Because she thought I was the helper and his wife of 12 years.
I stood there with her designer coat in my hand while she walked into my house as if it were hers: blonde, about 25 years old, wearing a dress that cost more than most people’s rent.
He glanced around our hall and said, “This place needs a makeover. I’ll talk to Richard.”
Richard is my husband. He was my husband, the man with whom I built this house, brick by brick, working two jobs while finishing medical school.
The man who, apparently, had a young woman who could be his daughter, who believed he could redecorate my house.
“Where is Richard?” he asked, without even looking at me.
“He’s not here,” I said.
—Well, when will you be back? I don’t have all day.
“Who are you?” I asked, even though I was beginning to reconstruct it.
“I’m Alexis, Richard’s girlfriend.” She tilted her head with an amused air. “And you’re the maid, it seems?”
She laughed.
—Well, yes, of course. But Richard usually has better-dressed staff. Are they new?
In my own house, dressed in my usual Saturday clothes (jeans and a university sweatshirt), I appeared to be the help of this child.
“I’ve been here 12 years,” I said. “Twelve years. Richard has only been here 5.”
He rolled his eyes. “Employees always exaggerate their age. Just tell Richard I’m here. I’ll be in the room.”
He came into my living room, sat on my sofa, and put his feet up on my coffee table. The coffee table that Richard and I bought at a yard sale during our first year of marriage. We finished it together in the garage.
“Could you bring me water?” he shouted. “With lemon. Yes, lots of ice.”
I brought him water. Yes, lemon. Too much ice.
She sighed as if she had offended him. “Is Richard upset with you? He doesn’t like things done this way.”
“How does Richard like things done?” I asked.
Co-ownership. Co-efficiency. Co-respect for your guests.
“Are you a frequent guest?”
“I’m here every Tuesday and Thursday when his wife is working,” he said, as if reciting a schedule. “Sometimes on Saturdays if she’s at her book club.”
I don’t have a book club. I haven’t worked Tuesdays or Thursdays for two months since I changed my schedule. Richard didn’t know anything about the change.
—It seems you know a lot about his wife—I said.
She laughed. “I know enough. Older. She got carried away. Boring.”
Richard is only with her out of convenience. It’s cheaper to keep her than to get a divorce. He says that all the time. She cheated on him when he was young, before he even realized it.
Now he’s trapped with a disheveled woman who probably doesn’t even know what Botox is.
I touched my face unconsciously. Thirty-seven years old. Some wrinkles, yes, but disheveled.
—Richard deserves better —she continued—. Someone young. Handsome. Who understands his needs. Not a housewife who probably thinks the missionary is a bird.
“Maybe I’ll work,” I suggested.
—Oh, please. Richard says he has a little job at a company. Probably as a receptionist or something. Nothing important.
My little job: running the company I founded 8 years ago. The one with 200 employees. The one that pays for this house, Richard’s car, his office that’s been losing money for 3 years.
“Richard’s practice must be successful,” I said.
She snorted. “Between us, things are going well. But that happens when you’re too nice. He needs a woman to push him to be ruthless. His wife probably nurtures his tender side. Maybe she pays the bills while he gets by on his meager salary.”
Please. Richard is the man. He provides.
I went to the kitchen and took out my phone.
Richard was at his golf club. Saturday’s routine changed.
I sent him a message to come home immediately. Emergency with the house.
He replied that he was in the middle of a game.
Le eпvié υп meпsaje de texto dicieпdo qυe el techo de sŅ oficiпa se había colυmbado.
I would be home for 15 minutes.
I returned with Alexis.
“Richard is on his way.”
“Please.” He smiled again. “I was hoping to surprise you. We’re going to Cabo next week. I booked the villa and everything.”
Cabo is pretty. Expensive.
Richard pays. Obviously. He always pays. That’s what real men do.
How long have you two been together?
Six months. The best six months of my life. He buys me everything I want. He takes me to the best restaurants. Did you know he spent $8,000 on my birthday necklace?
I knew it because I saw the credit card statement of our joint account that I pay with my small salary.
“That’s generous.”
I said he is very generous with the right woman. His wife probably gets flowers from the supermarket and dinners from chain restaurants.
“Probablemeпte.”
