
Wife Uncovers Husband's Plot
Chapter 1
I was in the middle of reviewing quarterly reports when my phone buzzed against my desk. Once, twice, three times in rapid succession. I glanced down, expecting to see client emails or calendar reminders.
Instead, the screen displayed a series of alerts from my car's safety app: "Collision detected at 2:17 PM." "Vehicle stationary for 1 hour." "Vehicle stationary for 2 hours."
My stomach tightened. The Mercedes was supposed to be with Spencer at his downtown office. I tapped on the notification, and a map appeared, showing my car parked at The Westbrook—an upscale apartment complex across town I'd never heard Spencer mention.
"That's odd," I murmured, checking the time. The car had been sitting there for over three hours now. Spencer had texted at lunch saying he was swamped with meetings all afternoon.
I called his office.
"Stewart Industries, how may I direct your call?" his receptionist answered.
"Hi Melissa, it's Ophelia. Is Spencer available?"
A pause. "Mr. Stewart stepped out after his 1:30 meeting. I believe he mentioned a client lunch?"
My fingers gripped the phone tighter. "Did he say when he'd be back?"
"No, Mrs. Stewart. Would you like me to have him call you when he returns?"
"Please," I said, keeping my voice steady. "Thank you."
I ended the call and stared at the map on my phone. The little blue dot hadn't moved. Three hours at an apartment complex. Not a restaurant. Not a client's office.
My phone buzzed again. "Vehicle stationary for 3 hours."
I tried calling Spencer directly. Straight to voicemail.
The rational explanations flashed through my mind: Car trouble. An unexpected meeting. A friend who lived there.
But the knot in my stomach told me otherwise.
---
That evening, Spencer returned home just after seven, loosening his tie as he walked through the door. I watched him from the kitchen island where I'd been pretending to review recipes.
"Sorry I'm late," he said, not quite meeting my eyes. "Client dinner ran over."
I nodded, noting how he'd changed from "client lunch" to "client dinner" without missing a beat. "How was your day?"
"Productive. Closed the Mendoza account." He kissed my cheek—quick, perfunctory—before heading upstairs. "I need a shower."
As soon as I heard the water running, I slipped into the garage. The Mercedes gleamed under the overhead lights, recently washed. Spencer was always meticulous about the car.
I opened the driver's door and checked the mileage. Thirty-seven miles more than yesterday. The trip to The Westbrook and back would account for that perfectly.
Moving methodically, I searched the console, the glove compartment, under the seats. Nothing unusual until I ran my hand between the passenger seat cushions.
My fingers closed around a small cylindrical object.
A lipstick tube. Cherry Red Passion, the drugstore brand announced in faded letters. The cap was slightly cracked, the tube worn.
I stared at it, this cheap little item so out of place in our carefully curated life. I owned dozens of lipsticks, all high-end brands in elegant packaging that cost ten times what this one did.
This wasn't mine.
I twisted it open, noting how the color had been worn down to a nub. A vivid, almost garish red.
An image flashed in my mind: Nevaeh, our live-in housekeeper, wearing a similar shade last week while serving dinner. I'd noticed because it seemed too bold for household duties, but hadn't thought much of it at the time.
Nevaeh, who had been with us for eight months. Nevaeh, whose room was just down the hall from ours.
I closed my fist around the lipstick, feeling the plastic dig into my palm.
The shower upstairs had stopped running.
Carefully, I returned the lipstick exactly where I'd found it and closed the car door without a sound.
---
Over breakfast the next morning, I watched them both with new eyes.
"More coffee, Mr. Stewart?" Nevaeh asked, the coffee pot poised above Spencer's cup.
"Please," Spencer replied, his gaze lingering on her hands as she poured.
She smiled—that same Cherry Red Passion smile—and I caught the subtle brush of her fingers against his as she set the pot down.
"Will you be home for lunch today?" I asked casually, buttering my toast.
Spencer looked up, momentarily startled. "Ah, actually, I might be. I have a gap in my schedule around noon."
"That's new," I remarked. "You haven't taken lunch at home in months."
"Just trying to maintain better work-life balance," he said with a shrug that was too deliberate to be casual.
Across the kitchen, Nevaeh busied herself with the dishes, but I noticed how her back straightened at the exchange.
"I'll make sure lunch is ready, Mr. Stewart," she said, not turning around.
"Thank you, Nevaeh," Spencer replied, his voice dropping half an octave.
I sipped my coffee and said nothing, feeling the distance between us expand across the marble countertop—a distance that had been growing for weeks while I'd been too trusting to notice.
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