
Wife Exposes Husband's Scheme
Chapter 3
The text message notification chimed while I was reviewing client files, but it was the sender's name that made my blood freeze: Margaret Thompson. My mother-in-law, who hadn't contacted me directly in months.
*Family dinner Sunday. 6 PM. Important announcement.*
I stared at the message, my fingers tightening around my phone. Margaret never invited me to anything anymore—not since she'd started making pointed comments about how "tired" I looked, how "difficult" things must be for Davis.
But it was what I found next that shattered my composure entirely.
Davis had left his laptop open on the kitchen counter, logged into his messages. I shouldn't have looked. But after Nova's visit, after discovering the systematic theft of my family's money, I'd stopped caring about privacy.
The conversation thread with his mother was a masterclass in manipulation.
*Margaret: She'll be perfect for Sunday dinner. Rosie already calls her 'Aunt Nova' so naturally.*
*Davis: Good. We need to make this transition smooth. Kiara's been so cold lately, so difficult to live with. Nova brings out the best in me.*
*Margaret: Poor dear. You deserve happiness after everything you've endured. Nova is such a breath of fresh air—young, beautiful, understanding. Nothing like...*
*Davis: I know. I can't wait for Rosie to have a real mother figure in her life.*
The laptop screen blurred as tears stung my eyes. They were planning to replace me. Not just as Davis's wife, but as Rosie's mother.
I scrolled further, finding weeks of messages plotting my erasure. Margaret discussing how to "gradually distance" Rosie from me. Davis complaining about my "mood swings" and "unreasonable demands"—demands like asking where he'd been until midnight, or why our savings account kept shrinking.
My hands shook as I screenshot everything, adding it to the growing file of evidence that would destroy them all.
That afternoon, I called Sarah Mitchell, my business partner and the only person I trusted completely.
"I need your help," I said when she answered. "Can you come over?"
Sarah arrived within an hour, her sharp eyes immediately cataloging my distress. We'd been friends since college, business partners for three years, and she could read me better than anyone.
"What did you find?" she asked, settling onto my couch with the grim expression of someone preparing for war.
I showed her everything. The bank transfers, the jewelry purchases, the messages between Davis and his mother. Sarah's face grew darker with each revelation.
"That bastard," she breathed, examining the financial records. "Kiara, this isn't just cheating. This is systematic theft."
"It gets worse." I pulled up another set of documents I'd discovered that morning. "Look at these transfers to his uncle Raymond and cousin Jake."
Sarah's expertise in financial investigation kicked in immediately. She traced the money flows with surgical precision, her fingers flying across her laptop keyboard.
"Jesus Christ," she whispered after twenty minutes. "Kiara, they're not just stealing from you. They're running money through illegal gambling operations. Look at these patterns—large deposits followed by immediate withdrawals to offshore betting sites."
The evidence was damning. Raymond Thompson, Davis's uncle who'd declared bankruptcy twice, had been receiving regular transfers from our accounts. Jake Thompson, his cousin with a documented gambling addiction, had been using our money to fund high-stakes poker games that operated outside legal channels.
"They're using your family's investment money to fund illegal gambling," Sarah said, her voice tight with anger. "This isn't just adultery and theft—it's money laundering."
I stared at the screen, watching years of my parents' careful investments disappear into a web of corruption that stretched through Davis's entire family. They'd all been feeding off me like parasites while planning my destruction.
"There's more," I said, pulling up the most recent messages between Davis and his mother. "They're planning to introduce Nova at Sunday dinner. As Rosie's new mother."
Sarah's face went white. "They're going to try to turn your own daughter against you."
"They already are." I showed her the texts between Davis and Margaret discussing how to "prepare" Rosie for the transition. How to make her see Nova as the "stable, loving influence" she needed.
"We have to stop this," Sarah said, her voice fierce with protective anger. "We have evidence of financial crimes, adultery, and now they're manipulating a child. We can destroy them."
I looked at my best friend, seeing the same cold determination in her eyes that I felt building in my chest. For years, I'd been the victim in this story. The betrayed wife, the discarded mother, the woman whose scars made her husband sick.
But that woman was gone.
"Yes," I said, my voice steady as steel. "We can."
You may also like





