Kevin Medley
Funny and Knowledge
đ„âđ I slipped a laxative into my husbandâs coffee before he left to meet his mistress⊠and I watched him drink it like he wasnât swallowing his own shame.
I thought the worst part would be seeing him sprint to the bathroom đđœ
But two hours later, I came home and found something far colder than his betrayal⊠đ„¶đ©žđ¶
The morning started with expensive perfume.
Not mine.
The kind she had asked him to wear in a text the night before.
Bruno stood in front of the mirror, adjusting the blue shirt he only wore for âimportant meetings.â
He sprayed cologne on his neck.
Then on his wrists.
Then again on his chest.
Too much perfume for work.
Too much smiling for a Monday.
Too much effort from a man who hadnât noticed my haircut in months.
I was in the kitchen of our house in Del Valle, watching coffee drip into his favorite mug.
The black one.
The one that said: âBest Husband.â
Funny how mugs can mock you so perfectly.
In my hand was the small bottle.
I wonât call it an impulse.
An impulse lasts seconds.
What I felt had been building for months.
The hanging-up calls when I walked in.
The âmeeting ran lateâ excuses.
The shirts smelling like sweet perfume.
The restaurant receipts from Polanco.
And the message I saw the night before while he slept flat on his back, snoring like a man with no guilt at all.
âIâll be waiting for you tomorrow. Donât forget the perfume I like.â
Carolina.
The new secretary.
Twenty-six years old.
Red nails.
An innocent smile.
The same woman who once told me at the office:
â âOh, maâam, Bruno talks about you all the time.â
Yeah.
Probably to explain why he couldnât stay the night.
â âIs that coffee for me?â Bruno asked from the doorway.
He was tightening his belt, carrying that excited kind of rush he no longer had when we went out together.
I handed him the mug.
â âA little gift.â
He looked at me strangely.
â âWow⊠you actually woke up in a good mood today?â
I smiled.
â âI learned from you. How to pretend.â
He let out a nervous laugh⊠but he drank it.
One sip.
Two.
Three.
He finished the whole thing.
Without thanking me.
Without noticing my trembling hand.
Without knowing that this morning, I wouldnât be the one swallowing something bitter.
â âSo where are you going all dressed up?â I asked.
â âMeeting.â
â âMeeting?â
â âStrategy, clients, projects⊠you know.â
Yeah.
I knew.
I knew the hotel.
The time.
Her name.
I even knew Carolina had told him to wear the gray tie because it âbrought her luck.â
â âWell then⊠good luck with your strategy meeting,â I said.
Bruno grabbed his car keys.
He kissed my forehead.
The forehead again.
Cheating men kiss foreheads when theyâre already kissing someone elseâs lips.
The door closed.
I waited.
One minute.
Three.
Five.
Ten.
Then I heard the scream from the garage.
â âDAMN IT!â
I nearly dropped the spoon from laughing.
I stepped onto the porch wearing my best worried-wife face.
Bruno was bent over in pain, one hand on his stomach and the other desperately trying to unlock the door like his own body had betrayed him.
â âWhat the hell did you give me, you psycho?!â
â âCoffee.â
â âIâm not gonna make it to the bathroom!â
â âAw, honey⊠maybe your body gets nervous when youâre about to see someone special?â đ
He froze for half a second.
Long enough.
â âWhat did you say?â
â âNothing. Hurry before your dignity leaks out.â
He ran upstairs like a defeated soldier.
â âDonât use the upstairs bathroom!â I shouted.
He stopped halfway down the hall.
â âWhy?!â
â âBecause Iâm cleaning it.â
The look on his face was poetry.
Ugly poetry.
Desperate poetry.
He locked himself inside the guest bathroom â the same bathroom where heâd accidentally left his phone open days earlier with Carolinaâs messages on the screen.
The sounds coming from inside were things no marriage should ever remember. đœđ„
I sighed.
Picked up my phone.
Opened the group chat with my friends.
