My husband is going to kill me. Not with a bullet, but with a text message I shouldn't have seen.
It suddenly appeared on the iPad at home: "Last night was crazy. I can't stop thinking about that hotel room. You owe me a second round... the sooner the better."
The first person I thought of was our sixteen-year-old son, Marco. He's there... looking for casual sex? But he's so young!
The truth completely devastated me when I found a condom in my husband's dirty clothes. The promiscuity wasn't Marco's fault, but that of my husband of twenty years, Lorenzo.
This sense of betrayal intensified when I overheard him talking to his son. They mocked my "little flaws" and called me boring. Marco even told his father, "You should leave her and be with Katya." Katya-his history tutor.
Their plot completely destroyed what little love I had left for them.
Now I have all the evidence, and the most important event of his career-the Mafia family party-is next week. It's the perfect stage.
He thought I would be his supportive wife, but he was wrong. I will not only leave him, but I will also completely destroy his world in front of everyone.
Chapter 1
Alessa POV:
My husband was going to kill me. Not with a bullet, but with a text message I was never meant to see.
The scent of lemon polish was sharp in the air, a clean, sterile smell that clung to the marble countertops of our sprawling, silent kitchen. It was my job to maintain this silence, this perfection. Lorenzo, my husband, a man whose name carried the weight of an old and powerful family, demanded it.
Our son, Marco, was upstairs, likely scrolling through his phone instead of studying.
I picked up the family iPad from the island, intending only to check the weather for a charity luncheon the next day. A green bubble popped up on the screen, a notification from an unknown number. My heart gave a sharp, painful lurch.
"Last night was insane. Can't stop thinking about that hotel room. You owe me another moment like that... ASAP. "
The message wasn't for me.
My first thought was a mother's instinct, sharp and protective: Marco. He was sixteen, the heir to this formidable legacy, and a liability like this-an older, calculating woman-could be his undoing.
Shame washed over me, hot and suffocating. I sank onto a barstool, my legs suddenly too weak to hold me.
I couldn't go to Lorenzo. I couldn't go to anyone in our circle.
Instead, I opened an encrypted forum on my own device, a private sanctuary for women like me, women who lived a certain kind of life. Anonymously, I typed out a vague version of the truth, framing it as a mother's fear for her son. I mentioned the hotel, the older woman, the crudeness of the message.
The replies were swift, a mix of sympathy and hard, cynical advice.
SicilianRose wrote: Why do you assume it's your son?
"Who else could it be?" I typed back, my fingers trembling. My husband was a pillar of respect, a man whose honor was everything.
BrooklynBelle was more direct: "'You owe me another moment like that' sounds transactional. Not like some kid's clumsy hookup."
ChiTownQueen added: Can a 16-year-old even book a suite at The Atherton without his parents knowing?
The Atherton. A five-star hotel on neutral ground. Marco's secure card had a spending limit that wouldn't cover a bottle of their cheapest champagne, let alone a room. A cold seed of doubt began to sprout in the pit of my stomach.
Then, a new comment appeared, simple and chilling.
Ma'am, is there another man in your house?
Lorenzo. His name flashed in my mind-an impossible, treasonous thought. He was my husband of twenty years. We were a dynasty.
The final blow came from a user I recognized by reputation only, LegalEagle88, a trusted advisor from an allied circle. His comment was cold and clinical.
The emoji. It's a code. It suggests an older man trying to keep up.
Ice seeped into my bones. Lorenzo was forty-five.
The front door clicked open. Lorenzo's voice, deep and confident, boomed through the foyer. "Alessa! I'm home!"
He strode into the kitchen, his handsome face lit with a broad smile. He held a box of expensive chocolates, a peace offering for being late.
"You look pale, sweetheart. Everything okay?"
I forced a smile that felt like cracking glass. "Just tired."
He came up behind me, wrapping his arms around my waist, his chin resting on my shoulder. "I'll run you a bath. Give you a massage later."
I stiffened, a barely perceptible tremor. "I'm fine. I'm glad you're home." I pulled away gently, before he could feel the revulsion coiling in my gut.
He headed upstairs to check on Marco, his footsteps heavy with authority. I was left alone with his briefcase. I needed to unpack for him, to restore the familiar rhythm of our life, to pretend nothing was broken.
In the laundry room, I unzipped his suitcase. My fingers brushed against the front pocket, closing around a small, foil packet. I pulled it out. It was the kind designed for a sterile, fleeting intimacy that had no place in our twenty years of life together.
The exact same brand I had found at the bottom of Marco's laundry basket months ago. I'd dismissed it then as typical teenage experimentation, relieved he was being safe.
My knees gave out. I sank to the cold tile floor, the wrapper clutched in my fist. The truth hit me like a physical blow, knocking the air from my lungs.
It wasn't Marco. It was never Marco.
It was Lorenzo.
My phone buzzed. A private message. It was from LegalEagle88.
I was a friend of your father's. He was a good man. My advice to you is this: Do not confront him. Gather your proof. Then expose the world he has built on lies.
My vision cleared. The nausea receded, replaced by a glacial calm. The canary in the gilded cage was dead.
I typed back a single, brutal reply.
"Tell me how."