I felt physically sick reading the report.
I never shared work passwords with Claire, but I had once logged into our secure project portal from the desktop in our study. Months ago. I remembered now because she’d brought me tea that night and stood behind me with her hands on my shoulders while I complained about pricing pressure. I’d thought it was affection. It had probably been reconnaissance.
Paula’s final note was the worst of all: Ethan Mercer was under quiet internal review at Halbrook already, connected to unexplained vendor steering and off-book recommendation patterns.
In other words, Claire had not wandered into one bad choice. She had attached herself to a man who was already crooked and joined him.
I sat in my parked car outside our house for nearly an hour after reading the report, watching the porch light Claire had insisted made the place look warm.
Then I went inside and started planning. Not revenge.
It started the night my wife came home just after midnight carrying the scent of a man I didn’t recognize.
Not whiskey. Not cigarettes. Not the faint perfume of a crowded room. It was men’s cologne—deep, expensive, edged with cedar and spice. It clung to her coat, her hair, even the scarf around her neck. I noticed it the moment she stepped through the front door of our house in Arlington, Virginia, heels in one hand, phone in the other, moving quietly like she didn’t want to wake anyone.
I was still sitting at the kitchen island, pretending to review invoices on my laptop.
It started the night my wife came home just after midnight carrying the scent of a man I didn’t recognize.
Not whiskey. Not cigarettes. Not the faint perfume of a crowded room. It was men’s cologne—deep, expensive, edged with cedar and spice. It clung to her coat, her hair, even the scarf around her neck. I noticed it the moment she stepped through the front door of our house in Arlington, Virginia, heels in one hand, phone in the other, moving quietly like she didn’t want to wake anyone.