âAre the beers still happening?â
They answered instantly.
âOf course.â
âTonight we celebrate your divorce.â
âPut on something hot.â
I touched up my lipstick in the mirror.
Put on my long earrings.
Grabbed my purse.
My keys.
And my dignity.
As I headed for the door, Bruno yelled from the bathroom:
â âWhere are you going?!â
I fixed my hair.
â âTo a meeting.â
Then I paused.
â âA very important meeting.â
And I walked out.
I didnât go straight to the bar.
First I stopped by the bank.
Then my cousinâs law office.
I handed her screenshots.
Receipts.
Photos.
The hotel address.
And copies of the statements showing Bruno had spent months using my card to pay for flowers, dinners, and hotel rooms for his secretary.
My cousin looked through everything in silence.
â âAre you sure about this, Mariana?â
â âMore sure than ever.â
She looked me dead in the eyes.
â âThen today youâre not just losing a husband.â
A pause.
â âToday, he loses his alibi.â
I didnât understand what she meant until later.
I met my friends at a cantina in Roma.
I ordered a beer.
Then another.
I didnât cry.
Not yet.
Because sometimes a woman has to laugh first⊠so she doesnât completely fall apart.
Two hours later, I came home.
The front door was slightly open. đȘ
That stopped me cold.
Bruno always locked the door twice.
Always.
I stepped inside carefully.
â âBruno?â
Silence.
The living room smelled like his expensive cologne.
And something else.
Something metallic. đ©ž
A broken wine glass sat on the table.
His phone was lying on the floor, screen still glowing.
A new message from Carolina lit up the display:
âI already did what you asked. Now tell your wife the truth.â
My stomach dropped.
I climbed the stairs slowly.
The guest bathroom was empty.
The window was open.
And on the sink, beside a stained towel, sat a pharmacy bag with my name written across it.
Then the doorbell rang.
Once.
Twice.
Three times. đ
I opened the door with shaking legs.
Carolina stood there.
Pale.
No makeup.
Eyes swollen from crying.
And in her arms⊠she was holding a baby wrapped in a yellow blanket. đ¶đ
Part 2 : ...
My sister forced a DNA test to prove I wasnât really dadâs daughter so she could take everything at the will readingâbut when the lawyer opened the envelope, he didnât even look at me⊠He turned to her mother, asked one quiet question, and the entire family realized the wrong daughter had been living a lie for thirty years.
I found out my father died through an email from his attorney.
Not a phone call.
Not a relative.
Just a neat little message in my inbox on a Tuesday in Chicago, telling me William Harper had passed away back in Ohio and that my presence was ârequestedâ at the reading of his will.
I hadnât set foot in that house in eighteen years.
Growing up, my stepmother would sit across from me at the dinner table and say things like, âItâs strange, isnât it? She doesnât look like you at all, William,â like I wasnât even there.
My younger sister Alyssa would roll her eyes and laugh with her friends, calling me the stray my dad felt sorry for.
They had framed photos on the wall of âtheirâ perfect little family. I was never in those.
By seventeen, I packed a single suitcase, walked out of that big Midwestern house, and told myself nobody would notice.
Now I was back, turning off the main road and driving up the long driveway lined with trees I used to climb as a kid.
Vivian was waiting.
My stepmother stood in the upstairs window, fingers locked around the curtain. She didnât look like a grieving widow. She looked like someone waiting for a storm to hit.
Inside, the house smelled the sameâpolish, old carpet, too-strong perfume.
Relatives clustered in corners with their plates and coffee, conversations dropping to a murmur whenever I walked by.
âOnly here because of the will,â I heard someone say under their breath.
âDidnât even come visit,â another voice answered.
Alyssa swept into the foyer like she owned the place. Perfect dress. Perfect hair. The same confident smile she used to wear when sheâd shove past me in the hallway.
