
Wife's Revenge on Cheater
Chapter 1
I checked my watch again as I stepped out of my car in the downtown shopping center parking lot. 12:15 PM. Perfect timing to surprise Grayson with lunch from his favorite Italian bistro. After five years of marriage, I still loved creating these small moments of joy for him—unexpected gestures to break up his busy workday. Today's surprise: homemade tiramisu alongside his favorite penne arrabbiata.
The spring air carried a gentle breeze as I smoothed down my floral sundress and adjusted my sunglasses. I'd taken extra care with my appearance today, wanting to look nice for our impromptu lunch date. Grayson had mentioned a client meeting downtown, and the restaurant was just around the corner from where he said he'd be.
I spotted his silver Mercedes in the far corner of the lot, partially hidden behind a delivery truck. My lips curved into a smile as I headed in that direction, picturing the look of pleased surprise on his face.
But I never made it to his car.
I froze mid-step, the paper bag with our lunch suddenly heavy in my hands. There, between two parked cars, stood my husband. And he wasn't alone.
Grayson had his arms wrapped around a woman with flowing dark hair. Carolina Carr. His childhood friend who'd been at our wedding, who occasionally joined us for dinner parties. The same Carolina who always looked at my husband a beat too long, whose casual touches lingered whenever they greeted each other.
They weren't just embracing. His hands were tangled in her hair, their bodies pressed together as if they were trying to dissolve the space between them. Their kiss wasn't the friendly peck of old acquaintances—it was desperate, passionate, intimate. The kind of kiss that told a story of practiced familiarity.
My stomach lurched. The world narrowed to that single point in space where my husband's lips met another woman's. Five years of trust and love collapsed in an instant, leaving nothing but a hollow ache where my heart should be.
I didn't confront them. Some primal instinct for self-preservation kept me rooted to the spot, hidden from their view by a large SUV. I watched as they finally broke apart, saw Carolina's fingers trail down my husband's chest, watched him smile at her in a way he hadn't smiled at me in months.
I slipped back to my car, lunch forgotten, moving on autopilot. The drive home passed in a blur, tears streaming silently down my face as my mind replayed those moments in an endless, torturous loop.
***
I was sitting in our living room when Grayson finally came home that evening. I'd spent hours alternating between numb disbelief and searing pain, rehearsing what I would say, how I would confront him.
"Sorry I'm late, sunshine," he called out, hanging his coat in the foyer. "The Peterson account needed some last-minute revisions. You wouldn't believe the hours we put in today."
He walked into the living room, his tie loosened, top button undone—the picture of a hardworking husband. The perfect lie.
"How was your day?" he asked, leaning down to kiss my cheek. I turned my face away.
"I saw you today," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "Downtown, in the parking lot."
His body tensed, almost imperceptibly. But I knew him too well—the slight widening of his eyes, the momentary pause before he composed his features.
"Oh?" he said casually, but I could hear the edge of panic.
"With Carolina." I met his eyes directly. "I saw you kissing her, Grayson."
The transformation was immediate and practiced. His expression shifted to one of indignant defense, eyebrows drawing together in manufactured confusion.
"It's not what you think, Sunny," he said, sitting beside me, reaching for my hands. I pulled them away. "Carolina's been going through a rough time. She's been... pursuing me. I've been trying to let her down gently, but today she ambushed me after my meeting. What you saw was me trying to push her away."
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband's face, spinning lies with such conviction that for a split second, I almost questioned what I'd seen with my own eyes.
"She threw herself at me," he continued, voice soft with false sincerity. "I was trying to be kind, but firm. You know how emotional she can be."
The audacity of his lies sparked something new inside me—a cold, clear anger that cut through my pain like a blade through silk.
"I see," was all I said, watching him carefully, seeing for the first time how easily deception came to him.
That night, as he slept beside me, I made a decision. I would discover the full extent of his betrayal before deciding my next move. No more blind trust. No more perfect wife waiting at home while her husband lived a double life.
The game had changed. And Grayson had no idea he was already losing.
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