
Wife Uncovers Husband's Affair with Her Best Friend
Chapter 3
The notifications started at 6:47 AM, piercing through the fog of another sleepless night. My phone buzzed against the nightstand like an angry wasp, each vibration sending jolts of dread through my already frayed nerves.
Fake accounts. That's what they were—profiles with generic stock photos and names like "WellnessWarrior2024" and "MentalHealthAdvocate." But I knew exactly who was behind them. Paloma's digital fingerprints were all over the carefully curated cruelty.
"Thought you might find this helpful! 💕" accompanied a link to an article titled "How to Spot a Toxic Person: 15 Warning Signs You're the Problem." The follow-up message made my stomach lurch: "Maybe it's time to do Chase a favor and just... disappear? The world would be so much brighter without your darkness dragging everyone down."
Another account sent me "When Mental Illness Ruins Relationships: A Survivor's Guide to Escaping Abuse." The accompanying note read: "Some people are too broken to be fixed. Chase deserves happiness, don't you think? 🌟"
I sat on the edge of my bed, scrolling through message after message, each one more carefully crafted than the last. This wasn't random cruelty—this was psychological warfare, designed to make me believe I was the villain in my own story. Paloma understood exactly which buttons to push, thanks to Chase's intimate knowledge of my triggers.
My hands shook as I blocked each account, but new ones kept appearing. She was relentless, systematic, like she'd studied my mental health history and designed a campaign specifically to push me over the edge.
I needed answers. Real ones, not the half-truths and gaslit explanations Chase had fed me during our final confrontation.
Our laptop sat on the kitchen counter, the same one where I'd written countless freelance articles over the past three years. Chase never bothered with financial details—that was always my domain. "You're so much better with numbers," he'd always said, making it sound like a compliment rather than him dumping unwanted responsibility on me.
Now I understood why he'd been so eager to let me handle our money.
The bank statements painted a picture so devastating I had to read them twice to believe what I was seeing. For the past thirteen months—thirteen months—Chase had been systematically draining our accounts. My freelance income, the money I'd earned writing marketing copy and blog posts late into the night, had funded his affair down to the last detail.
$347 at Canlis restaurant. $892 for a weekend at the Fairmont Olympic Hotel. $156 for lingerie at Victoria's Secret—lingerie I'd never seen. $2,400 for the engagement ring that now sat on Paloma's finger.
Every romantic gesture, every intimate moment, every promise he'd made to another woman—I had unknowingly paid for it all. My own money had purchased my replacement.
The coffee shop felt different now, tainted by memories I could no longer trust. I'd spent countless hours in this corner booth at Grind Coffee, my laptop open, fingers flying across the keyboard as I worked to support both our dreams. Chase's law school applications, his bar exam prep courses, his professional wardrobe—I'd funded it all through late-night writing sessions and weekend projects.
Now I sat in the same spot, nursing a cup of coffee I couldn't afford to refill, listening to Chase's coworkers destroy what remained of my reputation.
"I feel so bad for Chase," Jennifer from his firm was saying, her voice carrying clearly across the small space. "He's been trapped with that psychotic woman for years. Did you hear about her latest episode?"
"The poor guy," replied Mark, someone I'd met at office holiday parties where I'd smiled and played the supportive wife. "He told me she accused him of cheating just because he was working late. Paranoid delusions are a symptom of her condition, apparently."
My coffee cup trembled in my hands. Episode. Condition. The clinical language felt like ice water in my veins.
"He said she's been off her medication again," Jennifer continued. "Throwing things, making wild accusations. He's been staying with friends because he's actually afraid of what she might do."
"Christ, why doesn't he just leave her?"
"He's too loyal. Too good-hearted. He feels responsible for her because of her... you know, her history. But everyone has their breaking point."
They spoke about me like I was a rabid animal, a dangerous burden that poor, noble Chase had been carrying out of misguided charity. Every word was carefully chosen, every detail designed to paint him as the long-suffering hero and me as the unstable villain.
This wasn't accidental gossip. This was character assassination, as methodical and deliberate as Paloma's digital attacks. Chase had been laying the groundwork for months, maybe years, crafting a narrative that would absolve him of any guilt when he finally discarded me.
I stood up abruptly, my chair scraping against the floor loud enough to make both lawyers glance in my direction. For a moment, Jennifer's eyes met mine, and I watched recognition dawn on her face followed immediately by something that looked like fear.
Good. Let her be afraid. Let them all be afraid.
Because I was done being their victim.
You may also like





