
Wife's Revenge After Car Destruction
Chapter 2
The morning after the destruction of my father's car, I sat in my study with a clarity I hadn't felt in years. The leather journal lay closed beside me as I picked up my phone and dialed a number I'd memorized but never thought I'd use.
"Diana Chen's office."
"This is Alora Kennedy. I need to schedule an appointment with Ms. Chen. Today, if possible."
Three hours later, I sat across from Diana in an upscale café downtown, the kind of place where conversations were muffled by soft jazz and the gentle clink of expensive china. Diana's sharp eyes took in my composed exterior—the perfectly applied makeup that concealed my sleepless night, the tailored blazer that gave me armor.
"I've been expecting this call for months," she said quietly, sliding a manila folder across the marble table. "Your grandmother mentioned you might need my services."
I opened the folder to find photographs I'd never seen before. Cade and Leia at restaurants I'd never been to. His hand on her back as they entered hotels. Financial records showing expensive gifts charged to accounts I'd helped establish.
"How long have you been documenting this?" I asked, my voice steady despite the knot in my stomach.
"Eleanor hired a private investigator six months ago. She was concerned about your wellbeing." Diana's fingers traced the rim of her coffee cup. "The evidence is comprehensive. But more importantly, I've analyzed your husband's financial situation. He's more dependent on Kennedy family business connections than you might realize."
She pulled out another document—a detailed breakdown of Cade's company's revenue streams. Nearly seventy percent of his business came through Kennedy family partnerships and referrals.
"If you were to withdraw that support..." Diana let the implication hang in the air.
"He'd be ruined." The words tasted like justice on my tongue.
"Financially devastated," she confirmed. "The question is, how far are you willing to go?"
I thought of my father's destroyed car, of Leia's satisfied smile, of ten years of my life spent honoring vows that meant nothing to my husband.
"As far as necessary."
That evening, I returned home to find Cade in the dining room, already seated at our mahogany table. The formal place settings seemed absurd now—crystal glasses for a marriage that had shattered, silver cutlery for a relationship that had been carved apart.
"You're late," he said without looking up from his phone.
"I had errands to run." I took my seat across from him, noting how he'd positioned himself at the head of the table, a subtle assertion of dominance I'd never challenged before.
The housekeeper served our meal in silence—herb-crusted salmon that I could barely taste. Cade's phone buzzed constantly, each notification pulling his attention further away from me.
"I've been thinking about the Armstrong family gala next week," he said, finally setting his phone aside. "I'll be bringing Leia as my business partner. She's been instrumental in several new deals."
The casualness of his announcement hit me like ice water. "Your business partner."
"That's right. She understands the industry in ways that..." He gestured vaguely in my direction. "Well, you've never been involved in the business side of things."
I cut my salmon with surgical precision, each slice deliberate and controlled. "And what role exactly will I be playing at this gala?"
"The usual. Hostess duties. Smile, make small talk with the wives. You're good at that sort of thing."
His phone rang. Leia's name flashed on the screen.
"I need to take this," he said, already answering. "Leia? What's the emergency?"
I watched him pace to the window, his voice dropping to intimate tones I hadn't heard directed at me in years. "No, no, you did the right thing calling. I'll handle Peterson myself... Of course you're worried. That's why you're so good at this..."
The conversation stretched on for twenty minutes. When he finally returned to the table, his food was cold, but his eyes were bright with the kind of energy I remembered from our early marriage—when he'd still looked at me like I mattered.
"Sorry about that. Crisis with the Peterson account. Leia caught a major error that could have cost us millions."
"How fortunate," I said, my voice perfectly level, "that she's so... attentive to your needs."
If he caught the edge in my tone, he didn't show it. Instead, he launched into a detailed explanation of Leia's brilliance, her insights, her dedication. Each word was another nail in the coffin of our marriage.
As I sat there, listening to my husband praise another woman with the passion he'd never shown for me, I felt the last vestiges of the dutiful wife I'd been for ten years quietly die. In her place, something sharper emerged—a woman who understood that sometimes love meant knowing when to let go, and sometimes letting go meant making sure the person who'd betrayed you understood exactly what they'd lost.
The gala would be the perfect stage for the first act of my carefully orchestrated farewell.
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