Chapter 2

The Grandview Hotel loomed before me, its elegant façade a stark contrast to the turmoil in my chest. I sat in my car across the street, watching the entrance with a detachment that surprised me. Ten years of marriage, and here I was, about to spy on my husband's anniversary celebration with another woman.

I'd changed into a simple black dress and dark sunglasses, my hair tucked under a wide-brimmed hat—not quite a disguise, but enough to avoid immediate recognition by hotel staff who might know me as Mrs. Tucker. The dashboard clock read 7:45 PM. August would arrive soon.

Right on cue, his Aston Martin pulled into the hotel driveway. My stomach clenched as I watched him step out, looking more alive than he had in our bedroom that morning. He straightened his tie—my Christmas gift—and checked his reflection in the car window. The valet took his keys, and August disappeared into the lobby, carrying a gift bag I recognized from our favorite jeweler.

I gave him five minutes, then crossed the street. The hotel garden offered a perfect vantage point—Room 412 faced the courtyard, its balcony doors likely open on this warm evening. I found a secluded bench partially hidden by ornamental shrubs and waited.

Twenty minutes later, the lights in Room 412 came on. I raised the compact binoculars I'd brought, focusing on the large windows where the curtains remained undrawn. August appeared first, removing his jacket and pouring champagne into flutes. Then she entered—a willowy brunette in a red dress that hugged every curve. Bella James. In person, she was even more beautiful than her profile picture suggested.

I watched, feeling oddly hollow, as August presented her with the Cartier bracelet I'd selected for our most important client's wife. Bella's face lit up as she fastened it around her wrist, then rewarded him with a kiss that made me look away momentarily.

When I raised the binoculars again, August was unveiling another surprise—the set of rare vintage wine bottles I'd spent months tracking down for our investors' appreciation dinner. Six bottles worth over $30,000, now being displayed like carnival prizes as Bella clapped her hands in delight.

She disappeared into the bathroom, returning moments later in black lingerie that I immediately recognized from our joint credit card statement—a $2,000 charge August had dismissed as a "business expense" when I'd questioned it last month.

I'd seen enough. My hands trembled as I lowered the binoculars, but my mind was suddenly, terrifyingly clear. This wasn't just infidelity—the gifts, the expenses, the evasions about company funds—there was something more systematic happening here.

I drove home in silence, the images from the hotel room window playing on repeat in my mind. Once inside our mansion—the home August always claimed he'd built for us through his business acumen—I went straight to his home office.

Three hours later, surrounded by financial statements and company reports, I stared at the numbers that couldn't possibly add up. Transfers totaling $2.3 million to an entity called "Bella's Art Emporium"—a company that, according to my quick online search, had a beautiful website but no actual inventory, no shipping records, and no customer reviews. Just an empty digital storefront with August's mistress smiling from the "About the Artist" page.

I picked up my phone and dialed a number I rarely used directly.

"Marcus? It's Serenity Tucker. I'm sorry to call so late." I kept my voice steady despite the rage building inside me. "I'm putting together something special for our anniversary and need to review some recent expenses. Could you meet me tomorrow morning? There are some transactions I'd like to discuss... privately."

Marcus Chen, our CFO, agreed immediately. He'd always been professional, competent, and—most importantly—discreet. If anyone could help me understand the extent of August's betrayal, it would be him.

I hung up and looked around the office—at the awards on the wall celebrating August's business genius, the photos of him shaking hands with investors whose money he was apparently stealing, the empire we had supposedly built together.

No, I corrected myself. The empire I had built for him, using my family's connections, my business instincts, my unwavering support—all while hiding in the shadows to protect his fragile ego.

Tomorrow, with Marcus's help, I would discover exactly how deep this betrayal went. And then August Tucker would learn what happens when you betray not just Serenity Tucker, but Serenity Gardner.

Chapter 3

I waited until August returned home at midnight, the scent of expensive perfume clinging to his clothes like evidence. He found me in his office, the financial documents spread across his mahogany desk like a war map.

"Serenity?" His voice carried surprise, then irritation. "What are you doing in here? It's late."

I held up the bank statements, my hands steady despite the fury coursing through my veins. "Two point three million dollars, August. Transferred to something called Bella's Art Emporium over the past eight months."

His face went pale, then flushed red. For a moment, I thought I might see remorse, or at least shame. Instead, he straightened his shoulders and walked to his bar cart, pouring himself a scotch with deliberate calm.

"I don't know what you think you've discovered, but—"

"I know about the hotel room. Room 412 at the Grandview." My voice cut through his deflection like a blade. "I know about the Cartier bracelet, the vintage wine, the lingerie charges on our credit card. I know about Bella James."

August took a long sip of his drink, studying me over the rim of his glass. When he set it down, something had shifted in his expression—the mask of the loving husband finally slipping away.

"So you know." He shrugged, as if we were discussing the weather. "What exactly do you want me to say, Serenity? That I'm sorry? That it was a mistake?"

The casual cruelty in his tone hit me like a physical blow. "I want you to explain why you've been stealing from our company to fund your affair."

"Our company?" August laughed, a harsh sound that echoed off the office walls. "This is my company. I built this empire with my own hands, my own vision. You've done nothing but play housewife for ten years."

I stood slowly, the financial documents crackling in my grip. "I've done nothing? August, I've been your silent partner in everything. The connections that got you your first major client, the strategies that saved us during the recession, the—"

"You've been a wife meddling in business matters she doesn't understand." His voice rose, scotch sloshing in his glass as he gestured dismissively. "Do you have any idea what it's like being married to someone so... ordinary? So boring? Bella appreciates what I've accomplished. She sees my potential."

Each word was a knife twist, but I kept my expression neutral. "Your potential? Built on embezzled funds and lies?"

"I took what I deserved." August's eyes glittered with a dangerous light. "And frankly, I'm tired of pretending this marriage means anything to me. Bella and I have been planning our future together. A future where I'm not dragged down by a wife who brings nothing to the table."

The room seemed to tilt around me. Ten years of marriage, reduced to nothing in his mind. Ten years of sacrifice, dismissed as worthless.

"You want a divorce?" I asked quietly.

"I want my freedom." He moved closer, his confidence growing with each word. "And don't think you can take me for everything in some vindictive settlement. I've been documenting your... instability. Your jealousy, your paranoia about my business dealings. Any judge will see you're an unfit partner."

My breath caught. "Instability?"

"The way you've been acting lately, questioning my every move, going through my things." August's smile was predatory now. "I'll get half of everything, including the company's core technology patents. The algorithms, the client databases, the proprietary software—all of it was developed under my leadership."

He leaned against his desk, supremely confident. "You see, darling, I built this empire with my own hands. Every patent, every innovation, every breakthrough—that's my genius at work. You contributed nothing of value to our success. Nothing at all."

The silence stretched between us, heavy with the weight of his betrayal. August finished his scotch, apparently satisfied that he'd crushed any resistance I might have offered.

"I suggest you start looking for a good lawyer," he said, moving toward the door. "Though I doubt you'll find one willing to take on a case you can't possibly win."

As he left me alone in the office surrounded by the evidence of his crimes, I felt something cold and sharp crystallizing in my chest. August thought he knew exactly who he was dealing with—the ordinary, boring wife who had contributed nothing of value.

Tomorrow, I would remind him that he had never truly known me at all.

I picked up my phone and scrolled to a number I hadn't called in years. It was time to visit my father.

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