

Chapter 1 of When His Mistress Pushed Me Down the Stairs
I shouldn’t have been home. A canceled afternoon board meeting had given me a rare pocket of silence in the two-million-dollar Manhattan penthouse I had bought, decorated, and maintained. Sunlight spilled across the wide-plank oak floors, catching the dust motes dancing in the heavy quiet. I walked into the master bedroom to change out of my suit. The duvet was perfectly smoothed—Diana, our housekeeper, was always thorough. But on Roger’s nightstand, half-hidden beneath his charging cable, sat a sleek, silver voice recorder.
He used it for his advertising pitches, dictating ideas when inspiration struck. I picked it up, intending to move it to his leather briefcase. As I did, my thumb brushed the playback button.
*Click.*
The audio was crisp. Too crisp.
*“Wait, let me just—”* A giggle. High, breathy, and unmistakably familiar. Kori. Diana’s twenty-one-year-old daughter. The girl I had mentored. The girl whose college textbooks I had quietly paid for just last semester.
*“Leave it on,”* Roger’s voice murmured. Deep, velvet, the exact register he used when he wanted something from me. *“I want to hear how loud you get when she’s not here.”*
The sounds that followed didn’t just break my heart; they hollowed out my chest. The rhythmic, agonizingly familiar creak of our custom mattress. The wet, slapping friction of bodies intertwined. I stopped breathing. My vision narrowed to the cold silver device in my palm.
*“God, you’re so much tighter than her,”* Roger groaned.
*“Does she even know how to touch you?”* Kori mocked, her voice dripping with the effortless cruelty of youth. *“She’s always working. So boring.”*
*“Let her work,”* Roger panted, his breath hitching. *“Her bonuses pay for that Birkin bag I’m getting you next week. Come here.”*
My fingers whitened around the metal casing until my joints ached. A phantom hand gripped my throat, cutting off my air. Six years of marriage. Six years of funding his dreams, managing his fragile ego, building this immaculate life. Reduced to a punchline in my own bed. Heat flared behind my eyes, a tidal wave of humiliation and grief threatening to drown me right there on the Persian rug.
I closed my eyes. I inhaled the faint, lingering scent of Roger’s Tom Ford cologne in the air. I held it. Then, I exhaled.
I did not shatter.
Slowly, deliberately, I set the recorder down. I aligned it exactly where it had been, precisely parallel to the brass lamp base.
My heels clicked against the hardwood as I walked to the kitchen, the sound sharp and rhythmic. I moved with mechanical precision, grinding the dark roast beans, measuring the water. The violent roar of the espresso machine covered the ringing in my ears. I poured the coffee black. The bitter heat scalded my tongue, grounding me in my own body.
I pulled out my phone and dialed.
“I need you here,” I said when the line connected. “Now.”
“Naomi?” Sophia’s voice shifted instantly from casual to razor-sharp. “I’m in a cab. Twenty minutes.”
She made it in eighteen. The heavy front door swung open, and Sophia burst into the foyer, her dark eyes scanning the room for blood or fire. She found me sitting at the marble kitchen island, hands folded around a steaming mug, my posture perfectly straight.
“What happened?” She dropped her bag, her chest heaving as she hurried over. Her eyes searched my face, looking for the crack.
“Roger is sleeping with Kori Martin,” I said. My voice sounded hollow, like it belonged to someone else. “In my bed. He’s using my money to buy her designer bags.”
Sophia froze. Her jaw tightened, the color draining from her face before a flush of absolute fury replaced it. “I will kill him. I will literally push him off the balcony.”
“No, you won't,” I said, taking a slow sip of my coffee. “Because that would be quick. And he wouldn't suffer.”
Sophia stared at me. She knew me better than anyone in the world. She saw past the stillness, recognizing the absolute zero temperature of my anger. She pulled out a high-backed leather stool and sat opposite me, her gaze locking onto mine.
“You’re not confronting him,” she stated. It wasn’t a question.
“If I confront him now, he’ll cry. He’ll blame the pressure of his career. He’ll apologize, and she’ll play the naive victim.” I traced the rim of my mug. “They think I’m just the bank. The boring, oblivious wife.”
Sophia leaned forward, her elbows resting on the cool marble. “So, what do we do?”
“We take it all,” I said softly. “Every dollar. Every ounce of his reputation. I want him ruined, Sophia. I want her stripped of every fantasy she’s built in my house.”
For the next three hours, the kitchen island transformed into a war room. The afternoon sun dipped below the Manhattan skyline, casting long, sharp shadows across the marble. We didn't talk about my pain. We talked about leverage. We mapped out Roger's vulnerabilities: his desperate need for professional validation, his stagnant advertising career, his absolute financial dependence on my accounts. We dissected Kori's vanity and her meticulously curated Instagram aspirations.
“He needs a push,” I murmured, jotting down a timeline on a legal pad. “Something that makes him feel powerful. Untouchable.”
“People make the worst mistakes when they think they're winning,” Sophia agreed, her eyes gleaming with a dark, dangerous loyalty.
I looked down at the legal pad. The ink was stark against the white paper. Six years of absolute devotion, erased in twenty minutes of audio. I had built Roger Davis from the ground up.
Now, I was going to tear him down to the studs.
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