PART 2
For six days, I wore the mask of a wife who knew absolutely nothing.
It was the most difficult role I had ever played.
Not the divorce. Not the courtroom. Not even watching Carter’s mother break down when she discovered her perfect son had deceived everyone around him. No, the hardest part was sharing a dinner table with him each evening while he spread butter across his bread and lied to me as effortlessly as someone placing a coffee order.
He told me he was traveling to Denver for a business conference.
“Three days,” he said Wednesday night, slowly stirring cream into his soup. “Maybe four if the investor meetings take longer than expected.”
Denver.
I almost laughed out loud.
The man had packed linen shirts and swim trunks for Denver in November.
“Sounds important,” I replied.
“It could change everything for the company,” Carter said.
That statement was true, at least. Just not for the reasons he believed.
He reached across the table and wrapped his hand around mine. “You okay, Evie? You’ve seemed quiet lately.”
The nerve of that concern nearly shattered my composure.
I looked down at his hand resting on mine. The gold wedding band I had slipped onto his finger fifteen years earlier gleamed beneath the dining room chandelier. I remembered our vows. I remembered the tears in his eyes when he spoke them. I remembered believing tears were proof of honesty.
“I’m fine,” I said. “Just tired.”
He nodded with visible relief. He didn’t want my emotions. He wanted my ignorance.
So that was exactly what I gave him.
Every morning, I brewed his coffee. Every evening, I asked about his workday. When his phone vibrated and he flipped it face down, I acted as though I hadn’t seen it. When messages from Vanessa made him smile, I calmly asked whether he wanted another serving of salad.
Meanwhile, during lunch breaks and long after midnight, I prepared.
I opened a brand-new bank account solely in my name at another institution. I also met privately with an attorney named Margaret Sloan, a silver-haired divorce lawyer known for her calm demeanor and her remarkable ability to leave arrogant husbands financially exposed.
I sat across from her with a folder of printed emails resting on my lap.
Margaret reviewed the Dubai reservation first. Then the messages. Then the joint-account transaction. She didn’t gasp. She didn’t offer sympathy. She simply removed her glasses and said, “Mrs. Whitmore, your husband is a fool.”
It was the first genuine smile I had managed in nearly a week.
“Can I move the money?” I asked.
“The majority of those funds came from your income?”
“Yes.”
“You are allowed to protect your portion from continued misuse,” she replied carefully. “Keep records of everything. Don’t spend recklessly. Don’t conceal assets from the court. But if he is actively using marital funds to support an affair, you are under no obligation to sit quietly and watch.”
That was all I needed to hear.
I walked out of her office carrying a plan so precise it was almost unsettling.
Carter’s so-called Denver conference was scheduled to begin the following Monday. His flight to Dubai departed JFK at 11:20 a.m. Vanessa’s ticket appeared on the exact same itinerary. They would arrive late Tuesday evening Dubai time. By the time they reached the hotel, it would be late enough that panic would feel very much like isolation.
I had no intention of stopping the trip.
That would have been far too simple.
If I confronted Carter before he left, he would cry, deny everything, blame loneliness, call it a mistake, and beg for counseling. He would transform my pain into a negotiation.
No.
I wanted him to arrive.
I wanted him standing beneath the golden glow of that seven-star fantasy beside Vanessa, both dressed for luxury, both ready to spend my money, only to discover that the wife he underestimated had locked the vault.
Sunday night arrived, and Carter packed.
He laid his suitcase across our bed and moved around the bedroom whistling.
Whistling.
I folded laundry in the corner while watching him pack cologne, linen pants, sunglasses, swim trunks, and the white shirt I had bought him for our anniversary.
“Denver must be warmer than I remember,” I remarked.
He hesitated for half a second.
Then he laughed. “The hotel has an indoor pool. You know how these conferences are.”
No, Carter. I know how affairs are.
I smiled. “Right.”
He zipped the suitcase shut and walked over to me. “I’ll miss you.”
He said it so softly that, for a brief moment, the past rose between us. The young Carter standing outside my office in the rain with flowers. The Carter who danced barefoot with me in our first apartment. The Carter who once loved me—or at least loved the version of himself reflected in my devotion.
For one dangerous second, I wanted to ask him not to go.
Not because I intended to forgive him.
Because a small part of me still wanted him to choose me before I destroyed him.
But he had already made his choice.
So I kissed his cheek.
“Have a good trip,” I said.
He slept soundly that night.
I didn’t sleep at all.
At 6:15 the following morning, he came downstairs wearing a navy travel blazer and the expression of a man heading toward pleasure. I stood in the kitchen pouring coffee.
His suitcase waited beside the front door.
“Car’s here,” he said, glancing at his phone.
“Want me to drive you?”
“No, sweetheart. No need. Traffic will be awful.”
He kissed me quickly.
Too quickly.
His thoughts were already at the airport, already with Vanessa, already inside a luxury suite scattered with rose petals.
“I love you,” he said.
Those were the last words he ever spoke to me as my husband.
I looked directly into his eyes.
“I know,” I replied.
He never noticed the difference.
The black sedan pulled away from the curb at 6:22 a.m. Carter waved from the rear window. I stood on the porch in my robe, barefoot against the cold stone, watching fifteen years of my life disappear down the street in a hired car.
When the vehicle turned the corner, I stepped inside and locked the door.
Then I walked to the dining room, opened my laptop, and checked the flight status.
On time.
Perfect.
For the next fourteen hours, I waited.
I did laundry. I answered work emails. I removed Carter’s suits from our closet and arranged them neatly across the guest-room bed. I called a locksmith and scheduled an appointment for the next morning. I placed every piece of printed evidence into a fireproof box.
At 7:08 p.m. Eastern time, Carter’s flight touched down in Dubai.
I poured myself a glass of red wine.
At 8:03 p.m., I logged into our joint account.
Balance: $52,614.37.
I stared at the figure for a long moment.
Then I clicked transfer.