When His Mistress Pushed Me Down the Stairs

The micro-camera felt entirely too light in my palm, a tiny black bead that held the weight of my entire marriage.

"Angle it down a fraction," Sophia murmured, balancing on the edge of my custom velvet sofa. "If he sits on the chaise, you want his face, not the top of his head."

I nudged the lens deeper into the carved mahogany molding of the living room bookshelf. It vanished perfectly into the shadows.

Roger was at the agency, pitching a campaign he was already struggling to land. Kori was out "shopping"—a hobby she had taken up with alarming frequency lately. The two-million-dollar penthouse, its deed now safely sitting in Sophia's name, was silent except for the steady rhythm of our breathing.

We moved with surgical precision. One camera went behind the ventilation grate in the master bedroom, angled perfectly toward the custom mattress. Another was tucked into the spine of a decorative encyclopedia in Roger's home office.

"That's the last one," Sophia said, wiping a smudge of dust from her jeans as she stepped down.

I looked around the immaculate space. The trap was set. Now, I just needed to give them the room to step into it.

***

The next morning, I packed a sleek leather weekender bag.

"Chicago?" Roger asked, leaning against the bedroom doorframe with a cup of coffee. He wore his favorite cashmere sweater—the one I had bought him for his birthday.

"Just forty-eight hours," I said smoothly, zipping the bag. "A sudden client crisis. I couldn't get out of it, even with the... condition."

I placed a hand gently over my flat stomach.

Roger's eyes softened, a masterclass in fabricated devotion. He crossed the room, setting his mug down to wrap his arms around me. His hand rested over mine on my stomach. The heat of his palm seeped through my silk blouse, making the skin underneath crawl.

"Don't push yourself too hard," he murmured, kissing my temple. The familiar scent of his Tom Ford cologne hit my nose, cloying and thick. "You're carrying precious cargo now. I'll hold down the fort."

"I know you will," I whispered. *I'm counting on it.*

I didn't go to LaGuardia. I took a cab straight to Sophia's apartment in Brooklyn.

Her dining table had been transformed into a command center. Three laptops sat open, their screens emitting a cool, bluish glow in the dim room.

For the first few hours, nothing happened. Then, at six o'clock, the front door of the penthouse opened on feed one.

Roger walked in. Ten minutes later, the door opened again. Kori.

Over the next forty-eight hours, Sophia and I sat in the glow of the monitors, subsisting on black coffee and cold takeout. I watched strangers wear my life. I watched Kori drink my vintage Bordeaux from my crystal glasses. I watched them tangle in the sheets of my bed.

I didn't cry. My chest felt like it was packed with dry ice—cold, dense, and burning to the touch.

"Naomi," Sophia said sharply on the second afternoon. "Look at feed three."

I shifted my gaze to the monitor displaying Roger's home office. He was sitting at his mahogany desk, bathed in the glow of his desktop monitor. Kori was perched on the edge of the desk, her legs swinging, trailing a manicured fingernail down his jaw.

Sophia hit a few keys, amplifying the audio feed, and zoomed in on the reflection of Roger's screen bouncing off the glass of a framed photograph behind him. It was blurry, but the interface was unmistakable.

Chase Private Client. My personal account.

"I need that bag, Rog," Kori pouted, her voice tinny through the speakers. "The waitlist opened up, and if I don't secure it today, it's gone for another six months. You promised."

"I know, baby. I know." Roger's fingers danced across the keyboard. He was using the emergency password I had given him two years ago when I was hospitalized with a severe flu.

"How much?" he asked.

"Fifteen," she said casually.

Roger hesitated, his hand hovering over the mouse. "Naomi's meticulous with her ledgers. I'll have to bury it as a vendor payout for the agency before she gets back."

"She's so distracted with the baby anyway," Kori cooed, leaning down to kiss his neck. "She won't notice."

*Click.*

The transfer went through. Fifteen thousand dollars, siphoned directly from my hard-earned capital to fund a twenty-one-year-old's vanity.

Sophia hit the screen record button, her jaw clenched so tight I could hear her teeth grinding. "That's not just infidelity anymore, Naomi. That's wire fraud. It's a felony."

"I know," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.

Four hours later, Kori paraded through the living room feed holding a pristine, butter-yellow Chanel flap bag, twirling for Roger as he clapped from the sofa. Every tag, every logo, every self-satisfied smile was captured in high definition.

First, I had secured the property. Then, I had trapped Kori in a shell company. Now, I had undeniable, time-stamped proof of financial embezzlement.

I leaned back in Sophia's chair, the ice in my chest solidifying into something sharp enough to cut glass. Roger thought he was invincible. But the higher he climbed in his arrogance, the longer the fall was going to be. And I was going to make sure he hit every single stair on the way down.

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