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My Husband Gave Our Anniversary Ring to His Mistress First Novel Cover

My Husband Gave Our Anniversary Ring to His Mistress First

Elena’s third anniversary turns into a nightmare when she finds out Marcus, her billionaire husband, gave a custom ring to his mistress before her. This discovery uncovers a secret affair that destroys her trust. Refusing to be a second choice, Elena chooses to abandon her life of luxury. As she processes the betrayal, she seeks justice and the strength to rebuild, determined to reclaim her dignity and start a new chapter on her own terms.
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Chapter 3

I sent the message at 6:47 in the morning, before Xander was awake, before the coffee finished brewing. A single line through an encrypted channel I hadn't touched in five years.

*Need to know if the old infrastructure is still viable.*

I set the phone face-down on the kitchen counter and watched the espresso drip into the cup.

Marcus called back in fifty-three minutes.

'It's been waiting,' he said. No preamble. No questions. That was Marcus — he had always understood that the most important conversations were the ones that didn't need explaining.

'Keep it quiet,' I told him. 'I'm not ready yet.'

'Understood.' A pause. Then, quieter: 'It's good to hear your voice, Fox.'

I hadn't heard that name in five years. It landed somewhere in my chest, in a place I'd thought was sealed off. I pressed my palm flat against the counter and breathed through it.

'I'll be in touch,' I said, and ended the call.

I stood there for a moment in the quiet kitchen, the espresso going warm in my hand. Through the bedroom wall I could hear Xander's alarm beginning its slow climb to full volume. I picked up my cup and moved to the window, looking out at the gray February sky.

Not yet. But soon.

---

He told me about the reservation two weeks in advance. A rooftop terrace at a Michelin-starred restaurant in midtown — private, heated, with a view of the city that cost more per table than most people's monthly rent. He mentioned it the way he mentioned everything he was proud of: casually, as if it had just occurred to him, as if the effort were effortless.

'Valentine's Day,' he said, looking up from his phone. 'Just us. I want it to be special.'

'It sounds perfect,' I said.

I wore the anniversary ring.

I chose a black dress — simple, fitted, the kind that photographs well and gives nothing away. I sat across from him on the terrace while the city glittered forty floors below us and the champagne arrived in a bucket of ice, and I listened to every word he said.

He was good at this. I had always known he was good at this, but watching him now — with the knowledge I carried folded inside me like a blade — I could see the architecture of it more clearly. The way he leaned forward when he spoke, creating the illusion of intimacy. The way he held his glass, relaxed and unhurried, performing ease. The way his eyes stayed on mine, steady and warm, the practiced gaze of a man who had learned that eye contact reads as sincerity.

'You are my compass,' he said, somewhere between the amuse-bouche and the first course. He had his hand over mine on the table. 'I mean that. Everything I've built — none of it exists without you. You are the reason I know which direction is north.'

I smiled at him. The smile reached my eyes. I had been practicing it for weeks.

'That's a beautiful thing to say,' I told him.

He squeezed my hand. The ring pressed into my finger.

Halfway through the main course, his phone lit up on the table. He glanced at it — a flicker, barely a second — and then looked back at me with an apologetic tilt of his head.

'I'm so sorry. I have to take this. Two minutes, I promise.'

'Of course,' I said. 'Go.'

I watched him cross the terrace toward the interior corridor, his jacket perfectly cut, his posture easy and unhurried. A man with nothing to hide.

I counted to ninety. Then I set my napkin on the table, excused myself to no one, and followed.

---

The private corridor ran along the back of the restaurant, past the sommelier's station and a row of framed wine labels, toward the restrooms at the far end. The lighting was low and amber. My heels were quiet on the carpet.

I heard them before I saw them.

Not words. Just sound — the particular quality of silence that isn't silence, the kind that has breath in it, urgency, the compressed noise of two people trying to be invisible.

They were in the alcove beside the restroom entrance. Xander had his back to me. Indie's hands were in his hair. She was wearing a red dress I recognized from her last stream, and her eyes were closed, and neither of them heard me stop.

I stood there for four seconds.

I counted them. One. Two. Three. Four.

I looked at the line of his shoulders. The way her fingers curled at the back of his neck. The champagne flush on her collarbone. I looked at all of it with the same flat, total attention I used to give to market data — absorbing everything, feeling nothing, storing it all.

Then I turned around and walked back to the table.

---

The soufflé arrived twelve minutes after Xander returned, slightly flushed, his tie fractionally looser, his story about the call already assembled and delivered. I had listened to it with my chin in my hand and my eyes on his face and said *of course, these things happen* in exactly the right tone.

The soufflé was perfect. Dark chocolate, barely set in the center, with a dusting of cocoa and a small pot of crème anglaise on the side. I ate every bite.

Xander watched me with something that looked like tenderness. 'You seem happy tonight,' he said.

'I am,' I told him. And in some cold, precise, unnameable way, it was true.

When the check came, I added forty percent to the tip. The waiter — young, attentive, who had refilled my water glass without being asked and never once made me feel invisible — thanked me with genuine surprise.

'The soufflé was exceptional,' I said. 'Please tell the kitchen.'

In the car on the way home, Xander held my hand and talked about a fund he was watching, a position he was considering, the quarter shaping up better than projected. I looked out the window at the city moving past — the lights, the bridges, the dark ribbon of the river — and thought about Marcus.

*It's been waiting.*

So had I.

My hands rested in my lap, perfectly still, the anniversary ring catching the passing light. A promotional freebie. A trinket. A period at the end of a sentence he didn't know I was already writing.

I turned back to Xander and smiled, and he smiled back, and neither of us said anything that was true.

The Fox was patient.

But the stillness was almost over.

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