Richard’s car stopped.
He looked panicked at the ceiling of his office. First he saw Alexis. He turned pale.
Then he saw me.
He became whiter.
—Richard! —Alexis jumped up—. Surprise! I came to see you.
“Alexis, what are you doing here?”
—I’m visiting you, silly. Your help allowed me to enter. Although it’s very good. Perhaps you’d like to replace her.
“My help?”
He looked at me.
I smiled.
I maintained my firm smile as I watched Richard’s face change through at least three different expressions. He opened his mouth as if he wanted to say something, but closed it again after saying nothing.
He looked at Alexis, then at me, and back at Alexis again, and I could see his brain working flat out, trying to figure out what lie could save him.
He raised his hand to loosen his tie, although it wasn’t tight, and took a strange half step back as if his body wanted to run, but his legs wouldn’t cooperate.
Alexis was still standing there with a big smile, noticing the heat that Richard radiated like waves of heat on the asphalt in the summer. She started to approach him to hug him or something, but then she saw his expression and stopped mid-step.
Her smile faded a little and she looked at me confused, as if she couldn’t understand why Richard wasn’t happy to see her.
I saw that his eyes were directed to my left hand, where my wedding ring was, the same one that Richard put on my finger 12 years ago when we got married in that small ceremony in the courthouse, because we didn’t have money for anything bigger.
The circle reflected the light from the window, and I saw Alexa staring at it intently for three seconds before her brain began to connect.
She looked at Richard again, then at me again, and her face passed through a reflection that would have been funny if it were happening in my living room.
Richard finally recovered his voice, and it came out raspy and strange. He said that I was his administrator, that I took care of the household finances and helped him with the paperwork, and he spoke very quickly, as if speed made the lie more believable.
Alexis seemed relieved for perhaps 3 seconds, her shoulders relaxed and that confident smile began to return.
I raised my left hand so that the circle was right in his line of sight and told him very clearly that I was his wife for 12 years, which I had been talking about for the last 20 minutes while bringing him water with too much ice.
Alexis paled so fast that I thought she would faint right there on my wooden floor.
His eyes opened wide, his mouth opened in a perfect O, and he literally staggered backward until he crashed into the door frame that separated the foyer from the living room.
She grabbed the frame with all her might to avoid falling, and her designer bag slipped off her shoulder and hit the ground with a dull, expensive noise that snored in the repeated silence.
I saw her trying to process what I had just said; her eyes darted back and forth between my face and my armpit and Richard’s guilty expression. She was breathing faster and brought her free hand to her throat as if she couldn’t breathe.
Richard started to move towards her, but I raised my hand and told them both to leave the living room because we were going to have an adult conversation.
My voice came out calmly and firmly, even though my heart was beating so hard I could feel it in my ears.
Richard opened his mouth to argue, probably to say that it wasn’t a good moment or that we should talk in private or some other excuse, but something about my face made him shut up instantly.
He walked towards the sofa and sat on the edge as if he were about to run away at any moment.
Alexis followed him like a trail, moving slowly and carefully, as if the floor were about to open up and swallow her. She sat at the opposite end of the sofa, facing Richard, as far away as possible, without leaving the same piece of furniture.
I remained standing because sitting down seemed like giving up some kind of advantage that I didn’t want to lose.
I looked at Alexis and asked her to tell me all about her relationship with Richard, and she immediately turned to look at him as if he could give her permission or tell her what to say.
Richard kept his gaze fixed on his hands on his lap, touching his thumbnail as he does when he is nervous.
Alexis opened and closed his mouth several times before making a sound. And when he finally began to speak, his voice was trembling and weak.
He said that he had been together for six months and that he met the fundraising team at the hospital where Richard was getting referrals for his consultation.
He said that Richard told him he was unhappily married to someone who didn’t understand him, who was boring and old, and who didn’t appreciate what a good man he was. His voice became even lower as he said that last part, as if he were beginning to realize how stupid he was dreaming.
Richard tried to interrupt me with some excuse or apology, raising his head and opening his mouth, but I interrupted him before I could say a word.
I asked Alexis about the money, about all the things Richard had bought him, and he maintained a firm and calm voice, as if he were being asked about the weather.