âCandace,â she said, like the word tasted sour. âWow. You came.â
At the funeral, they sat me in the back row, behind distant cousins I barely remembered. The front rows were reserved for âfamily.â
When I opened the printed program, my name was at the very bottom in tiny letters under a line that said:
âOther relatives.â
Vivian stood at the podium and talked about her âdevoted husbandâ and âour daughter Alyssa,â the life they built together, the holidays in that house.
She never said my name once.
I watched my fatherâs casket and felt⊠nothing. Just a cold, hollow space where a daughter was supposed to fit.
After the service, I was on my way out when a hand brushed mine.
Rosa, the housekeeper, slipped me a folded note and kept walking.
Mr. Harperâs study. Third floor.
He wanted you to see it.
I have the key.
That night, while the house buzzed with people telling stories that didnât include me, I climbed the stairs to the floor that had always been off-limits.
Inside that locked room, I found proof that my father had watched my entire adult life from a distance.
Photos of me in Chicago. Articles with my name on them. A letter in his shaky handwriting I could barely finish without crying.
By the time I walked back downstairs, something in me had shifted.
For the first time, I wondered if the version of my life Vivian had sold me all those years had been a very carefully written script.
Two days later, everyone gathered in the living room before the will reading. Suits, black dresses, the low hum of fake sympathy.
Alyssa stood up, smoothed her skirt, and raised her voice just enough for everyone to hear.
âBefore we read Dadâs will,â she said, âI think we need to address something. Itâs only fair that Candace takes a DNA test to prove sheâs actually Dadâs child if sheâs going to claim anything.â
The room went quiet, then burst into agreeing whispers.
I saw Vivian nod like this was the most reasonable thing in the world.
Old me would have frozen. Apologized. Tried to make myself smaller.
This time, I looked straight at my sister and said, âSure. Iâll do it. But the will talks about âbiological children.â If weâre doing DNA tests, shouldnât everyone who wants a share take one?â
Alyssa laughed, flicking her hair off her shoulder.
âFine by me,â she said. âI have nothing to worry about.â
For a split second, I saw it.
A flicker of something dark in Vivianâs eyes.
Not anger.
Fear.
My grandmotherâmy motherâs motherâwas sitting in the corner. She caught my eye and gave me the smallest nod, like sheâd been waiting twenty years for this exact moment.
A week later, we were in the attorneyâs office.
Leather chairs, big windows, the soft buzz of city traffic outside.
Vivian sat front and center in perfect black, shoulders back, chin up.
Alyssa sat beside her, a little farther away from her mother than before.
I sat across from them with a folder in my lap and my hands steady for the first time in a long time.
âMr. Harper added a special clause to his will,â the lawyer said. âHis estate is to be divided only among his biological children. All parties claiming inheritance agreed to DNA testing. We have the results.â
He picked up a sealed envelope.
The room went silent.
I could hear the air conditioner, the faint tick of his watch.
He opened it, looked down at the paper⊠and then he didnât look at me.
He looked straight at my sister.
And the smile slid right off Alyssaâs face...
đ THIS IS ONLY PART OF THE STORY, THE ENTIRE STORY AND THE EXCITING ENDING ARE IN THE LINK BELOW THE COMMENT đđđ
"Two days after Grandma's funeral, I was still in her kitchen. Then my brother texted: ""We're in the Maldives. We can't access Grandma's account."" I said nothing. Good thing I moved Grandma's $235,000. He panicked when...
He came home sunburned from the Maldives and walked straight into Grandmaâs kitchen like grief was a paperwork problem.
Evan did not knock. He pushed through the screen door, crossed the worn linoleum, and dropped into Grandmaâs chair at the table as if the house had already rolled itself into his name. Leah stayed standing beside him, one hand wrapped around the strap of her tote, her tan still fresh against a black dress that looked too expensive for a room that still smelled like cinnamon and coffee.
âClaire, we need to figure this out,â he said.
Not hello. Not Iâm sorry. Just that soft voice he uses when he wants something, the one that always shows up right before he starts counting other peopleâs money.
