The champagne.
The proof.
Underneath it, I typed one message:
Silk sheets tangled behind her.
Warm gold lights reflected against marble walls.
Everything about the picture had been carefully staged to hurt me.
And behind her, half asleep on the bed, was my husband.
“Looks like our CEO has been working very hard on this new project. Vanessa appears deeply committed to supporting him. Congratulations to both of them. May their happiness last a hundred years.”
I hit send.
The message landed in the board chat like a grenade sliding across polished mahogany.
For a few seconds, nothing happened.
Then one person read it.
Then another.
Profile icons began lighting up one by one in the darkness.
I smiled.
Vanessa thought she had destroyed the wife.
She had actually destroyed the husband.
I powered off my phone, removed the SIM card, walked into the marble bathroom, and flushed it down the toilet.
Watching the old version of myself disappear felt strangely peaceful.
The woman who stayed quiet.
The woman who protected her husband’s image.
Gone.
I walked to the hidden safe inside my closet. Behind jewelry I never cared about and handbags I never loved sat a black carry-on suitcase I had packed three months earlier.
Passports.
Contracts.
Bank records.
Two encrypted phones.
I changed into jeans, a black sweater, and sneakers.
No diamonds.
Nothing that belonged to Mrs. Whitmore.
Downstairs, Ethan’s collection of exotic cars gleamed beneath the garage lights. I ignored the Ferrari and the Aston Martin.
Instead, I chose a black Range Rover registered under one of Ethan’s shell companies.