Chapter 1

The kitchen timer chimed softly as I pulled the roast from the oven, its golden-brown surface glistening under the warm light. Ten years of marriage had taught me exactly how Gideon liked his dinner—medium-rare beef, roasted vegetables arranged just so, and a glass of his favorite Cabernet waiting at his place setting. I smoothed my apron and glanced at the clock. Six-thirty. He'd be home any minute.

I moved through our dining room with practiced efficiency, adjusting the placement of the silverware, ensuring the candles were lit just right. Everything had to be perfect. It always was.

"Honey, I'm home!" Gideon's voice echoed from the foyer, followed by the familiar thud of his briefcase hitting the marble floor.

"Welcome home," I called back, forcing warmth into my voice. "Dinner's almost ready. How was your day?"

His footsteps approached the kitchen, and I turned to greet him with the same smile I'd worn for a decade. Gideon looked tired, his usually pristine suit wrinkled, his dark hair slightly disheveled. There was something different about him lately—a distraction that seemed to pull his attention away even when he was standing right in front of me.

"Long day," he said, loosening his tie. "I forgot some files upstairs. Mind if I grab them real quick before we eat?"

"Of course." I watched him disappear up the staircase, his steps heavy with exhaustion—or perhaps something else entirely.

I finished plating our meal, arranging everything with the same meticulous care I'd always taken. The dining room looked perfect, like something from a magazine spread. But as I stood there, surrounded by the fruits of my domestic devotion, an uncomfortable feeling settled in my chest. Something felt off, though I couldn't quite place what.

Fifteen minutes passed. Then twenty.

"Gideon?" I called up the stairs. "Dinner's getting cold."

"Just a minute!" came his muffled reply.

I frowned. How long could it take to grab a few files? The uncomfortable feeling grew stronger, morphing into something that made my stomach clench. Without really thinking about it, I found myself climbing the stairs, my heels clicking softly against the hardwood.

Our bedroom door was ajar, and I could see Gideon rummaging through his dresser drawers, his movements hurried and almost frantic. "Did you find what you were looking for?" I asked from the doorway.

He startled, spinning around with wide eyes. "Yeah, just... just looking for that contract from the Henderson deal. Thought I might have left it up here."

But his hands were empty, and the dresser he'd been searching through contained only clothes. I stepped into the room, my gaze sweeping across our perfectly made bed, the pristine nightstands, the—

There. On the white comforter, near Gideon's pillow, lay a small silver tube that definitely didn't belong to me.

My breath caught in my throat. I moved closer, my heart beginning to pound as I recognized the shape, the size. A lipstick. Not just any lipstick—an expensive brand I'd never owned, in a shade of deep red that would look terrible with my complexion.

My fingers trembled as I reached for it, the cool metal foreign against my skin. The label read 'Rouge Noir'—a color I'd never seen in any of my makeup drawers. The tube was warm, recently used, with the faintest trace of the crimson shade visible at the tip.

Behind me, Gideon had gone completely silent.

I turned the lipstick over in my palm, my mind racing. In the space of those few seconds, a thousand tiny details came flooding back with crystal clarity. The way Gideon had been coming home later and later, claiming overtime at the office. How he'd changed his phone password last month, saying something about 'security protocols.' The unfamiliar perfume I'd caught lingering on his shirts—sweet and floral, nothing like the subtle vanilla scent I'd worn for years.

The business trips that seemed to multiply recently. The way he'd started taking calls in the garage, speaking in hushed tones. How he'd stopped looking at me during dinner, his eyes always somewhere else, his mind clearly occupied with thoughts that didn't include me.

"Thessaly?" Gideon's voice sounded strained, uncertain. "What are you doing?"

I didn't answer immediately. Instead, I pulled out my phone with steady hands and took a photo of the lipstick, the white bedding providing a stark contrast that made the evidence impossible to ignore. The camera clicked softly, capturing proof of what I'd suspected but hadn't wanted to believe.

Carefully, I placed the lipstick back exactly where I'd found it, my movements deliberate and controlled. When I turned to face my husband, I found him watching me with an expression I couldn't quite read—guilt mixed with something that might have been relief.

"I was just checking if you needed help finding those files," I said, my voice remarkably steady. "Shall we go have dinner?"

Gideon blinked, clearly caught off guard by my calm response. "I... yes. Dinner sounds good."