I was already sitting at the table with Grandmaâs green metal recipe box in front of me and a mug cooling by my wrist. The box was dented at one corner from when I dropped it as a kid.
âThereâs nothing to figure out,â I said.
His jaw tightened. Leah looked from me to the recipe box, then to the yellow legal envelope near my elbow, and I saw the first thin crack move through her face.
Two days earlier, while I was in this same kitchen opening that recipe box, Evan had texted me a photo of two cocktails on a hotel balcony over water so blue it looked fake.
We just checked in. We canât access Grandmaâs account.
The next message came six minutes later.
Call me now.
My grandmother had been gone forty-eight hours, and my brother was already on an island trying to get into the one thing he thought she had left him. I turned my phone facedown beside the sink and went back to the index cards in my lap.
Grandma had written notes on the backs of them. Not recipe notes. Notes about me.
The peach cobbler card said, For when you need the house to smell like home. The chicken soup card said, For Claire when she is sick. A little extra ginger, just how she likes it.
I sat there reading her handwriting while my brother stared at a locked bank screen from a beach chair half a world away, and for the first time since the funeral, grief and clarity arrived in the same room.
My grandmother was not confused. She was not manipulated. She was exact.
I knew that because I had watched the shift happen months before she died. Evan started showing up more, but never with groceries, never with medication, never with the kind of quiet help older people actually need. He came with questions about the lake house. Leah called with her careful little voice and asked whether the savings account was separate from the property or tied to it somehow.
I contacted a lawyer the next morning. By then Grandma had.
She had seen this coming before any of us wanted to say it out loud.
One of the last afternoons I had with her, she was tired and small in bed, the late sun coming through the curtains in thin gold bars. She reached up and started braiding my hair the way she used to when I was little. Neither of us said what was happening.
A week later, after the funeral casseroles and the porch voices, I went to the lawyerâs office.
The lake house came to me. The savings came to me. Two hundred thirty-five thousand dollars, already moved where only I could legally touch it. When I asked why she had arranged it that way, he looked at me and said, âBecause your grandmother believed your brother would fight you for it, and she wanted you protected before he knew there was a fight.â
So when Evan sat in front of me now, bringing salt air and panic into her kitchen, I did not feel cornered. I felt late to a truth she had already settled.
Leah finally pulled out the chair beside him but never sat back in it. She stayed perched on the edge, fingers clasped too tightly. Through the window over the sink, the lake was flat and silver.
âThis isnât fair,â Evan said. âYou were here every week. You had access. You had influence.â
I almost laughed at the word influence.
I was here because somebody had to change the lightbulbs she couldnât reach. Because somebody had to bring soup after appointments and salt the back steps when the weather turned. Because somebody had to notice when the prescription bottle on the counter was almost empty. Because loving an older person is not a speech. It is a pattern.
Leah tried to soften him. âWeâre family,â she said quietly.
I looked at her tan, at the phone screen lighting up in her lap. âYou went to the Maldives two days after she died,â I said. âDonât use family on me in this kitchen.â
That landed harder than I expected. Leah looked down. Evan looked at the table. For one sharp second, the room lost its script.
Then he did what he has always done when charm fails. He reached for urgency.
âClaire,â he said, leaning in, voice dropping low, âI have debts.â
There it was. Not sorrow. Not memory. Not Grandma. Just the hole in his own life, dressed up like an emergency I was supposed to respect.
I folded my hands on the table and let the silence sit there with him. The recipe box was still between us. My coffee had gone cold. The yellow envelope by my elbow might as well have been glowing.
He saw it. So did Leah.
His eyes flicked down and back up. âWhat did you do?â
Outside, a boat motor carried across the lake and faded. Inside, nobody moved.
I thought about Grandmaâs note on the back of the plain index card. I hope she knows she never could be a burden.
Then I looked at my brother, still waiting for me to rescue him from the consequences of being exactly who he had always been, and I said, âThere is nothing wrong with the account.â
He blinked.
