
Wife Turns Tables on Cheater
Chapter 2
The morning light filtering through our kitchen window felt different now—sharper, more clinical. I'd barely slept, my mind cataloging every suspicious detail from the past months with the methodical precision I'd once applied to medical diagnoses. By 7 AM, I had a plan.
"I thought I'd surprise you with lunch today," I announced as Luca adjusted his tie in the hallway mirror.
He paused, meeting my eyes in the reflection. "That's sweet, but you don't have to—"
"I want to." I stepped closer, smoothing an imaginary wrinkle from his collar. "I feel like I've been so focused on the treatments lately. I miss seeing your world."
Something flickered across his features—guilt, perhaps, or calculation. "Of course. I'd love that."
Three hours later, I stood in the marble lobby of Bennett & Associates, a thermal bag containing homemade sandwiches in one hand, my phone discreetly positioned in the other. The receptionist, a young woman with perfectly styled blonde hair, smiled warmly as she called up to announce my arrival.
"Mrs. Bennett! What a lovely surprise," Luca's assistant, Margaret, greeted me as the elevator doors opened on the fifteenth floor. "He's just finishing a conference call."
I followed her through the open-plan office, my trained eye scanning faces, ages, potential threats. Most of the women were either significantly older or clearly junior staff. No one matched the sultry voice from yesterday's recording.
"Elena!" Luca emerged from his corner office, genuine surprise lighting his features. He kissed my cheek, his hand lingering on my waist in a way that would have reassured me yesterday. Today, it felt performative.
"I hope you don't mind the interruption," I said, allowing him to guide me into his office.
"Never." He closed the door behind us, gesturing to the leather chairs facing his desk. "This is perfect timing, actually. I was just thinking about you."
The lie came so easily to him. I wondered how many others I'd swallowed without question.
We ate lunch while he told me about a new client presentation, his hands animated as he described market projections and growth strategies. I nodded at appropriate intervals, but my attention was focused on his phone, which buzzed twice during our conversation. Both times, he glanced at it but didn't check the messages.
"I need to use the restroom," I said, standing and smoothing my skirt.
"Of course. Margaret can show you—"
"I remember from the Christmas party."
The moment I stepped out, his phone rang. Through the glass walls, I watched him answer with an expression I'd never seen before—soft, almost tender. My pulse quickened as I pretended to head toward the restrooms, then doubled back to position myself near the employee directory mounted on the wall beside his office.
My phone's camera captured the organizational chart in three quick shots, the names and departments now preserved for later analysis. As I tucked the phone away, fragments of Luca's conversation drifted through the door.
"...can't wait either... tomorrow will be perfect..."
I returned to his office just as he was ending the call, his expression shifting back to the familiar mask of professional composure.
"Everything alright?" I asked, settling back into my chair.
"Just business. You know how it is."
That evening, I prepared Luca's favorite meal—herb-crusted salmon with roasted vegetables—while mentally reviewing the employee directory I'd photographed. No Anastasia Williams listed, but that didn't surprise me. If she worked for Heritage Tea Company, she wouldn't appear on his staff roster.
We were halfway through dinner when his phone rang. The caller ID read "Tea Girl Anna," and my fork froze midway to my mouth.
"I should take this," he said, already standing. "It's about the Heritage Tea project."
He stepped onto the back patio, sliding the glass door closed behind him. Through the window, I watched his body language transform—shoulders relaxing, one hand gesturing expressively as he paced. Even from inside, I could hear the intimate cadence of his voice, though not the specific words.
My medical training had taught me to observe without judgment, to gather data before forming conclusions. But watching my husband's face light up while talking to another woman felt like a scalpel cutting through my chest.
After ten minutes, he returned, his expression carefully neutral.
"Sorry about that. Anna Williams from Heritage Tea had some questions about our import timeline."
Anna. The voice from the car. The woman who couldn't wait to see him again.
"Sounds like an important account," I managed, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands.
"It has potential. We're looking at a significant investment in their expansion."
Later that night, after Luca had fallen asleep, I slipped into the guest bathroom and dialed Sarah's number.
"Elena? It's almost midnight—"
"I need your help," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "I need you to look into a company called Heritage Tea, and a woman named Anastasia Williams."
Silence stretched between us before Sarah's voice returned, sharp with concern. "What's going on?"
"I think Luca is having an affair."
The words hung in the air like a diagnosis I'd been afraid to voice. Sarah's intake of breath confirmed what I already knew—she wasn't surprised.
"I'll make some calls tomorrow," she said quietly. "Elena, whatever you find, whatever you need—I'm here."
As I ended the call and crept back to bed, I realized I was no longer the naive wife who'd discovered a suspicious voicemail. I was becoming something else entirely—a woman with a mission, armed with the analytical skills I'd thought I'd abandoned forever.
The investigation had begun.
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