
Chapter 1 of The Wife Who Knew Everything
The alarm pierced through my dreams at 5:30 AM, dragging me from the warm cocoon of sleep into another perfectly orchestrated day. I rolled over, my hand instinctively reaching for Ryan's side of the bed, but found only cool sheets and the faint impression where his body had been.
He'd left early for his morning run again.
I padded to the kitchen in my silk pajamas, the marble floor cold against my bare feet. The morning routine was as familiar as breathing—açaí, blueberries, almond milk, and a handful of spinach into the Vitamix. The machine's whir filled the silence of our pristine apartment, drowning out the hollow echo that seemed to follow me everywhere lately.
The smoothie turned out perfect, as always. Deep purple, Instagram-worthy, packed with antioxidants that would keep my skin glowing and my energy levels steady through another twelve-hour day at the firm. I poured it into my favorite glass tumbler, the one Ryan had bought me for our third anniversary, back when he still remembered things like that.
Upstairs, I selected the Reformation wrap dress from my closet—the emerald green one that made my eyes pop and hugged my curves in all the right places. In the mirror, I applied my makeup with practiced precision: concealer to hide the faint shadows under my eyes, mascara to make them look wider and more awake than I felt, a subtle nude lipstick that said 'effortlessly polished.'
The woman staring back at me looked successful, put-together, enviable. Everything I'd worked so hard to become.
Ryan appeared in the doorway just as I was fastening my pearl earrings, his hair still damp from the shower, tie hanging loose around his neck. Even rumpled, he was devastatingly handsome—the kind of man who turned heads in restaurants and made other women shoot envious glances my way.
'You look beautiful,' he said, but his eyes were already on his phone, thumb scrolling through emails.
'Thank you.' I stepped closer, breathing in his cologne—the Tom Ford I'd bought him last Christmas. 'What time will you be home tonight?'
He leaned down and brushed his lips against mine, a perfunctory kiss that lasted exactly two seconds. 'Might be late. Big presentation tomorrow, you know how it is.'
I did know. I'd been knowing for months now, watching him slip away one 'late night' at a time.
'Of course,' I said, forcing brightness into my voice. 'I'll probably be working late too. The Morrison merger is getting complicated.'
'That's my girl,' he said, already walking away. 'Knock 'em dead, Harper.'
The drive to the firm took thirty-five minutes through downtown traffic, my Tesla gliding silently between lanes of honking cars. I used the time to mentally prepare for the day ahead—client calls, document reviews, the endless dance of corporate law that had consumed my life for the past eight years.
The Morrison merger was indeed a beast. Two pharmaceutical companies, each with their own labyrinth of subsidiaries and international holdings, trying to become one without triggering antitrust violations. I'd been living and breathing this deal for three months, and today we were finally seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.
'Harper, excellent work on the Morrison due diligence,' James Patterson, the senior partner, said as he passed my office around noon. 'Keep this up and you'll be making partner by next year.'
Partner. The golden ring I'd been chasing since law school, the validation that would make all the sacrificed weekends and missed dinners worth it. I should have felt triumphant, but instead, there was just a hollow satisfaction, like biting into a beautiful apple only to find it mealy inside.
I was reviewing contract amendments when my phone buzzed with a call from Sienna.
'Harper! Thank God you picked up. I'm having a crisis about whether to get bangs, and I need your brutally honest opinion.'
I laughed despite myself. Sienna had been my anchor since college, the friend who could make me laugh even when the world felt like it was crumbling. 'Absolutely not. Remember senior year?'
'Ugh, you're right. I looked like a deranged poodle.' She paused. 'But speaking of hair disasters, did you see Ryan's company holiday party photos on Instagram?'
My pen stopped moving. 'What photos?'
'Oh, probably nothing. Just the usual corporate stuff. But there was this one picture... Ryan's standing with some of his colleagues, and there's this woman next to him. Young, blonde, very touchy-feely. Her hand's on his arm, and she's looking at him like he hung the moon.'
The contract blurred in front of me. 'What do you mean, touchy-feely?'
'I'm sure it's innocent! You know how these work events are—everyone's a little drunk, personal space goes out the window. I just thought you should know in case someone else mentions it.'
After we hung up, I stared at my computer screen without seeing it. Ryan hadn't mentioned any holiday party. When had it been? Last week? Last month? How many details of his life had become mysteries to me?
The rest of the afternoon passed in a haze of forced productivity. I reviewed documents, made calls, attended meetings, all while a cold knot of anxiety grew in my stomach. By the time I left the office at eight PM, I felt like I was walking through water.
The apartment was dark when I got home. No note, no text explaining where Ryan was or when he'd be back. I heated up leftover Thai food and ate it standing at the kitchen counter, the silence pressing against my eardrums.
At ten-thirty, my phone buzzed with a text from Ryan: 'Working all night. Don't wait up. Love you.'
Love you. Two words that used to make my heart flutter, now feeling as routine as a weather report.
I lay in our king-sized bed, staring at the ceiling as the digital clock ticked past eleven. The sheets felt too big, too empty, like I was floating in an ocean of Egyptian cotton. Sleep seemed impossible, my mind churning with images of blonde women and work parties I hadn't been invited to.
Reaching for my phone, I opened my fitness app to check my step count for the day. The screen glowed in the darkness, showing my usual stats—8,847 steps, 45 minutes of activity, average heart rate of 72 BPM.
But then I saw it. Another entry, one I hadn't made.
Ryan's profile was still linked to my account from when we'd tried that couples' fitness challenge last year. And there, glowing accusingly in the blue light, was his data from tonight:
11:47 PM. The Langham Hotel. Heart rate: 165 BPM. Duration: 32 minutes.
The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering onto the nightstand. I stared at the ceiling, my own heart rate spiking as the truth crashed over me like ice water.
Ryan wasn't working late.
He was at The Langham Hotel, and his heart was racing for thirty-two minutes straight.
The perfect life I'd built, the future I'd planned, the partnership I'd sacrificed everything for—it all crumbled in the space of a heartbeat, leaving me alone in the dark with the devastating clarity of betrayal.
Read the Full Novel on

