Leah turned her head so fast her earring caught the light.
And when I added, âI know you canât access it,â the whole kitchen changed."...
đ THIS IS ONLY PART OF THE STORY, THE ENTIRE STORY AND THE EXCITING ENDING ARE IN THE LINK BELOW THE COMMENT đđđ
đ I betrayed my husband once, and he punished me for eighteen years by sleeping beside me like my skin was filth. But on the day of his retirement checkup, a doctor opened an old file and said one sentence that broke me worse than my sin. đ
For eighteen years, Arvind never kissed me.
Never hugged me.
Never let his fingers brush mine, not even by mistake.
Every night, he placed one white pillow between us like a small, clean funeral wall.
And I, stupid Naina Deshmukh, believed I deserved it.
Because yes.
I had failed.
One monsoon evening in Mumbai, while rain slapped the tin roofs near Dadar and the streets smelled of wet dust, vada pav, and diesel, I did the one thing I had sworn I would never do.
I cheated on my husband.
His name was Sameer.
He was a vendor at the textile office where I worked.
He was not more handsome than Arvind.
Not richer.
Not kinder.
He simply looked at me like I was still alive.
Like I was not just Naina tai, the woman who packed tiffin, ironed shirts, counted coins for vegetables, and waited every night with dal kept warm on the stove.
It began with messages.
Then tea near the station.
Then one small lie.
Then another.
Until one rainy afternoon, in a cheap lodge near Sion, I removed my mangalsutra and placed it on the bedside table.
Even now, that memory burns my throat.
When I came home that night, my hair still smelled of rain and guilt.
Arvind was sitting in the kitchen.
The pressure cooker was silent.
The clock sounded too loud.
He did not shout.
He did not break a glass.
He did not ask where I had been.
He only looked at my neck.
The empty place where my mangalsutra should have been.
Then he said, âGo bathe, Naina. You smell of another man.â
My legs died under me.
I cried.
I begged.
I told him everything.
The messages.
The three months.
The lodge.
The shame.
Arvind did not slap me.
He did not throw me out.
He did not tell my parents.
That would have been mercy.
He only stood up, went to the bedroom, took one pillow from the cupboard, and placed it between our sides of the bed.
That night, he slept with his back to me.
As if something had died between us and he did not want to touch the body.
From that day, he never touched me again.
Not on Diwali.
Not when my mother died and I collapsed near the funeral pyre.
Not when I had gallbladder surgery and came home bent like an old woman.
Not when our children brought cake and flowers for our thirtieth wedding anniversary.
In front of people, Arvind was perfect.
He served me chai.
Opened the car door.
Called me âNainaâ in a calm voice that made relatives say, âWhat a decent man.â
At home, he was ice.
Polite ice.
Quiet ice.
Cruel ice.
We slept under the same fan, in the same bed, below the same framed picture of Lord Ganesha, breathing the same tired air.
But always with that pillow between us.
A white border.
A punishment no one else could see.
Sometimes, at two in the morning, I would wake up and find him staring at the ceiling.
I would whisper, âArvindâŠâ
Without turning, he would say, âSleep. I have work in the morning.â
So I swallowed my apology again.
For eighteen years.
I grew old asking permission even to breathe.
I wore lipstick; he did not look.
I bought sarees from the Sunday market; he did not notice.
I cooked his favorite poha; he ate without tasting.
Sadness settled in my bones, but I never left.
Because every time I thought of leaving, one sentence rose inside me like poison.
âYou earned this.â
Our children grew up thinking their parents were peaceful.
The family called Arvind a saint for not abandoning me.
The aunties in the building said, âNaina, you are lucky. Men like him donât exist anymore.â
I smiled with my soul bleeding behind my teeth.
If they had seen our bedroom, they would have understood.
A man can bury a woman without raising his voice.
Everything changed after Arvind retired.
That Monday morning felt wrong from the start.
He did not drink his tea.
He did not read the newspaper.
