
Wife Uncovers Husband's Plot
Chapter 3
"We need to expose him publicly," Leila said, her voice cutting through my tears like a blade. "Not some private confrontation where he can gaslight you or make excuses. He needs to face consequences in front of people who matter to his precious career."
I wiped my eyes with the back of my hand, still sitting in my car outside my own home. The irony wasn't lost on me—hiding from the life I'd built with a man who'd never truly wanted me. "How?"
"When's his birthday?"
"Next Friday. But Leila, I can't—"
"Perfect." Her eyes gleamed with the kind of strategic thinking that had made her a successful marketing executive. "You're going to throw him the surprise party of his nightmares."
The plan she outlined was elegant in its simplicity. I would announce a business trip, create the perfect opportunity for Spencer and Nevaeh to be together, then return with witnesses who mattered to Spencer's reputation. His business partner Marcus, his assistant James, key clients—all the people whose respect he craved.
"But what if they don't—"
"Trust me," Leila interrupted, squeezing my hand. "Give a cheating man three days of thinking he's safe, and he'll get careless. They always do."
That evening, I delivered my performance over dinner. Spencer was cutting into his salmon when I dropped the news.
"I have to fly to Chicago this weekend," I said, keeping my voice light and apologetic. "The Morrison Foundation wants to discuss expanding our literacy program. It's a three-day conference."
Spencer's fork paused halfway to his mouth. "This weekend? But it's my birthday Friday."
"I know, darling. I'm so sorry." The endearment tasted like ash on my tongue. "We can celebrate when I get back. Maybe dinner at Chez Laurent?"
Across the table, I caught Nevaeh's reflection in the china cabinet glass. She was trying to hide a smile.
"Of course," Spencer said, but I could hear the relief threading through his disappointment. "Work comes first."
How perfectly he'd trained me to believe that.
The next morning, I made a show of packing, leaving my suitcase open on the bed where both Spencer and Nevaeh could see it. Conservative business suits, sensible shoes, the kind of wardrobe that screamed important conference.
"I'll miss you," Spencer said, kissing me goodbye at the front door. His lips were warm against mine, and for a moment, muscle memory almost made me lean into him. Eight years of conditioning were hard to break.
"Miss you too," I whispered, hating how easily the lie came.
I drove to the Marriott downtown and checked into the room I'd booked as evidence, then slipped out the back entrance where Leila waited in her car. We drove to her apartment in silence, the weight of what I was about to do settling over me like a shroud.
"You sure about this?" she asked as we climbed the stairs to her guest room.
"No," I admitted. "But I'm sure about what happens if I don't."
From Leila's laptop, I watched the surveillance feeds like a woman observing her own autopsy. Spencer returned from work early, practically bouncing with anticipation. When Nevaeh appeared in the kitchen camera's view, he swept her into his arms and spun her around.
"Three whole days," I heard him say through the audio feed. "Just us."
They didn't even make it upstairs.
I closed the laptop and reached for my phone. Time for the second phase.
"Marcus? It's Ophelia Stewart... Yes, I know it's short notice, but I wanted to surprise Spencer for his birthday... Friday at seven... No, he doesn't know, so please don't mention it..."
The calls took two hours. Marcus Chen, Spencer's business partner, sounded delighted by the surprise. James Morrison, his loyal assistant, promised to bring the Hendricks file Spencer had been asking about. The Kowalski account, their biggest client, said they'd love to celebrate with their favorite contractor.
Each yes felt like loading another bullet into the chamber.
"What if he tries to cover it up?" I asked Leila that night as we sat in her kitchen, Chinese takeout growing cold between us. "What if he just denies everything?"
Leila smiled, and it was sharp enough to cut glass. "Honey, that's what the cameras are for. Some things are impossible to deny when there's video evidence."
I nodded, but my hands were shaking as I picked up my chopsticks. In forty-eight hours, I would walk back into my house with an audience and destroy the life I'd spent eight years building.
The strangest part was how much I was looking forward to it.
Friday couldn't come fast enough.
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