I caught my husband cheating at his own club. I made him sign a post-nup: one more time, and I get everything. He didn't just cheat again; when I confronted him, he shoved me so hard I cracked my head open on a marble table. He left me bleeding and concussed at the hospital. He ran to his mistress' s side after she faked a suicide attempt for attention. His mother told me he called me "dramatic" as he abandoned me. Lying there, I saw his post on social media, calling her "my darling" while I was being treated for a head injury he caused. I finally understood. He didn't just betray me; he would have let me die for her. So I picked up the phone and called my lawyer. "Enforce the post-nup. Every single clause. And file the felony assault charges. I'm taking his entire empire, and then I'm putting him in jail."
I caught my husband cheating at his own club. I made him sign a post-nup: one more time, and I get everything. He didn't just cheat again; when I confronted him, he shoved me so hard I cracked my head open on a marble table.
He left me bleeding and concussed at the hospital.
He ran to his mistress' s side after she faked a suicide attempt for attention.
His mother told me he called me "dramatic" as he abandoned me.
Lying there, I saw his post on social media, calling her "my darling" while I was being treated for a head injury he caused.
I finally understood. He didn't just betray me; he would have let me die for her.
So I picked up the phone and called my lawyer. "Enforce the post-nup. Every single clause. And file the felony assault charges. I'm taking his entire empire, and then I'm putting him in jail."
Chapter 1
My world shattered not with a bang, but with the soft click of a phone camera. I saw it on the rooftop lounge, high above the glittering Manhattan skyline, reflected in the panoramic window of Jonathan' s exclusive club. My husband, Jonathan Gross, the man who built this empire, was kissing Kesha Rosa, a bartender whose name I only vaguely knew from staff rosters. His hand was on her lower back, her fingers tangled in his perfectly coiffed hair. It wasn't a casual peck. It was an embrace that left no room for doubt, a brutal intimacy that stole the air from my lungs.
My heart didn't break. It froze, solid and sharp, an icicle in my chest.
I stood there, hidden by the velvet curtains of the private booth, watching the replay on my phone. The video was a mistake, an accidental capture from my pocket as I walked past a mirror. But there it was, undeniable proof, echoing the whispers I had dismissed as petty jealousy.
My vision blurred, not from tears, but from a sudden, dizzying rage. How dare he? How dare she?
I pushed through the curtains, my footsteps echoing too loudly on the polished floor. The music, the laughter, the clinking of glasses – it all became a distant hum, a soundtrack to my unraveling.
Jonathan' s eyes met mine across the crowded room. His smile, usually so confident, faltered. Kesha, still in his arms, looked up, her innocent gaze widening. She pulled away, a picture of startled vulnerability.
"Anya?" Jonathan' s voice was a low murmur, laced with a surprise that felt insulting.
I walked towards them, each step a deliberate act of defiance. The world seemed to slow down. I could feel every eye turn towards us, drawn by the sudden tension.
"Don' t pretend," I said, my voice dangerously calm, a stark contrast to the earthquake inside me. "I saw you."
Kesha' s hand flew to her mouth, her eyes welling up with tears. "Mrs. Collins, I... I' m so sorry. It' s not what it looks like."
I laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. It was so loud, the music seemed to dip. "Not what it looks like? Were you two just practicing CPR, Kesha? Because from where I was standing, it looked a lot like you were trying to swallow my husband whole."
Jonathan stepped forward, putting himself between Kesha and me. "Anya, stop it. You' re making a scene." His voice was low, commanding, the one he used to quell unruly investors.
"A scene?" My voice rose, betraying the calm I desperately clung to. "You want to talk about a scene, Jonathan? Let' s talk about the one you just made with her." I pointed a trembling finger at Kesha.
Kesha whimpered, clutching Jonathan' s arm. Her eyes, wide and tearful, darted from me to him. She was playing the victim perfectly, a masterclass in feigned innocence.
Jonathan' s jaw tightened. "Kesha, go home," he ordered, his eyes still fixed on me, a silent plea for discretion.
"But Jonathan..." Kesha started, her voice a fragile whisper.
"Now, Kesha," he repeated, his tone leaving no room for argument. He turned back to me, his expression a carefully constructed mask of concern. "Anya, let' s go home. We need to talk."
"Talk?" My voice cracked. "What is there to talk about, Jonathan? I saw you. With her. In your club. Do you have any idea how humiliating this is?"
He took my arm, his grip firm. "You' re upset. Let' s not do this here."
I yanked my arm away. "I' m beyond upset, Jonathan. I' m done."
His eyes hardened. "Don' t be dramatic, Anya. This is a misunderstanding."
"A misunderstanding?" I scoffed. "Is that what you call it? Because it looks an awful lot like betrayal to me." I turned and stormed out, leaving the stunned silence of the lounge behind me. Every step was a declaration of war.
Later that night, in our penthouse, the air crackled with unspoken accusations. Jonathan pleaded, begged, promised it was a mistake, a moment of weakness, fueled by stress and loneliness. He swore it would never happen again. His words were a torrent, washing over me, trying to erase the image burned into my mind.
I stared at him, exhausted, hollowed out. There was a part of me, a small, foolish part, that still wanted to believe him. The years we had built, the dreams we shared... could it all be thrown away so easily?