Alexis expelled everything with a soft and frightened voice that didn’t resemble the confident tone he used when he believed I was the helper.
He spoke of restaurants that he had heard about, of places in the city center with French or Italian names that probably cost more for food than most people spend on groceries in a week.
She mentioned the $8,000 necklace he gave her for her birthday, the shopping trips where Richard bought her shoes, bags, and clothes, and the weekend trips to beach resorts. It’s just a few hours away.
Then he told her about the trip to Cabo that he had booked, a villa that cost $12,000 a week, and Richard had told her not to worry about the cost because he wanted to treat her well.
His voice broke in that last part and I saw that tears were beginning to form in his eyes.
I took out my phone and opened the banking app. I pulled out the credit card statements I’d been checking for the past month, trying to find out where all our money was going.
I held the phone so that both of us could see the screen and checked the charges, highlighting them with my finger.
Ceпa eп υп lυgar llamado Leerпard Daп, $470.
Purchase of Tiffany jewelry, $8,200.
Hotel room at the Ritz, $600 per night.
Alexis turned pale again as she watched me review charge after charge, and I could see her doing calculations in her head, adding up all the money Richard had spent on her during 6 months.
He turned to Richard and asked if it was true, if he really had been spending his wife’s money on her. And his voice broke as he uttered the last word, as if he were in physical pain.
Richard tried to explain to her that it was complicated, that his office had gone through some difficult years and that he was going to return everything once things improved.
I interrupted him before he could finish and told him that his practice had lost money for three consecutive years, that I had been covering the losses with my salary while he pretended to be a successful doctor who could afford a mistress.
Alexis brought her hand to her mouth and made a small sound as if she might be ill.
I told him I’d been covering Richard’s losses at his office, his car payment, his mortgage. Basically, everything in our lives while he was getting rich off my income.
I told him that every gift I gave him, every dinner, every hotel room, everything came from the money I earned in my company, the little job he had made fun of before.
Alexis looked like she was really going to vomit right there on my sofa.
And I blamed her, because all her fantasy about Richard being this generous and successful man who could take care of her had been shattered into a million pieces.
Richard kept looking at his hands, and I noticed that his face had turned red. Not from shame, but from anger, as if he were furious because Alexis was being told the truth about our fiacing things.
Alexis started to cry for real. They weren’t pretty tears, but horrible sobs that made her mascara run down her face and her hair turn black.
Alexis dried her face with the back of her hand and applied black makeup to her cheek. She looked at Richard and then at me, and something seemed to click in her brain because she suddenly sat up on the sofa.
She asked Richard about his father and said that he promised to help with his father’s professional advancement.
Richard’s face turned even redder and he shifted in his chair but said nothing.
I asked him what his father’s name was and Alexis said Nox Marcato, looking at me.
My stomach clenched because I knew exactly who Kox Marcato was. He worked in the operations department of my company and had been doing a decent job for four years, but nothing stood out as special or deserved a promotion.
I turned to Richard and asked him if he had really promised to influence Kox’s career in my company.
Richard looked at the ground, and his silence told me everything I needed to know. I had been making promises about my company to his lover if he would even speak to me.
Alexis began to cry harder, and they were no longer the delicate tears of before, but horrible sobs that made her tremble all over. She called Richard pathetic and asked him how much of what he had told her was true.
Richard simply sat there, looking at his hands as if he had answers written in them.
I got up and told Alexis that he needed to leave my house right now.
She didn’t argue as I expected; instead, she simply grabbed her designer handbag from the coffee table and her coat from where she had left it on the chair. She walked to the door, and I followed her to make sure she left.
Alexis stopped with her hand on the doorknob and turned to look at me.
She said she was sorry and that she didn’t know I was real.
It was such a strange thing to say that I almost laughed, because of course it was real.
She opened the door and went out to her car. I saw her walk away before locking the door.
When I turned around, Richard was standing there, reaching for my arm.
I quickly stepped back and told him not to come near me.
He started talking really fast about how useless my bird was, how much he loved me, and how he would break up with her so we could work this out together. His words moved as if he thought that if he spoke fast enough, I might believe him.
