The police officers' faces were expressionless as they read me my rights. I stood frozen in our living room, wrists burning from the handcuffs that bit into my skin.
"This is ridiculous," I said, my voice cracking. "I didn't assault anyone."
The female officer—Rodriguez, according to her badge—looked at me with something almost like pity. "Your husband has filed a complaint stating you attacked him during your confrontation tonight. We have photos of his injuries."
"Injuries?" I echoed, disbelief washing over me. "What injuries?"
She gestured toward Dalton, who stood in the doorway of our bedroom. His shirt was torn—I'd never touched his shirt—and there was a reddish mark on his collarbone that hadn't been there when I'd left Violeta's office.
"Dalton," I pleaded, "what are you doing?"
His eyes met mine, cold and distant. "What I should have done months ago. Protecting myself from your jealousy."
I watched in horror as he turned to Detective Rodriguez. "She's been unstable for weeks. The jealousy has consumed her."
"That's not true!" My voice rose, panic clawing at my throat as the officers began leading me toward the door. "Dalton, please! You know I didn't do anything!"
He didn't even look at me as I was guided out of our home—the home I'd decorated, the home where I'd waited five years for him to love me properly.
---
The jail cell smelled of disinfectant and despair. Seven days. Dalton's lawyer had ensured I'd stay here for seven days without bail.
"He's really letting you rot in here," said Tanya, a woman arrested for shoplifting who shared my cell. "Most husbands at least try to get their wives out."
I stared at the wall, tracing the graffiti etched into the concrete. "He's not most husbands."
"Been married long?"
"Five years."
She whistled. "That's a long time to be with someone who'd do this to you."
I didn't respond. What could I say? That I'd spent those five years hoping he'd someday touch me with desire instead of obligation?
On the third day, I overheard two women talking in the common area.
"—saw them at that new restaurant on Maple Street," one said. "The Harrison guy and that therapist chick."
"Violeta Cooper," the other replied. "She's been all over him for months. My sister works at his company."
I froze, spoon halfway to my mouth.
"They're staying at his place now," the first woman continued. "Moving her stuff in while his wife's locked up."
The spoon clattered from my fingers. Tanya nudged me with her elbow. "You okay?"
"No," I whispered, the truth of it sinking in. "I'm not."
---
The house looked the same when I returned—red brick with white trim, roses climbing the trellis I'd planted three summers ago. But something had shifted. I could feel it before I even opened the door.
"Welcome home," Dalton said, standing in the entryway as though greeting me from a business trip rather than my release from jail.
I stepped inside, my body still aching from the hard mattress and thin blankets of my cell. "Where are my things?"
"Your what?"
"My clothes. My books. My—" I stopped as I noticed the living room. Different throw pillows. A crystal vase where my ceramic one had been. "What happened to my stuff?"
Before he could answer, I heard footsteps on the stairs. Violeta appeared, wearing one of my silk robes—the one Dalton had given me for our third anniversary.
"Madison," she said, as though greeting an expected guest. "You're earlier than we thought."
I stared at her, then at Dalton, who watched me with clinical detachment. "What is she doing here?"
"Violeta has moved in," he said simply. "Her apartment building was condemned last week."
"That's convenient," I said, my voice barely audible.
"You can stay in the guest room," he continued, as though offering hospitality to a distant relative rather than telling his wife she'd been displaced in her own home. "We've moved your things there."
I walked past them both, my legs trembling as I climbed the stairs. The guest room door was ajar. Inside, I could see my clothes hanging in the closet, my books stacked haphazardly on shelves.
But when I turned to leave, I froze. Through the partially open door of our bedroom—our bedroom—I could see Violeta's lingerie draped over the chair by the window. Her perfume bottles lined the dresser where my jewelry box had once sat.
And on the nightstand, a framed photo of her and Dalton, arms around each other, smiling as though they hadn't just destroyed my life.
I leaned against the wall, sliding down until I hit the floor. Seven days in jail had been bad enough.
But coming home to this—this was worse than any cell could ever be.
I stared at the email notification on my phone, reading it three times before the words finally registered.
