
Wife's Escape from Betrayal
Chapter 3
My phone vibrated against the nightstand, pulling me from a restless sleep. The clock read 3:17 AM. I reached for it, expecting another message from my father about the divorce proceedings.
Instead, Kaylee's name flashed on the screen.
I should have deleted it immediately. Instead, I opened it.
The message contained no words—just a video. My thumb hovered over the screen, hesitation lasting only seconds before I pressed play.
The footage was dark but clear enough. Kaylee and Bradley in what appeared to be the master bedroom of the Bellevue mansion. Her laughter, high and teasing. His hands on her waist.
"This is what he really wants," read the message that followed. "Not some cold, career-obsessed wife who can't even win a simple case."
I closed my eyes, my hand gripping the phone so tightly my knuckles whitened. The pain was there—sharp and unexpected—but something else burned brighter. Determination.
Before I could stop myself, another message arrived. Then another.
"Did you know he whispers my name when he thinks you're not listening?"
"He says you've never satisfied him, not really."
Each message came with a photo or video clip, each more intimate than the last. The nursery they were painting. The kitchen where they cooked together. The bed where they...
I deleted them all, my movements mechanical, precise. But not before saving copies to my encrypted drive. Evidence.
* * *
"Ten million dollars." I placed the document before Bradley, my voice steady despite the rage simmering beneath my skin.
We sat in his home office—the same room where I'd found evidence of his betrayal just days ago. The afternoon sun cast long shadows across the mahogany desk between us.
Bradley's eyebrows shot up, his expression a mixture of amusement and condescension. "You can't be serious."
"I've never been more serious." I leaned back in my chair, adopting the posture of the powerful lawyer I was. "Ten million dollars, or I'll make our divorce the most public spectacle Seattle has ever seen."
I slid another document toward him—a preliminary draft of what such a spectacle might entail. Names, dates, detailed accounts of his professional sabotage.
"You wouldn't." His voice hardened, but I caught the flicker of uncertainty in his eyes.
"Try me." I smiled thinly. "I've already lost my perfect record. What's one more defeat?"
Bradley studied me, searching for the emotional crack he could exploit. The desperate wife, the wounded woman he could manipulate with empty promises and false sympathy.
Instead, he found only cool professionalism and calculated resolve.
"This is absurd," he finally said, pushing the paper back toward me. "You're emotional. We can discuss reasonable terms when you're thinking clearly."
"These are reasonable terms." I tapped the document with one manicured finger. "My father has already spoken with Judge Harmon about expedited proceedings. Sign today, and we can handle this discreetly. Wait, and I'll make sure every legal publication in the country knows how you sabotaged my case to advance your mistress's career."
His jaw tightened. "You're bluffing."
"Am I?" I pulled out my phone, pretending to check a message. "Judge Harmon is expecting my call in ten minutes. Shall I tell him you need more time?"
Bradley's eyes narrowed as he calculated his options. I could almost see the gears turning behind his confident facade—weighing the cost of a public scandal against his pride, against the image he'd so carefully cultivated.
"Fine," he said finally, reaching for the pen on his desk. "But this isn't over. We can still negotiate terms once you've calmed down."
I nodded, keeping my expression neutral even as triumph surged through me. He thought this was temporary insanity—a tantrum he could placate until I came to my senses.
He had no idea I'd already secured my position.
* * *
The pen scratched against paper as Bradley signed his name on the dotted line. Each stroke of the pen transferred another piece of his fortune to me.
"There," he said, capping the pen with a decisive click. "Now maybe you'll come to your senses."
I gathered the papers carefully, ensuring each signature was in place, each initial where it belonged. "Thank you for your cooperation, Bradley."
"You know this is just a formality," he said, leaning back in his chair with the easy confidence that had once made me feel safe. "We'll renegotiate once you're thinking rationally again."
I slipped the documents into my briefcase, snapping it shut with finality. "There's nothing to renegotiate."
His smile faltered slightly. "Aurelia—"
"I've already arranged for the transfer of funds," I said, rising from my chair. "My father's connections at First National will process everything by morning."
Bradley's expression shifted from confidence to confusion to the first flickers of alarm. "What are you talking about? These aren't the final documents."
"Aren't they?" I tilted my head, studying the man I'd once loved with such devotion. "My father's judge friends don't make mistakes, Bradley. Neither do I."
As I walked toward the door, his voice finally cracked with genuine concern.
"Aurelia, wait—"
But I was already gone, leaving behind the sound of his chair scraping against hardwood as he lunged for the phone.
Too late, Bradley. Far too late.
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