We walked downstairs together in silence, the weight of unspoken knowledge hanging between us like a heavy curtain. I reheated the roast while Gideon washed his hands, both of us moving through the familiar routine as if nothing had changed.

But everything had changed.

As we sat across from each other at our elegantly set table, I watched my husband of ten years cut into his perfectly prepared meal. "How was work today?" I asked, taking a sip of wine that tasted like ash in my mouth.

"Oh, you know," he said, not meeting my eyes. "Same old stuff. Meetings, paperwork, the usual."

His phone buzzed against the table. Gideon glanced at the screen, and for just a moment, his entire expression transformed. A smile tugged at the corners of his mouth—genuine, warm, alive in a way I hadn't seen directed at me in months.

He picked up the phone, his fingers moving quickly across the screen as he typed a response. That smile never left his face.

I sat there, fork halfway to my mouth, watching the man I'd loved for over a decade light up for someone who wasn't me. The roast turned to cardboard in my mouth, but I kept chewing, kept smiling, kept playing the role of the perfect wife.

"Everything alright?" I asked sweetly.

"Just work stuff," he said, still staring at his phone. "Nothing important."

But his thumb was already moving again, typing another message, that secret smile growing wider.

I took another sip of wine and began to plan.

Chapter 2

The next morning, I called in sick to my volunteer position at the children's hospital. For the first time in ten years, I couldn't bring myself to smile at sick children when my own world was crumbling.

Instead, I sat in my pristine kitchen, staring at the business card I'd kept tucked away in my jewelry box for years. Rafferty Sinclair, Attorney at Law. He'd handled the legal work when we bought this house, and I'd always found him thorough, discreet, and ruthlessly efficient.

But first, I needed proof. Real proof.

I opened my laptop and began researching private investigators in the city. After an hour of reading reviews and credentials, I settled on Marcus Webb—a former police detective with stellar recommendations and a reputation for discretion. His fee was steep, but money had never been an issue in our marriage. Gideon made sure I had access to everything I needed.

How ironic that his generosity would now fund the investigation into his betrayal.

I called Webb's office, my voice steady as I explained what I needed. "I suspect my husband is having an affair. I need documentation—photos, records, whatever you can find."

"I understand, Mrs. Ashford. This is more common than you might think. I'll need some basic information about your husband's routine, workplace, and any suspicious patterns you've noticed."

I provided everything—Gideon's office address, his usual haunts, the recent changes in his behavior. Webb assured me he'd begin surveillance immediately and promised results within a week.

After hanging up, I sat in the silence of my perfect home and began my own investigation.

I started with Gideon's home office, a space I rarely entered out of respect for his privacy. Now, respect felt like naivety. I searched through his desk drawers, finding nothing but business documents and old receipts. His computer was password-protected, but I remembered him typing it in once—our wedding anniversary. The irony wasn't lost on me.

The desktop revealed nothing suspicious, but I noticed he'd been clearing his browser history religiously. I checked his email, finding only work correspondence and spam. Either he was being careful, or he was using a different account.

My phone buzzed with a text from Gideon: "Working late again tonight. Don't wait up."

I stared at the message, remembering how I used to respond with understanding and love. Now, I simply typed back: "Okay. Dinner will be in the fridge."

That evening, I sat alone at our dining table, picking at the salmon I'd prepared for two. The empty chair across from me seemed to mock the facade I'd been maintaining. How many nights had I eaten alone recently? How many lies had I swallowed along with my perfectly prepared meals?

The week passed in a blur of careful observation and mounting dread. I watched Gideon more closely than I ever had, noting every phone call taken in private, every late night, every shower immediately upon coming home. The signs had been there all along—I'd simply chosen to ignore them.

On Friday, Webb called.

"Mrs. Ashford, I have what you need. Can we meet this afternoon?"

We arranged to meet at a coffee shop downtown, far from anywhere Gideon might see us. Webb was exactly what I'd expected—middle-aged, unremarkable, the kind of man who could blend into any crowd. He slid a manila envelope across the table with practiced discretion.

"I'm sorry, Mrs. Ashford. It's all in there."

My hands trembled slightly as I opened the envelope. The first photograph hit me like a physical blow—Gideon and a young woman with auburn hair entering a hotel together, his hand on her lower back in a gesture of intimate familiarity.

I flipped through the images with growing nausea. Hotel records showing repeated visits over the past six months. Credit card receipts for jewelry I'd never received, dinners at restaurants he'd never taken me to. And then, the photographs that made my stomach drop entirely.