"We regret to inform you that your position at Harrison Enterprises has been filled by Violeta Cooper, effective immediately..."
My fingers trembled as I scrolled through the message, searching for some indication that this was a mistake. But there it was—Dalton's electronic signature at the bottom, authorizing the change.
I drove to the company in a daze, my mind replaying every moment of the past week. Seven days in jail. Coming home to find Violeta in my house, wearing my robe. And now this—my job, the one thing I'd built independently of Dalton, stripped away without warning.
The security guard's smile faltered when he saw me. "Mrs. Harrison—I mean, Ms. Powell—I wasn't informed you'd be coming today."
"I wasn't either," I said, my voice hollow as I walked past him.
The familiar hallways felt different now—hostile, as though the very walls knew I didn't belong. When I reached my office—no, Violeta's office now—I paused outside the door, steeling myself before knocking.
"Madison." Dalton's voice was cool as he opened the door. "This is unexpected."
"Is it?" I held up my phone. "I just got the notification. No call? No discussion?"
He stepped aside, allowing me to enter what had been my workspace for three years. Violeta sat behind my desk—no, not my desk anymore. She'd already replaced the framed photo of my college graduation with one of her and Dalton at some gala.
"Madison," she greeted, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "How unfortunate about your position."
I ignored her, focusing on Dalton. "You couldn't even tell me yourself?"
"It was a business decision," he said, his tone suggesting this was a minor inconvenience rather than a career-ending move. "Violeta is more qualified for the role."
"More qualified?" I echoed, disbelief coloring my words. "I built that department from nothing. Every client, every contract—"
"And now Violeta will take it to the next level," he cut me off. "She's better suited for the role."
Violeta smiled, not bothering to hide her triumph. "I've already begun implementing some changes. The office will be fully restructured by next week."
---
I watched from the hallway as Violeta hosted a meeting with my former team. The glass conference room offered no privacy as she gestured expansively, redesigning projects I'd developed over years.
"As you can see," she was saying, "Madison's approach was fundamentally flawed. We'll be taking a more... structured approach moving forward."
Marcus Chen, Dalton's business partner who'd worked closely with me for years, caught my eye through the glass. His expression was apologetic, but he quickly looked away when Violeta glanced in my direction.
"Oh, Madison," she said, noticing me. "Come join us if you'd like."
The false sweetness in her voice made my stomach turn. I remained in the hallway, watching as she continued.
"Madison's... instability... has been concerning for some time," she told the group, her voice carrying through the glass. "Dalton has been incredibly patient, but we all agree this change is for the best."
One by one, my colleagues averted their eyes when I looked at them. Only Marcus held my gaze for a moment longer than necessary—a silent acknowledgment of what was happening.
---
"We need to pick up my equipment from the resort," Violeta said that evening, lounging on what had once been my couch. "The therapy equipment I left there last week."
I looked up from my book, trying to ignore the way she'd rearranged the living room furniture. "What resort?"
"The Lakeside Luxury Resort," she said casually. "Dalton and I have been meeting there for our sessions."
The book slipped from my fingers. "You've been meeting at a resort?"
"For privacy," she explained, her eyes gleaming with malice barely disguised as concern. "Dalton needs a neutral space for our work together."
I nodded mechanically, my mind racing. The Lakeside Luxury Resort—I knew it well. Dalton had taken me there for our first anniversary, back when he still pretended to care.
"I'll go get your things," I said suddenly.
Violeta's eyebrows rose in surprise. "You'd do that?"
"Of course," I said, a plan forming in my mind. "Anything to help with your... therapy."
What neither of them knew was that I had no intention of simply retrieving equipment. If they'd been meeting at the resort regularly, there might be evidence there—something that could prove what I'd suspected all along: that Violeta had been manipulating Dalton long before I discovered those tapes.
As I drove toward the mountains the next morning, I rehearsed what I'd say to the hotel staff. I needed access to whatever room they'd been using—needed to find something, anything, that would confirm what I already knew in my heart.
Violeta Cooper wasn't just stealing my husband and my home.
She was stealing my life.