My Husband's Betrayal, My Brilliant Rise

Elena POV:

Thirty minutes later, the aggressive roar of a sports car engine tore through the quiet suburban street. It was followed by the sharp, violently loud screech of tires slamming onto the driveway pavement.

It was the Porsche 911. The exact car I had bought Nathan for his birthday last year. Right now, the sound of that engine made me want to vomit.

The heavy front door was shoved open with a massive bang.

Nathan burst into the living room. He was out of breath, his hair messy, beads of sweat rolling down his forehead.

His eyes frantically scanned the room and instantly locked onto me.

I was sitting dead center on the white leather sofa. My posture was flawless. My legs were crossed, my hands resting perfectly still on my lap. I looked like a judge waiting to deliver a death sentence.

Cowering on the bottom step of the staircase was Misty. She was clutching the baby to her chest, her eyes red and swollen from crying, terrified to make a sound.

Nathan’s face contorted in sheer, absolute panic. But the moment he processed the scene, a switch flipped in his brain. The panic vanished, replaced instantly by a sickeningly sweet, desperate smile.

"Elena! Honey!" he gasped, rushing forward with his arms wide open, aiming to wrap me in a hug. "Baby, please, just listen to me, let me explain—"

I didn’t stand up. I didn't even blink.

I casually reached out, grabbed the heavy, solid crystal ashtray off the coffee table, and hurled it directly at his feet.

The crystal shattered against the hardwood floor with an explosive crash. Shards of glass exploded outward, raining over his expensive shoes.

Nathan froze mid-step, his arms dropping to his sides. He swallowed hard, looking at the broken glass.

"Elena, it's not what it looks like," he started, his voice adopting that smooth, persuasive tone he used when he wanted my money. "Misty is... she's a distant cousin. She was homeless, and she had nowhere to go, so I—"

"A cousin?" I cut him off. My voice was a flat, emotionless blade. I slowly pointed a finger toward the stairs. "Do cousins give birth to babies with your exact curly hair?"

Nathan’s mouth opened and closed. The blood-tie lie was dead on arrival.

He instantly pivoted, throwing Misty straight under the bus.

"She set me up!" he yelled, pointing an accusing finger at the girl on the stairs. "I swear to God, Elena! She got me blackout drunk at a bar! I didn't even know what happened! She planned the whole thing to trap me!"

On the stairs, Misty’s head snapped up. Her tear-filled eyes widened in absolute, horrified disbelief. A pathetic, broken whimper escaped her throat as she stared at the man who had promised her the world.

I unclasped my designer handbag. I reached inside and pulled out a thick stack of stapled papers. I had found them locked inside the safe in his study ten minutes ago.

I threw the papers hard. They hit Nathan right in the chest and fluttered to the floor.

"Then why," I asked, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper, "did I just find a draft of a deed transfer? Why were you trying to add the name of a woman who 'trapped you' to the title of my house?"

Nathan looked down at the papers. All the color drained from his face. He looked like a corpse. He clearly hadn't expected me to crack his safe so fast.

"That—that's just a fake document!" he stammered, sweat pouring down his neck. "It was for tax evasion! My accountant told me to draw it up to hide assets! It means nothing!"

I stood up. The sheer physical disgust I felt for the man standing in front of me made my skin crawl.

"You haven't worked a real job in four years, Nathan," I said, my voice ringing clear and cold in the silent room. "I bought this house. I bought that Porsche sitting in the driveway. I pay off your credit cards every single month. And you used my money to move a parasite into my bed."

Nathan’s face flushed a dark, ugly red. His ego, fragile and pathetic, finally snapped under the weight of the truth.

"Because you're never here!" he roared, his voice echoing off the walls. "You're always on a plane! Always in a boardroom! You're not a wife, Elena, you're a cold, calculating work machine! What was I supposed to do? Live in an empty museum?"

There it was. The classic, textbook victim-blaming. The slut-shaming for a woman daring to be successful.

I didn't yell back. I didn't scream. I just looked at him, finally seeing the absolute bottom-feeding trash he truly was.

I turned my back on him. I walked to the hallway and grabbed the handle of my silver suitcase.

Nathan panicked. The realization hit him that if I walked out that door, his luxury lifestyle, his cars, his endless credit limit—it was all over.

"No, no, Elena, wait!" he begged, lunging forward. He grabbed the metal handle of my suitcase, his knuckles white. "Please! Don't do this! I love you! I can fix this!"

I looked down at his hand touching my belongings.

I violently yanked the handle sideways, shaking his grip loose. Then, I lifted my foot and stomped the stiletto heel of my shoe down onto the top of his leather loafer with all my weight.

Nathan screamed in pain, leaping back and grabbing his foot.

I reached out and pulled open the heavy oak front door.

Outside, the classic Seattle drizzle had started to fall, casting a gray, misty gloom over the driveway.

I paused in the doorway. I looked back over my shoulder at the pathetic, groaning man hopping on one foot, and the weeping girl clutching a baby on the stairs.

I reached into my trench coat pocket. I pulled out the heavy brass keys to the villa.

With a flick of my wrist, I tossed them out into the dark. They landed with a soft thud in the muddy, overgrown grass.

Nathan stared at the spot where the keys vanished, his entire body shaking uncontrollably.

I opened my black umbrella. I stepped out into the rain, not looking back.

"Get ready to receive my lawyer's letter."

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