"I want a post-nuptial agreement," I said, my voice flat, devoid of emotion.
He stopped, his eyes wide. "Anya, what are you talking about?"
"If you ever, ever do this again," I continued, ignoring his question, "if you so much as look at another woman with desire, if I so much as suspect you' re cheating, everything you own, Jonathan, every single asset, every hotel, every penny, comes to me. You walk away with nothing."
His face drained of color. He was a hospitality mogul, his fortune his identity. "Anya, that' s... that' s extreme."
"Is it?" I challenged, my gaze unwavering. "What you did was extreme. This is my insurance. Take it or leave it."
He hesitated for a long, agonizing moment, his greed battling with his desire to keep me, or at least the illusion of our marriage. Finally, he nodded slowly. "Okay, Anya. Whatever you want. I' ll sign it. Just... please. Give us another chance."
For a while, things were... calm. A fragile peace settled over our penthouse. We went to therapy. He brought me flowers. He took me out, held my hand in public, whispered sweet nothings that felt hollow in my ears. I tried. God, I really tried to believe him. To rebuild. To forget Kesha' s tear-filled eyes, her innocent act.
One night, months later, we were in bed. The lights were dim, the city hummed outside our window. He pulled me closer, his breath warm against my neck. His touch felt... distant. A performance.
"I love you, Anya," he murmured, his lips brushing my ear. "Thank you for giving me another chance, Kesha."
My breath hitched. The world tilted. Kesha. He called me Kesha.
The name hung in the air, a poisoned dart. My body stiffened, every nerve ending screaming. It was a mistake, he would say. A slip of the tongue. But it wasn't. It was the truth, raw and ugly.
I pushed him away, a sudden, violent shove. "Get off me!" My voice was a choked gasp.
He recoiled, startled. "Anya? What' s wrong? You' re acting crazy."
"Crazy?" I scrambled out of bed, pulling the silk sheets tighter around me, as if they could somehow shield me from the stench of his deceit. "You called me Kesha, Jonathan! Kesha! Don' t you dare tell me I' m crazy!"
His eyes narrowed, a flicker of irritation replacing the feigned tenderness. "It was a slip! A mistake! You' re overreacting, Anya. This is exactly why we can' t have nice things."
"Nice things?" My laugh was bitter. "You think this is nice? You think lying to my face, then calling me by her name, is 'nice' ?"
He sighed, running a hand through his hair. "I can' t deal with this right now. You' re being irrational." He threw the covers back and got out of bed, grabbing a shirt. "I' m going out. Don' t wait up."
He slammed the door, leaving me alone in the oppressive silence. My hands trembled. My stomach churned with a sickening mix of rage and despair. He was still seeing her. He had never stopped.
My mind raced. How could I prove it? He was careful now. Too careful. Then I remembered the Tesla app. The remote access. The in-car audio recording feature. He had shown it to me once, boasting about its advanced features. A cold, determined calm settled over me. I grabbed my phone, fingers fumbling as I opened the app. Jonathan' s car was still in the garage.
I activated the audio. Silence. Then, the rumble of the engine, the familiar hum of our Tesla. He was pulling out. My heart pounded a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I had to know. I had to hear. The betrayal was already a gaping wound; I needed to cauterize it with the truth.
The car navigated the city streets. I heard the low thrum of the radio, a forgotten pop song. Then, his voice, softer than I' d heard it in months. "Kesha? Are you awake?"
A faint, sleepy murmur, definitely feminine. Then Kesha' s voice, clear as day. "Jonathan? What time is it?"
My breath hitched. My fingers clenched around the phone, the plastic digging into my palm. He had gone straight to her. To her apartment. All these months, all his promises, all the therapy... a lie.
I heard the sound of her getting into the car, the rustle of clothes, a soft giggle. "You missed me."
"Always," Jonathan replied, his voice thick with a tenderness he never showed me anymore.
I listened. I tortured myself. I heard their whispered endearments, their laughter, the disgusting intimacy of their conversation. They talked about their day, trivial things, like a normal couple. My normal life, stolen and paraded in front of me through a speaker.
Then, the car pulled over. The engine idled. I heard the unmistakable sounds of fumbling, of clothes rustling, of hungry kisses. My stomach rebelled, bile rising in my throat. They were in our car. The car I sometimes drove. The car where we had shared countless conversations, dreams, arguments, reconciliations.
I listened to every moan, every gasp, every sickening sound of their affair unfolding, right there, inside the Tesla. My body shook with silent sobs, but no tears came. My eyes were dry, burning. It wasn't just betrayal anymore. It was an invasion, a desecration.
The audio played on, endless minutes of their passion, their callous disregard for me, for everything we had. When it finally stopped, when the car started again and Kesha was dropped off, and Jonathan eventually returned home, the silence in my bedroom was deafening. But the sounds of their affair still echoed in my head, a tormenting symphony.
I got out of bed, my legs wobbly, but my resolve as solid as concrete. I walked over to my study desk, pulled out the sleek leather folder. Inside was the post-nuptial agreement, signed and sealed, a legal weapon I never thought I' d have to use. And underneath it, the divorce papers, waiting.
My hand didn' t tremble this time. The pen scratched against the legal document, sealing not just my marriage's fate, but Jonathan's as well.
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