me proof that Marco was already stealing our shared assets to build a new life with his mistress. Then, he made me an offer. "Divorce him," he said, his eyes cold and calculating. "Join me. We'll build an empire together and destroy him."
Husband's Obsession Costs Mom's Life Novel Cover
8.7
My husband was obsessed with a social media influencer, blowing even the money set aside for Milana's funeral. Her cancer had worsened, leaving her hospitalized. When I went to pay the medical bills, I found our bank account empty—Gianni had spent it all on that internet personality. Milana was left without a hospital bed, forced to sit on a chair in the hallway, silently wiping away tears as she trembled in pain. I called Gianni in desperation, needing money, only to be met with a barrage of insults. "Why should I care if your mom is sick? Ryleigh's family is going through a rough time. How could I not help her out?" "What kind of son wishes his own mother dead to get money? It's disgraceful." Listening to him, Milana closed her eyes in resignation. She missed her chance for urgent treatment.