I raised my hand to stop him and asked him how long he’d been lying to me about everything. Not just about Alexis, but about the consultation, the money, and those Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Richard’s face changed and he looked at the ground again.
He admitted that the consultation had been going on for more than three years. He said it was actually five years and he didn’t know how to tell me.
Five years I worked on his business while spending my money to keep it afloat.
Richard said that he felt emasculated by my success and that everyone in our social circle knew that his wife was the breadwinner of the family while he was the failed doctor.
I reminded him that I worked two jobs so he could study medicine. I built my company from scratch while supporting his dream of becoming a doctor. That’s how he repaid me for 12 years of support.
Richard interrupted me, but I kept talking about him.
I told him to pack his suitcase and leave tonight. He could stay at a hotel or with a friend, but he had to leave at a certain time.
Richard said that it was also his house and that he had the right to stay there.
I reminded him that my name was the only one that appeared in the deed because my money paid for every brick of this house.
He opened his mouth, closed it, and opened it again, but no words came out.
I pointed to the stairs and told her to start packing.
Richard went upstairs and I heard his footsteps on the floor above mine.
I went to the kitchen and took a bottle of wine from the shelf. I poured myself a large glass and sat down at the table, trying to process that my 12-year marriage had collapsed in my living room.
The house was silent, except for Richard, who was moving about upstairs, opening drawers and closet doors. I wondered how I hadn’t seen any sign or if I simply didn’t want to see them because seeing them would mean admitting that my marriage was a lie.
I heard Richard’s footsteps coming down the stairs and he appeared in the kitchen doorway with a suitcase in his hand. He put it down and began to apologize once again. He said he would do whatever it took to fix it.
I took a sip of wine and told him that the only thing I could do at that moment was to leave and give me space to think.
I told him that from now on we would talk through lawyers and that he shouldn’t contact me directly.
Richard picked up his suitcase and headed for the front door. I heard it open and close, and then his car started up in the driveway. The engine faded as it drove away, and I was left alone in the kitchen with my wine.
The glass felt heavy in my hand and I put it down on the table because my fingers were trembling.
The house was so quiet that you could hear the hum of the refrigerator in the corner and the ticking of the clock on the wall.
I sat there for about ten minutes, staring into space, before the tears started. Not the pretty tears you see in movies, but the horrible tears that make your face red, your nose run, and you can’t breathe.
I cried for every lie Richard told me over 12 years. I cried for having two jobs while he was studying medicine and thinking we were building something together. I cried every time I covered his losses and believed him when he said things would get better.
I cried because I was so stupid that I didn’t see what was happening in my own house on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
The worst part was knowing that he stayed with me because leaving would cost him money, or because he loved me, or because he appreciated me. It was just covetousness. A bacterial account with heartbeats.
I sat on that kitchen table until almost midnight crying and drinking wine until the bottle was empty and my eyes were so swollen I could barely see.
The next morning, my head hurt and my face looked terrible in the bathroom mirror. I splashed cold water on my eyes and tried to look normal, but I couldn’t hide the fact that I had spent half the night crying.
I made coffee and sat down at the kitchen table, and at that moment I was looking at my phone.
I needed to talk to someone who would understand me, someone who knew me before Richard and who still knew me afterwards.
I called Gita at 7 in the morning, even though it was Sunday. She answered on the second ring and I started crying again just from hearing her voice.
She asked me where I was and I told her I was home and she said I would be there in 20 minutes.
Gita appeared 17 minutes later with a bag of bagels, cream cheese, and her own cup of coffee. She looked me in the face and hugged me right there in the doorway.
We sat down at my kitchen table and I ate everything while we ate bagels that I really couldn’t taste.
I told him that Alexis showed up and he thought I was the helper. I told him about the $8,000 necklace and the trip to Cabo. I told him that Richard spent my money on his girlfriend for six months while telling her that his wife was just a boring woman with a little job.
Gita got angrier as she spoke, her face turned red and her hands gripped her coffee cup with such force that I thought it might break.
She asked me if I knew that Nox Marcato was Alexis’s father.
I stopped mid-bite and stared at her because that name sounded familiar, but at first I didn’t remember it. Then it dawned on me and I felt bad again.
Kox worked in our operations department, he had been there for four years, always calm and professional. I never knew he had a daughter because we didn’t talk much about personal matters at work.
