
Wife Exposes Husband's Secret Life with Mistress
Chapter 3
I slammed the car door and ran toward the house, my heart hammering against my ribs. The smart home notifications were still pinging on my phone—motion detected, unusual activity, someone moving through my bedroom like they owned it.
But as I rounded the corner of our driveway, I stopped dead.
Stephen was standing in the doorway of the adjacent apartment—the unit he'd claimed housed an elderly Mrs. Chen. His hand was pressed against the door frame, his body angled as if he was blocking the entrance. Or blocking my view.
"Stephen?" My voice came out sharper than I intended.
He spun around, his face cycling through expressions too quickly—surprise, panic, then that practiced smile I'd seen him use with difficult clients. "Julia! You're home early."
Behind him, I caught a glimpse of movement. A flash of auburn hair, the rustle of fabric. Someone was trying to stay hidden, but failing.
"Who's in there?" I stepped closer, my heels clicking on the concrete walkway.
"Just helping our neighbor," Stephen said quickly. "Plumbing emergency. The poor woman was beside herself."
That's when she appeared.
Tall, maybe five-foot-eight, with the kind of auburn waves that caught light like copper wire. She was younger than me—mid-twenties, I'd guess—with sharp cheekbones and full lips painted in that same crimson shade I'd found on my crystal swan. She wore a cream silk blouse that probably cost more than most people's rent, and her designer jeans fit like they'd been tailored.
This was no elderly Mrs. Chen.
"Oh." The woman's eyes met mine, and I saw something there—not embarrassment or apology, but annoyance. Like I was interrupting her day. "You must be the wife."
The wife. Not Julia. Not Stephen's wife. The wife, like I was an inconvenience she'd heard about but hoped never to meet.
"I'm Julia Franklin," I said, extending my hand with deliberate politeness. "And you are?"
She glanced at Stephen before taking my hand briefly. Her grip was limp, dismissive. "Kelly. I live here."
"Kelly was just explaining about the water damage," Stephen jumped in. "Burst pipe in her bathroom. I was checking if it might affect our unit too."
I looked between them. Stephen's shirt was slightly wrinkled, his hair mussed like he'd run his hands through it. Kelly's lipstick was perfect, but I noticed a small smudge on her collar—the kind you get when someone kisses your neck.
"How awful," I said to Kelly, my voice honey-sweet. "Have you lived here long?"
"A while." She shrugged, already turning back toward the apartment. "Thanks for the help, Stephen. I'll call a plumber tomorrow."
The way she said his name—familiar, intimate, like she'd said it a thousand times before.
"Of course," Stephen replied. "Anytime."
Kelly disappeared inside without another word, closing the door with a soft click that felt like a dismissal.
Stephen and I stood there for a moment in the awkward silence. A neighbor's dog barked somewhere in the distance. The afternoon sun cast long shadows across the walkway.
"Ready to head inside?" Stephen asked, his hand touching my lower back in that automatic gesture of husbandly guidance.
I let him steer me toward our front door, but my mind was cataloging everything. The way Kelly had looked at me—not with the gratitude you'd show someone whose husband had helped in an emergency, but with barely concealed irritation. The expensive clothes that didn't match Stephen's story about a struggling elderly neighbor. The casual way she'd used his name.
That evening over dinner, I decided to test the waters.
"I should bring Kelly some cookies," I said, cutting into my chicken. "Welcome her to the neighborhood properly."
Stephen's fork paused halfway to his mouth. "Kelly?"
"Our neighbor. The one with the plumbing emergency." I kept my tone light, conversational. "She seemed nice."
"Right. Kelly." Stephen set down his fork, reaching for his water glass. "Actually, I don't think she's very social. Some people prefer to keep to themselves."
"But you said she was elderly. Mrs. Chen, wasn't it?" I tilted my head, genuinely confused. "Kelly looked quite young to me."
Stephen's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "Did I say elderly? I meant... I don't really know the neighbors that well. I just try to help when someone's in trouble."
"That's one of the things I love about you," I said softly. "Always willing to help."
He smiled then, that boyish grin that had first attracted me in college. "Just being neighborly."
But I noticed he didn't meet my eyes.
Over the next week, I found myself paying attention to the adjacent apartment in ways I never had before. I started leaving for work five minutes later, taking my time to lock the front door and check my phone, stealing glances at the neighboring unit.
On Tuesday morning, I watched Kelly emerge at 8:15 AM sharp. She wore a tailored black blazer over dark jeans, carried a leather purse that I recognized as Hermès, and climbed into a silver BMW that definitely wasn't a rental car. Her morning routine was precise, efficient—the movements of someone who lived here permanently, not a temporary resident dealing with emergency housing.
Wednesday, she left at the same time wearing a different designer outfit. Thursday brought another expensive ensemble and the same luxury car.
I began to wonder what kind of job Kelly had that afforded such an expensive lifestyle, and why Stephen had been so eager to hide her existence from me.
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