He sat at the dining table with both hands on his knees, staring at a small crack in the wall like it had come to collect him.
âI have my retirement medical checkup today,â he said.
âI will come with you,â I replied out of habit.
I expected him to refuse.
He stayed silent.
And somehow, his silence frightened me more than his rejection.
We went to a government clinic near Andheri.
The waiting room was full of retired men holding files, wives clutching medicine packets, and nurses calling names over the smell of sanitizer and machine coffee.
Arvind did not hold my hand.
Of course not.
But that day, he walked slowly.
As if he was carrying something heavier than age.
Inside the consultation room, the doctor opened his reports.
One page.
Then another.
Then one old yellow file from the bottom of the stack.
His face changed.
He looked at Arvind.
Then at me.
âMr. Deshmukh,â the doctor said carefully, âthis did not happen overnight.â
My chest turned cold.
âWhat is wrong with him?â I asked.
The doctor did not answer.
He pulled out a folded note from the old file.
Arvind suddenly reached for it, but his hand trembled so badly the paper slipped.
Then the doctor looked straight at me and said the sentence that split eighteen years of my life open.
âMrs. Naina⊠before I speak about your husbandâs condition, I need to know whether you were ever told what he signed eighteen years ago.â
My sister emptied my accounts and vanished with her boyfriend. I was heartbroken until my 9 year old daughter said 'Mom, don't worry. I handled it' then, days later my sister called screamingâŠ
I never imagined my life would unravel because of the sister I once carried on my hip. My name is Melissa Carter, and for most of my life, my younger sister Ashley was my responsibility. After our parents divorced when we were kids, I became the one who packed her lunches, fixed her homework, and soothed her nightmares. I was the stable oneâthe one who grew up fast, got a job, married, had a daughter, and fought tooth and nail to build a life that wouldnât collapse under me.
Ashley⊠was different. Sweet, funny, charming, but drawn to chaos like a magnet. I spent years helping herâemotionally, financially, practically. And I kept telling myself sheâd eventually find her footing.
By the time I was 36 and my daughter Lila was nine, I finally had a sense of financial security. Iâd built three savings accounts: a college fund for Lila, an emergency fund, and a business fund I hoped to use to start a small consulting company. Every dollar came from sacrificeâlate nights, double shifts, and saying ânoâ to every luxury.
Ashley was drifting againânew jobs every month, unstable boyfriends, constant âtemporary loansâ she never repaid. When she introduced me to Jake, her newest boyfriend, I felt a knot in my stomach. Something about him was offâhis slick confidence, his probing questions, the way he scanned my house like he was calculating its value.
But Ashley insisted he was âthe one,â and I wanted to believe her.
Then came the business trip. Three days out of state for a required conference. Ashley begged to stay at my house so she could watch Lila, and though hesitation burned in my gut, I agreed. I even ignored the red flag when she asked for my online banking password âin case of an emergency.â I didnât want a fight. I wanted peace.
I left for the trip. I checked in with them. Everything seemed fine.
Until I got back.
My accounts⊠were empty.
All three of them.
Fifty-six thousand dollars vanished.
Ashley and Jake were gone.
I collapsed in my kitchen, shaking so violently I could barely breathe. It felt like my entire worldâevery hour Iâd worked, every dream Iâd builtâwas ripped away in one ruthless swipe.
That night, as I stared blankly at the wall trying not to break apart, Lila climbed onto the couch beside me. Her small hand rested on mine, steady and strangely calm.
âMom,â she said softly, âdonât worry.â
I looked at her through blurry, exhausted tears. âSweetheart⊠I donât know what weâre going to do.â
She shook her head with unexpected certainty.
âMom⊠I handled it.â
I froze.
âWhat do you mean you handled it?â
Lila stood, walked to her bedroom, returned with my old phoneâone Iâd given her just for games. She placed it in my hands.