Gita leaned forward and said we should be careful about how this affected the company. If Noox found out about what happened, if other employees found out, it could cause unnecessary problems at that moment.
I knew you were right, but a part of me wanted to fire Noox just for being related to Alexis.
Gita saw my face and reminded me that Nox hadn’t done anything wrong. That punishing him for his daughter’s decisions would be unfair and probably illegal.
She said we should keep this quiet for now and handle it professionally if it later became a work problem.
I accepted, although I thought it was wrong that Kox continued to work in my company while his daughter slept with my husband.
I spent the rest of the weekend in my home office reviewing every financial record I could find. Bank statements, credit cards, loan documents, everything. The more I looked, the worse it got.
Richard had been hiding credit card statements in his car. I found them when I looked for the insurance papers. Three different cards I didn’t recognize, all maxed out, in both our names.
Cash advances totaling almost $30,000 over two years.
I found a loan application for your medical office where someone had forged my signature, and the handwriting resembled mine enough to have me compare it with real documents to be sure it was me.
Richard had obtained a loan of $75,000, used our house as collateral, and I found out.
Every page I looked at made me feel more stupid for trusting him.
How did I realize that thousands of dollars were disappearing?
But I knew how.
I was busy running my company, working 60 hours a week, and I trusted that my husband would be honest with money. I trusted him completely, and he used that trust to steal from me left and right while sleeping with some young woman who could be his daughter.
On Monday morning, at 6 a.m., I was at my desk making calls before I even got to the office. I needed the best divorce lawyer in the city, and everyone said it was Palmer Hedrix.
The website of his firm said that it specialized in divorces of people with high net worth and had a reputation for being strict.
I called her office at 8 when it opened and was attended to by an assistant who seemed bored. I explained that I needed an urgent appointment for a divorce and the assistant told me that Palmer’s schedule was full for the next three weeks.
I gave my name and mentioned my company’s name, and the assistant’s tone changed completely. She put me on hold, and when I came back, it was Palmer herself on the phone.
Palmer’s voice was sharp and professional, and he asked me what this was, an emergency.
I explained to him that my husband had been cheating on his lover for six months, spending the marital property on his lover and hiding financial information, even falsifying my signature on loan documents.
Palmer remained silent for about 3 seconds and then said he could see me that afternoon at 3:00.
I told her I would be there and she gave me the address of her office in the center, in the financial district.
Palmer’s office was on the 40th floor of a glass tower that reflected the entire city. The lobby had marble floors, modern art on the walls, and a receptionist who looked like she’d stepped out of a fashion magazine.
I gave my name and the receptionist smiled and told me that Palmer was expecting me. She led me down a floor-to-ceiling corridor to a corner office with views of the river and the horizon.
Palmer rose from behind his enormous dark wooden desk and shook my hand. He was about 50 years old, with gray, pear-shaped eyes, and was wearing a black suit that probably cost more than my car payment.
His hand squeeze was firm and he indicated me with a gesture that I should be separated from the leather chairs in front of his desk.
She had a notepad ready and a pen in her hand and looked at me as if she could see through any lie I might tell.
I liked her immediately.
Palmer asked me to tell him everything from the beginning, and he didn’t interrupt me even once. He simply took notes on his notepad, his pen moving rapidly across the paper, and his face remained neutral even when I got to the part about the money.
I took out the folder I had brought with all the financial records I found at the end of the week: credit card statements with charges at expensive restaurants and jewelry stores, bank statements with cash advances, the loan application with the forged signature.
Palmer carefully reviewed each page, sometimes taking notes, sometimes taking photos with his phone. When he finished, he looked at me and said:
“That Richard spent the marital money on his adventure was called wasting marital property, and it would help me a lot in the divorce trial.”
He explained that the judges did not like that one of the spouses used the common money to finance a bird, especially when the quantities were high.
Palmer said that we could probably get a larger share of it all, since Richard had wasted a lot of our money on Alexis.
I felt something loosen in my chest when I heard that, as if perhaps I was completely powerless in this situation after all.
Palmer asked me about my company and whether Richard had any stake in it. I explained that I had founded it eight years before we got married and that I had kept it completely separate.
