She was everything I would never be allowed to become: tall, elegant, polished like a luxury brand. Her manners were flawless. Her smile was precise. She walked through my home in heels that cost my entire monthly “limit,” making notes in a leather notebook, glancing at me with a mild condescension that felt rehearsed.
“You have an interesting approach,” she said, eyeing my hand-embroidered curtains. “Very soulful. But for a home of this caliber, you need something more current. Don’t you agree?”
Lysander stood beside her, nodding as if she’d invented taste itself. His gaze slid over her with an interest so obvious it made my skin go cold.
But I kept smiling.
A good wife always smiled.
The shift in Lysander started gradually, then became relentless. Late returns with soft explanations. Private calls “so I don’t disturb you.” A new cologne “from a grateful client.” I made excuses for each detail, clinging to stability like it was a life raft.
Then I found a receipt.
Apex Rooftop. Tuesday, 8:05 p.m. Dinner for two. $600.
A number that could have covered my personal expenses for two months.
The item list was practically a poem: premium champagne, specialty steak, a chocolate dessert meant to be shared with forks and laughter.
That Tuesday, Lysander had allegedly been finishing a quarterly report “until late.”
Sitting on the edge of our bed, receipt in my hand, I felt the world crack—not loudly, but cleanly. It wasn’t even the betrayal itself. Some part of my mind had been bracing for that truth.
What shattered me was the price tag.
Years of humiliation over a coffee receipt. Years of “just ask” turning into cross-examination. And here was $600 spent without a blink—on romance that wasn’t mine.
The next morning I dressed in plain clothes, grabbed my modest Honda Civic—Lysander had “graciously allowed” me to keep it after selling my Lexus (“Why does a family need two luxury cars?”)—and drove downtown.
I parked across from Sovereign Tower and waited.
At 11:30 a.m., my suspicion became a picture.
Lysander stepped out with Kalista Royale. She laughed, head tilted back, hand resting on his shoulder like she belonged there. She looked like the heroine of a glossy movie, red coat bright against the city. I looked like an extra in a scene of someone else’s happiness.
They got into his Porsche and drove away.
I followed.
They went to the same restaurant where three years earlier Lysander and I celebrated our anniversary—the one he later declared “too expensive for regular visits.”
For two hours I sat in my car and watched them through the panoramic windows. They held hands over white linen. She touched his face with tenderness I remembered from the first months of my marriage. He kissed her palm with reverence.
By her silver Mercedes, they kissed like nobody could see. Like they were teenagers with adult bank accounts.
The following weeks turned me into a shadow.w
Tuesdays and Thursdays became patterns. Restaurants. Museums. High-end boutiques. Walks that weren’t innocent. I watched my husband buy Kalista jewelry at Tiffany’s with a card I didn’t even know existed. Bouquets for her looked like art installations. On my birthday, I got five grocery-store tulips and a reminder to keep receipts.
Then came the real shock.