
Wife Uncovers Husband's Affair with Intern
Chapter 3
The rain hammered against the windows of Café Luna with relentless fury, each drop exploding like tiny grenades against the glass. I pressed my palm against the cold surface, watching the water streak down in chaotic patterns that mirrored the chaos in my chest. Thunder rolled overhead, and in the brief flash of lightning that followed, I saw them.
Across the street, through the warm glow of Ristorante Bellacorte's windows, William sat at a corner table with Bianca. Not the professional dinner he'd claimed when he kissed my cheek and promised to be home by nine. Not the client meeting that required his immediate attention during the worst storm of the season. This was intimate. Deliberate. A betrayal served with wine and candlelight.
Another flash of lightning illuminated their faces, and I saw William throw back his head in laughter at something she'd said. His hand reached across the white tablecloth to cover hers, fingers interlacing with the casual familiarity of lovers. Bianca leaned forward, her dark hair falling like a curtain around her face as she whispered something that made his eyes crinkle with delight.
My coffee grew cold in my trembling hands as I watched my husband court another woman with the same gestures he'd once reserved for me. The way he tilted his head when she spoke. The way his thumb traced circles on her knuckles. Even from this distance, I could see the electricity between them, the magnetic pull that made them lean closer with each passing moment.
The server appeared at their table with dessert—tiramisu, William's favorite. He fed her a spoonful, and she closed her eyes in exaggerated pleasure, making him laugh again. The intimacy of the gesture hit me like a physical blow. How many other dinners had there been? How many other moments of tenderness that should have been mine?
Lightning struck again, closer this time, and in that stark white moment, I saw Bianca's hand rest on William's thigh beneath the table. Possessive. Claiming. The thunder that followed seemed to echo from inside my chest, a rumbling acknowledgment that my marriage was truly over.
I forced myself to look away, my reflection staring back from the rain-streaked window like a ghost haunting her own life. When I looked back, they were gone, leaving only empty wine glasses and the lingering evidence of their deception.
* * *
The company's annual holiday party glittered with forced cheer three weeks later, silver and gold decorations catching the light from crystal chandeliers. I stood beside William in my emerald silk dress, the perfect executive's wife, smiling at colleagues and making small talk about vacation plans and quarterly projections. But my attention kept drifting to Bianca, radiant in red velvet, moving through the crowd with practiced grace.
She carried a tray of champagne flutes, playing the dedicated intern even as her eyes constantly sought William's across the room. I watched her approach a group of senior managers, her laugh musical and bright, but when she reached our circle, something shifted in the air.
"Mr. Peterson," she said, her voice honeyed with false formality. "Champagne?"
As she offered him a glass, her fingers brushed his with deliberate slowness. The contact lasted a heartbeat too long, and I saw the way his breath caught, the slight widening of his eyes that spoke of shared secrets. She leaned closer than necessary, her breast grazing his arm as she whispered something about quarterly reports that made him nod with exaggerated seriousness.
But it was when she turned to leave that I saw the real betrayal. William's hand moved to her lower back, a gesture so automatic, so possessive, that it spoke of countless other touches. His palm rested just above the curve of her hip for three seconds—I counted them—before he remembered where he was and pulled away.
Bianca glanced back over her shoulder, her eyes meeting his with an intimacy that excluded everyone else in the room. In that look, I saw my replacement. Not just in his bed, but in his heart, in his future, in the space I'd occupied for ten years.
"She's quite dedicated," I said to William, my voice steady despite the earthquake in my chest.
He cleared his throat, adjusting his tie with nervous fingers. "Yes, very committed to the company's success."
The lie sat between us like poison, sweet and deadly.
* * *
Reece Wood stirred his coffee with methodical precision, his engineer's mind evident in the careful way he aligned the spoon against the cup's rim. We sat in the corner booth of Morrison's Deli, surrounded by the comfortable chaos of the lunch crowd, but his discomfort was palpable.
"So you want to plan a surprise party for William's birthday," he said, not quite meeting my eyes. "That's... thoughtful of you."
"I was thinking of having it at the office," I continued, watching his face carefully. "Maybe after hours, when the technical team finishes their evening maintenance. You know how William appreciates when everyone stays late to solve problems."
Reece's coffee cup rattled against the saucer as he set it down too quickly. "Evening maintenance?"
"Like that night during the storm," I pressed gently. "When the servers crashed and you all had to work until midnight. William was so grateful for everyone's dedication."
The color drained from Reece's face. He stared at his hands, and I watched him wrestle with something that clearly tormented him. When he finally looked up, his eyes held the weight of unwilling knowledge.
"Treasure," he said quietly, "there were no server issues that night."
The words hung between us like a death sentence. I'd known, of course, but hearing it confirmed by someone I trusted felt like watching the last foundation stone of my marriage crumble into dust.
"The servers ran perfectly," Reece continued, his voice barely above a whisper. "I left the office at six that evening. Everyone did."
I nodded, my throat too tight for words. Another lie. Another betrayal. Another piece of evidence for the growing file that would soon become my divorce petition.
Reece reached across the table, his hand hovering near mine but not quite touching. "I'm sorry, Treasure. You deserve so much better than this."
As I walked back to my car through the gray December afternoon, I realized that Reece's words had given me something more valuable than confirmation of William's lies. They'd given me permission to stop pretending that my marriage was worth saving.
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