My Wife Funded Her Ex, So I Bought His Company And Exposed Them-hamyt - Chainityai

My Wife Funded Her Ex, So I Bought His Company And Exposed Them-hamyt

The second phone was under the romance novels, which would have been funny if it had not been my life cracking open in my hand. I was looking for a charging cable. That was all. I was standing on my side of the bed in the blue wash of a Tuesday morning, already late for work, while Alicia was downstairs pretending the coffee maker needed more water.

The iPhone buzzed before I could move my hand away. Doug H. lit up the lock screen. Can’t wait for this weekend. Tell Ben you’re visiting your sister again.

For a few seconds, I did not breathe. Doug Harmon was not a stranger. He was the college ex Alicia had mentioned with that casual little laugh three months earlier. He had reached out on LinkedIn, she said. Something about a business opportunity, she said. I had nodded like a husband who trusted his wife of 22 years.

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Then I remembered Sarah, Alicia’s sister in Portland. I had called Sarah the week before about Sophie’s birthday plans. Sarah had sounded confused when I mentioned Alicia’s last visit. She had not seen Alicia in six months.

I took a picture of the message with my phone. I put the second phone back under the books, exactly where I found it. When Alicia came upstairs, I was holding the charging cable and standing in the middle of a marriage that no longer existed.

“Morning, honey,” she said. “I was thinking of visiting Sarah this weekend. You do not mind watching Sophie, do you?”

Sophie was 17, old enough to read the silence in a room and young enough that I still wanted to protect her from it.

“Of course,” I said. “Have fun.”

Alicia kissed my cheek. It was quick, dry, and practiced. Her perfume was different, something expensive and sharp, not the vanilla scent she had worn for years. After she left for work, I sat on the edge of our bed and stared at the nightstand until my anger became useful.

By lunch, I had opened the bank accounts. By midafternoon, I had found the transfers. Eight thousand dollars had left our joint savings in small pieces, moved into a personal account I had never seen. By evening, I knew why. Doug Harmon owned a startup called Nexus Solutions. It had a polished website, a downtown Boston address, and the financial health of a candle in the rain.

He owed creditors. He was behind on office rent. He needed cash.

My wife had been giving it to him.

When Alicia came home, I had wine on the table and divorce papers beside my laptop. She smiled when she saw the glass, then stopped when I pushed the papers across the wood.

“What is this?”

“Your weekend gift,” I said. “I figured you would want to be free when you see Doug.”

The color left her face so completely that I almost felt sorry for her. Almost.

“Ben, I can explain.”

“You can explain the phone, the sister lie, the transfers, and the hotel weekends?”

Her hand shook against the wineglass.

I told her I knew enough. I told her the papers were filed. She cried. She apologized. She said it was not what I thought. But betrayal has a smell once you recognize it, and everything in that kitchen reeked of it.

Friday morning, Alicia left for Doug’s apartment anyway. I watched her car roll out of the driveway and felt something inside me settle. She had made her choice with both eyes open.

So I made mine.

I drove to the Boston tower where Nexus Solutions rented space it could not afford and introduced myself as Ben Rener from Pinnacle Investments. Pinnacle was a clean shell company, properly registered, with a website, a phone number, and no emotional fingerprints. Doug came out smiling in an expensive suit, hand extended, all charm and debt.

He did not know who I was.

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