Gideon kissing her in the hotel lobby. Gideon's hand tangled in her hair as they stood pressed against a car in a parking garage. The woman's face was clearly visible now, and recognition hit me like ice water.

Vivienne Cross.

I knew that face. I'd seen it at Gideon's company holiday party just last December. She was the young designer who'd approached me at the cocktail reception, her eyes wide with apparent admiration.

"Mrs. Ashford, it's such an honor to meet you," she'd gushed, her smile bright and seemingly genuine. "You're absolutely radiant. Gideon talks about you all the time—he's so lucky to have such an elegant, accomplished wife."

I'd been charmed by her enthusiasm, even telling Gideon later that night how impressed I was with the caliber of people his company was hiring. "She seems like such a sweet girl," I'd said. "Very promising."

Now, staring at photographs of that same "sweet girl" wrapped in my husband's arms, I felt sick.

Webb's investigation had been thorough. Phone records showed hundreds of calls and texts between them. He'd even managed to obtain screenshots of their messaging conversations through a contact at the phone company.

I forced myself to read them, each word a fresh wound.

Vivienne: "Can't wait to see you tonight. That conference room fantasy you mentioned... 😉"

Gideon: "God, you drive me crazy. I can barely concentrate during meetings anymore."

Vivienne: "Does the wife suspect anything?"

Gideon: "Thessaly? No. She's too wrapped up in her charity work and dinner parties to notice anything. Sometimes I think she cares more about the perfect table setting than our marriage."

Vivienne: "Poor baby, stuck with someone so boring. When are you going to leave her?"

Gideon: "Soon. I need to figure out the finances first. She's been out of the workforce so long, the alimony could be substantial."

Vivienne: "Well, when you do, I can't wait to be the next Mrs. Ashford. I'll actually appreciate everything you give me."

The conversation continued, each message more damning than the last. They mocked my cooking, my volunteer work, my "desperate attempts to stay relevant." Vivienne had even sent photos of herself wearing lingerie, asking if it was "better than what the housewife wears to bed."

I read every word, my vision blurring as tears finally came. Ten years of marriage, reduced to cruel jokes between lovers. My devotion, my sacrifice, my love—all dismissed as the pathetic clinging of a boring housewife.

When I finished reading, I carefully placed everything back in the envelope and looked up at Webb. "Thank you. This is exactly what I needed."

He studied my face with professional concern. "Are you alright, Mrs. Ashford?"

I wiped my eyes and straightened my shoulders. "I will be."

That evening, I sat in my car outside our house for a long time, the envelope of evidence beside me. Gideon's car was in the driveway—apparently, he'd decided to come home for once. Through the kitchen window, I could see him moving around, probably wondering where I was.

I pulled out my phone and scrolled to Rafferty Sinclair's number. My finger hovered over the call button for a moment before I pressed it.

"Rafferty," I said when he answered, my voice steady despite the tears still drying on my cheeks. "I need you to help me with a private matter."

Chapter 3

Rafferty's office hadn't changed much in the decade since I'd last been here. The same mahogany desk dominated the space, the same leather-bound law books lined the walls. But the man behind the desk looked older, his silver hair thinner, his face more lined with the weight of countless divorces and custody battles.

He studied the envelope I'd placed before him with the careful attention of a surgeon examining X-rays. When he finally looked up, his expression was a mixture of professional sympathy and genuine shock.

"Thessaly," he said quietly, "I'm so sorry. In thirty years of practice, I've seen this scenario too many times, but it never gets easier to witness."

I sat perfectly straight in my chair, my hands folded in my lap like the proper lady I'd been raised to be. "What shocks me more than the affair itself is how thoroughly they've documented their contempt for me. It's almost like they wanted to be caught."

Rafferty flipped through the photographs again, his jaw tightening. "The arrogance is astounding. Most cheating spouses at least try to be discreet." He paused, studying my face. "But what surprises me most is how calm you are about all this."

I smiled—a real smile this time, not the practiced one I'd worn for years. "Oh, I'm furious, Rafferty. I'm absolutely livid. But anger without strategy is just noise."

He leaned back in his chair, and I caught a glimpse of the sharp legal mind that had made him one of the city's most feared divorce attorneys. "What do you want to do?"

