
Wife Uncovers Husband's Plot
Chapter 2
The next morning, I waited until Spencer left for his nine o'clock meeting and Nevaeh headed out for grocery shopping. The house felt different in their absence—quieter, but charged with possibility. I had maybe two hours before either returned.
I'd spent half the night researching surveillance systems on my laptop, careful to delete my search history afterward. The online retailer promised same-day delivery for an extra fee. By ten-thirty, a nondescript package sat on my doorstep.
My hands trembled as I unpacked the tiny cameras. Each one no bigger than a button, wireless, with motion activation. The salesperson's chat had assured me they were undetectable when properly placed.
I started in the living room, tucking the first camera behind a decorative vase on the mantelpiece. The angle captured the entire seating area—the plush sofa where Spencer and I used to watch movies, the Persian rug where we'd once made love on a lazy Sunday morning. Now these spaces felt contaminated by possibility.
The kitchen camera went behind the coffee maker, nearly invisible among the stainless steel appliances. I tested the angle on my phone app, adjusting until it covered the breakfast nook and the island where I'd watched them exchange those lingering touches.
The hallway proved trickier. I finally settled on positioning the camera inside a decorative picture frame, the lens peering through a carefully enlarged hole I'd made with a nail file. From there, it could monitor the path between the kitchen and Spencer's home office.
By the time I heard Nevaeh's key in the front door, everything was in place. I was sitting at my laptop in the study, ostensibly working on foundation grant proposals, my heart hammering against my ribs.
"Mrs. Stewart? I'm back," she called out, her voice carrying that same honeyed tone I'd once found charming.
"Thank you, Nevaeh," I replied, not looking up from my screen. "Did you remember the organic lemons?"
"Of course. I'll start on the salmon for tonight."
I nodded, watching her reflection in my laptop screen as she passed by the study doorway. That cherry red lipstick gleamed even in the hallway's muted light.
Two days. I gave myself two days to gather evidence before confronting anyone.
I didn't have to wait that long.
On Wednesday afternoon, while supposedly attending a board meeting at the children's hospital, I sat in my car three blocks away, watching the live feed on my phone. Spencer had come home early, claiming he needed to review contracts in his office.
At 2:47 PM, he appeared on the kitchen camera, loosening his tie. Nevaeh entered moments later, and I watched the careful distance they'd maintained around me evaporate instantly.
His hands found her waist. She pressed against him, her fingers threading through his hair. They kissed with the desperate hunger of people who'd been forced to wait, to pretend.
My breath caught in my throat. Even expecting it, seeing it felt like a physical blow.
But it was what happened next that shattered me completely.
They moved to the living room, still intertwined, and sank onto our sofa. Spencer pulled back, cupping her face in his hands.
"God, I've missed this," he murmured, his voice carrying clearly through the camera's audio. "Having to pretend around her is killing me."
"How much longer?" Nevaeh asked, her fingers tracing his jawline. "I hate sneaking around."
Spencer's laugh was bitter. "Not much longer. Once I have everything I need from her family connections, I won't have to keep up this charade."
My phone nearly slipped from my numb fingers.
"You really married her just to get back at her parents?" Nevaeh's voice held a note of admiration.
"They looked at me like I was dirt under their shoes when we first met," Spencer said, his voice hardening. "Her father actually asked if I was 'suitable' for his precious daughter. Now look—I've built an empire using their money and connections, and they have to smile and pretend they're proud of their son-in-law."
"And Ophelia?"
Spencer shrugged, the gesture casual and devastating. "She's been useful. The startup money from her father, the social connections, the perfect wife image for business functions. But she's just a tool, Nevaeh. You're what I actually want."
The phone slipped from my hands, clattering to the car floor. Eight years. Eight years of marriage, of believing in us, of sacrificing my own ambitions to support his dreams. Eight years of being nothing more than a tool for his revenge.
I sat there shaking, watching through blurred vision as they continued their embrace on the sofa where I'd curled up with him just last Sunday, where he'd told me he loved me.
Lies. All of it, lies.
With trembling fingers, I found Leila's number and pressed call.
"Ophelia? What's wrong?" Her voice was sharp with concern.
"Can you come over?" My voice cracked. "I need... I need help."
"I'm on my way."
Twenty minutes later, Leila burst through my front door to find me sitting in my car in the driveway, still clutching my phone, tears streaming down my face.
"What happened?" she demanded, sliding into the passenger seat.
I handed her the phone, the surveillance feed still running. We watched in silence as Spencer and Nevaeh disentangled themselves, straightening clothes, returning to their careful charade.
"Oh, honey," Leila whispered, her arm coming around my shoulders. "How long have you known?"
"The affair? Two days. But Spencer... he never loved me, Leila. He married me for revenge. I've been nothing but a tool to him."
Leila's jaw tightened as she watched Spencer kiss Nevaeh goodbye before heading to his office. "That bastard. That absolute bastard."
I leaned against her shoulder, feeling hollow. "What do I do now?"
Leila was quiet for a long moment, her fingers drumming against the dashboard. When she spoke, her voice was steel.
"Now? Now we make him pay."
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