âThereâs something you need to see.â
And suddenly, I felt the ground shift beneath me againânot from loss this time, but from the terrifying possibility that my nine-year-old daughter had uncovered something far bigger than I ever realized...To be continued in C0mments đ
My husband secretly bought a 5-million-dollar house for his mistress... when the bank notified me, I stayed as calm as if nothing had happened. But three days later, I took my parents-in-law there, and right in front of him, I pointed at that woman and asked: "Is this the new maid for our mansion?"... The ending left her paralyzed.đČđ„
The bank notification arrived at 9:17 in the morning, just as I was sitting in my office on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, about to sign an important contract.
"Real estate transaction notification in the amount of $5,000,000 confirmed from the joint marital account."
I stared at my phone screen for almost ten seconds.
I didn't ask any questions.
My hand didn't tremble.
Nor did I fly into a rage at that moment.
I simply, in silence, dialed the number of my account manager at the bank.
Five minutes later, I had all the information.
The house had been purchased in a new luxury gated community in Calabasas, under a shell company's name. But the real beneficiary was a woman named Chloe Bennett: twenty-six years old, eight years younger than me, an employee at a high-end interior design showroom whom my husband had once introduced to me as an "associate vendor."
My husband, Alexander Vance, truly knew how to lie very well.
He hadn't bought that house with his own money.
He had used the exact funds that the bank considered our joint marital assets.
In other words, he took money from our marriage to build a love nest for his mistress.
I leaned back in my chair and took a deep breath.
My assistant, who was standing in front of me, saw me too quiet and thought I was feeling unwell. Cautiously, she asked if I wanted to postpone the meeting.
I looked up and gave a faint smile.
"There's no need. Everything remains exactly the same."
And so it was. I lived as if nothing had happened for the next three days.
I kept coming home at my usual time.
I kept having dinner with my son.
I kept asking Alexander how his day at work went. I even poured him wine as if nothing was wrong.
Alexander had no idea that I had already received the bank notification.
Nor did he know that, in less than twenty-four hours, I already had my hands on a copy of the transaction, pictures of the house, the payment history, photos of him going in and out of that place, and even the complete background of the mistress he was trying so hard to hide.
My name is Victoria Carrington.
In Los Angeles, very few people know that I am the person behind the Carrington family's chain of investment funds, because I have never been in the habit of showing off.
For eight years of marriage, I practically let Alexander live convinced that he was the real breadwinner of the household.
I let him believe that the mansion in Beverly Hills existed because he "knew how to make moves."
I let his family think that I was nothing more than a polite, discreet wife, good at taking care of everything.
I never bothered to explain anything to them.
Because those who enjoy underestimating others the most, fall the hardest when their time comes.
On the morning of the third day, I called my parents-in-law myself.
"Do you have some time? I want to invite you to see a house."
My mother-in-law, Theresa Vance, asked me in surprise:
"A house? What house?"
I answered with a light voice:
"A very special house. I think you should see it with your own eyes."
My father-in-law, Ernest Vance, who was always a man of few words, stayed silent for a few seconds before answering:
"If you're calling us personally, then it's not a minor issue. Let's go."
I went to pick them up in my car myself.
During the whole ride to Calabasas, hardly anyone spoke.
I wasn't in a hurry to explain anything, either.
I wanted them to see it with their own eyes.
I wanted Alexander to hear it from his own family.
And I wanted that mistress to understand why there are women who stay silent not because they are weak...
but because they are waiting for the exact moment to strike.
When the black SUV pulled up in front of a brand-new house in that exclusive gated community, my mother-in-law even let out an admiring comment:
"What a beautiful house. Are you planning on buying another property?"
I unbuckled my seatbelt and smiled.
"Something like that."
I rang the doorbell.
A few seconds later, the door opened.
And the person who appeared was Alexander.
His face turned stark white the moment he saw me.
But when his eyes slid toward my parents-in-law, who were standing right behind me, his entire body seemed to freeze.
"D... Dad? Mom? What are you doing here?.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Telephone
Website
Address
376 Duck Creek Road
Los Angeles, CA
95134