I reached into my purse and pulled out a small notebook, flipping it open to reveal pages of neat handwriting. "I want them to pay, but not yet. I need you to help me with two things. First, prepare divorce papers that will ensure I get everything I'm entitled to—and then some. I want the house, half of all assets, and substantial alimony. Gideon's been very generous in keeping me financially dependent. Now that generosity will work in my favor."

Rafferty nodded, already taking notes. "That's standard. What's the second thing?"

"I need you to investigate Vivienne Cross. I want to know everything about her—her background, her finances, her family, her weaknesses. Knowledge is power, and I intend to have all of it."

His pen paused mid-stroke. "You're planning something."

"I'm planning everything," I said softly. "Gideon thinks I'm just a boring housewife who cares more about table settings than our marriage. He's about to learn exactly who he married."

Rafferty's eyes gleamed with something that might have been admiration. "The Whitmore family didn't build their fortune by being passive, did they?"

"No," I said, standing and smoothing my skirt. "They didn't."

Two days later, I stood in front of my closet, selecting my outfit with the same care a general might choose weapons for battle. The navy Chanel suit had been a wedding gift from my mother—classic, elegant, and expensive enough to command respect in any room. I paired it with my grandmother's pearl necklace and the Cartier watch Gideon had given me for our fifth anniversary.

Ironic how his gifts would help me reclaim the life he'd tried to diminish.

My first stop was the Riverside Country Club, where I'd once been a regular before marriage consumed my social calendar. The maître d' recognized me immediately, his face lighting up with genuine pleasure.

"Miss Whitmore! I mean, Mrs. Ashford. It's been far too long."

"It has indeed, Charles. Is the usual table available?"

Within an hour, I was surrounded by women I hadn't seen in years—old friends from boarding school, fellow debutantes, wives of prominent businessmen. They embraced me like a long-lost sister, their excitement palpable.

"Thessaly, darling, where have you been hiding?" Margaret Sinclair gushed, air-kissing both my cheeks. "We've missed you terribly at the charity circuit."

"I've been playing house," I said with a self-deprecating laugh. "But I'm ready to get back to more meaningful work. Actually, I'm thinking of reactivating the Whitmore Foundation. It's been dormant too long."

The reaction was immediate and electric. The Whitmore Foundation had been one of the city's most influential charitable organizations before my father's death. Its return would be major news in our circles.

"That's wonderful!" exclaimed Victoria Hayes, whose husband owned half the city's real estate. "We absolutely must plan a launch event. Something spectacular."

I smiled, feeling the familiar thrill of orchestrating something significant. "I was hoping you'd say that. I want to make a real impact, not just write checks. Perhaps we could start with a gala? Something that brings together all the major players in the city?"

The next two hours flew by in a whirlwind of planning and reconnection. Phone numbers were exchanged, committees were formed, and invitations were promised. By the time I left the club, I had a full social calendar for the next month and a growing sense of my own power.

At home, I found Gideon in his office, hunched over his laptop with the intense focus he usually reserved for major deals. He looked up when I entered, his eyes taking in my outfit with surprise.

"You look... different," he said, his tone uncertain. "Very polished."

"Thank you. I had lunch with some old friends at the club. It felt good to get out and be social again."

Something flickered across his face—was it concern? "The club? I didn't know you were thinking of going back there."

"There's a lot you don't know about what I'm thinking lately," I said lightly, moving to perch on the edge of his desk. "Actually, I've been watching you work so hard, and you seem so stressed. Have you considered taking some time off? Maybe a long weekend somewhere?"

Gideon's eyes widened slightly. In ten years of marriage, I'd never suggested he take time away from work. "I... well, there are some projects that need attention..."

"All the more reason to recharge," I said, running my fingers along his shoulder in what appeared to be a loving gesture. "You work too hard, darling. Take a few days, clear your head. I'll be fine here—I'm thinking of getting more involved with charity work anyway."

I could see the wheels turning in his head. Time away from home meant time with Vivienne without having to invent elaborate excuses.

"You know what?" he said, his voice gaining enthusiasm. "That's not a bad idea. There's that conference in Chicago next week. Maybe I could extend the trip, do some networking."

"Perfect," I said, leaning down to kiss his forehead. "You deserve it."

As I left his office, I allowed myself a small smile. Phase one was in motion. While Gideon thought he was getting away with more time for his affair, he'd actually be giving me exactly what I needed—more evidence, more rope to hang himself with, and more time to rebuild the life and power he'd tried so hard to make me forget I possessed.

The Whitmore name still carried weight in this city. Soon, everyone would remember exactly what that meant.

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