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Wife Exposes Husband's Secret Life with Mistress Novel Cover

Wife Exposes Husband's Secret Life with Mistress

The notification came while I was cutting into my salmon at Meridian, the upscale bistro downtown where I'd been courting potential investors for our latest venture. My phone buzzed against the white tablecloth, and I glanced down to see the smart home app alert glowing on the screen: "Unusual water usage detected in master bathroom." I frowned slightly, my fork pausing midair. Across from me, Richard Chen—no relation to our supposed elderly neighbor—was explaining his concerns about market volatility, but his words suddenly felt distant, muffled. "Julia? Your thoughts on the Q3 projections?" I blinked, forcing my attention back to Richard's expectant face. "The projections are conservative but realistic," I said smoothly, setting my phone face-down. "We've built in cushions for market fluctuations." It was probably nothing. A system glitch. These smart home apps were still working out their bugs. But even as I smiled and nodded through the rest of lunch, that small notification had planted itself in my mind like a seed, quiet but persistent.
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Chapter 2

Sarah arrived at noon on Saturday, her arms full of pastries from the French bakery we both loved. Our weekly coffee dates had become sacred over the years—two hours where we could laugh, complain, and forget about demanding clients and tight deadlines.

"I swear, if Marcus asks me to revise that proposal one more time, I'm going to staple it to his forehead," Sarah said, dropping onto my couch with dramatic flair. She kicked off her heels and tucked her legs under her. "Your house always smells amazing. What is that? Lavender?"

"Vanilla," I said automatically, then stopped. My hand froze on the coffee pot.

I only used lavender. Always lavender. The vanilla bath salts had been a gift from Stephen's mother last Christmas, sitting unopened in the cabinet because the scent gave me headaches.

Sarah didn't notice my pause. She was already up, wandering toward the living room cabinet where I kept my collection of crystal figurines—delicate pieces I'd gathered over the years, each one a memory or milestone. "God, I love these. You have such an eye for beautiful things."

I followed her, coffee forgotten, watching as she leaned close to examine the largest piece—a crystal swan I'd bought in Prague during our honeymoon. The light caught its curves, throwing rainbows across the wall.

"Jules," Sarah's voice had changed, flattened. She straightened, turning to look at me. "When did you start wearing red lipstick?"

"I don't." The words came out steady, but my pulse had started hammering in my ears. "You know I only wear nude shades."

Sarah reached into the cabinet carefully, lifting the swan. When she turned it over, I saw it—a distinct smudge of crimson on the crystal base, bright as blood against the clear surface.

"Then whose is this?"

I took the swan from her hands, my fingers suddenly cold. The lipstick was fresh enough to still have a slight sheen, not old and dried. Someone had handled this recently, touched it with hands that had just applied makeup.

The coffee date dissolved into something else then. Sarah helped me check every piece in the cabinet. Three more figurines bore similar marks—always on the base, always red, always in places where someone would grip them to examine them closely.

"Maybe the cleaning lady?" Sarah offered, but her tone said she didn't believe it.

"Maria doesn't wear makeup. She's told me a hundred times her skin is too sensitive." I set down a crystal horse, the fourth contaminated piece. "And she has instructions never to touch these. They're too valuable."

Sarah was quiet for a moment, then reached over and squeezed my hand. "Jules. You need to pay attention. Really pay attention."

I nodded, but I couldn't speak. The swan felt heavy in my palm, that red smudge screaming truths I wasn't ready to hear.

After Sarah left, I moved through the house like a ghost, cataloging everything with new eyes. In the master bathroom, I found my expensive sea salt scrub—the one I'd just bought last week—already half empty. I twisted open the lid and inhaled. Vanilla and jasmine, not the eucalyptus scent I'd purchased.

Someone had used my scrub and replaced it with a different one, counting on me not to notice.

I opened the shower drain cover with shaking hands. Long auburn hairs clung to the mesh, several of them, unmistakable against the chrome. My own hair barely touched my shoulders, and I'd kept it blonde since college.

The next three weeks became an exercise in controlled paranoia. I started taking photos of everything before I left the house—the position of perfume bottles on my dresser, the angle of throw pillows on the bed, the exact placement of towels on the rack. Every evening, I'd compare the photos to reality, documenting each small change in a password-protected file on my laptop.

Shampoo bottles moved two inches to the left. My bathrobe hung on the wrong hook. The guest towels used when I'd specifically taken them off the rack that morning.

Stephen noticed nothing, or pretended not to. He kissed my forehead each morning, asked about my day each evening, made love to me with familiar tenderness twice that week. Each time, I studied his face in the darkness afterward, searching for guilt or fear or anything that would confirm what I was beginning to know.

I found nothing but the same man I'd always known. Or thought I'd known.

Then, on a Thursday afternoon, I was three slides into a presentation for a major client when my phone buzzed in my pocket. I ignored it, focusing on Mrs. Patterson's questions about projected ROI. But it buzzed again. And again.

I glanced down as discreetly as possible.

"Motion detected in master bedroom - 2:47 PM."

"Unusual activity detected - 2:48 PM."

"Motion detected in master bathroom - 2:49 PM."

My throat closed. Someone was in my house. Right now. Moving through my bedroom, my bathroom, my space.

"Mrs. Patterson," I heard myself say, my voice surprisingly steady, "I apologize, but I need to excuse myself. Family emergency."

I didn't wait for her response. I grabbed my bag and phone, my heels clicking rapidly across the conference room floor, then breaking into a run the moment I hit the parking lot. My hands shook so badly I could barely get the key in the ignition.

The drive home took twelve minutes. Every second stretched like hours. My mind raced with possibilities—burglars, yes, please let it be burglars, something explainable, something that wasn't the truth that had been building in my chest for three weeks like a scream.

I pulled into the driveway too fast, barely remembering to put the car in park before I was out and running for the front door.

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