Richard’s pombre was a company document. No tepía capital, pi participacióp, pi pada.
Palmer smiled for the first time and said that it had been very intelligent of me. He explained that, in many divorces, the most important fights were over the company’s assets.
But as I had kept my separate company and founded it before the marriage, Richard had no right to it.
I felt a great relief because my company was everything I had built and the idea of Richard getting any part of it made me want to vomit.
Palmer made a note on his legal pad and said that we would make sure that the divorce papers would make it very clear that the company was only mine and that Richard had no right to it.
Then we talked about Richard’s medical consultation, and Palmer became serious again. She explained that, although the consultation was in Richard’s name, any debt he incurred during our marriage was probably marital.
That meant that I could be responsible for half of what his office owed, including in the case of divorce.
My stomach clenched because I knew his office was drowning in debt. More than $100,000 easily, maybe more.
Palmer saw my face and said we would have to review all the consultation’s financial statements to see exactly what we were facing. He said:
“There could be ways to argue that Richard’s mismanagement was his fault, and that I shouldn’t have to pay for it, but it would depend on what the figures showed.”
I sat there feeling sick, weighing on having to carry $50,000 or more of Richard’s business debts, in addition to everything else he had done to me.
Palmer leaned back in his chair and said that we needed to hire someone to meticulously review all our financial records. He called him a foresight counter, someone who specialized in finding hidden money and tracking where every dollar went.
Palmer said he knew someone excellent who could start immediately and could testify in court if we needed him.
The accountant would document exactly how much Richard spent on Alexis, where the cash advances were, and if there were other hidden accounts or debts that we still didn’t know about.
Palmer said it would cost around $5,000, but it would be worth every penny because good documentation would significantly strengthen our case.
I accepted immediately because I wanted to know the whole truth about what Richard had done with our money.
Palmer made a call directly from his desktop and scheduled a reupload with the counter fore for later that week.
When I left his office an hour later, I felt that I finally had someone on my side who knew how to fight against what Richard had done to me.
Before leaving Palmer’s office, I asked him about Kox Marcato and whether having Alexis’s father working at my company would create legal problems for me.
Palmer stopped writing and thought for a moment before saying that it was complicated, but that probably no one could sue me. He explained that he couldn’t fire Kox just because his daughter slept with my husband.
That would be discrimination based on family relationships and could expose me to a lawsuit for unjustified dismissal.
Palmer said I should talk to my Human Resources department immediately and make sure we documented everything carefully so that no one could claim I was treating Kox differently because of what Alexis did.
I thanked him and left feeling as if every part of my life was becoming a legally protected field where one false step could blow up in my face.
Back in my office the next morning, I scheduled a private meeting with Corey Bradt, our head of Human Resources. Corey had been with the company for six years, and I trusted him to handle delicate situations without spreading gossip throughout the building.
I closed my office door and explained that I was going through a divorce and that there might be complications at work about which I needed his advice.
Cory took out a notepad and listened, interrupting me while I was telling her that my husband had dyed a bird with the daughter of an employee.
At first I didn’t use names, I simply explained the basic situation and asked him what I should do to protect myself and the company.
Cory’s face was professional, but I could see compassion in his eyes when he said we should be extremely careful with the management of employee status.
He explained that we couldn’t punish anyone for the actions of their family members. That would be discrimination and could result in a lawsuit that the company would likely lose.
Cory said that the best approach was to document everything and treat the employee exactly as we would treat any other person, only addressing real performance problems if they arose.
I took a deep breath and told Cory that the employee was Nox Marcato e opcioпes.
Cory nodded and opened Kox’s personnel file on her laptop, reviewing the performance evaluations and attendance records. After a few minutes, she looked up and said:
“Nox has been a responsible employee for four years, with no disciplinary problems and consistently good performance.”
Cory explained to me that this, in fact, worsened the situation because he could not justify Kox’s dismissal or his transfer to another position without a legitimate business reason.
If I did anything that looked like retaliation for her daughter’s affair with my husband, Kox could sue me and the company.
I felt frustrated because part of me wanted Kox to leave so I wouldn’t have to see him every day and remind him of what his daughter did. But I realized that Cory had a point about the legal risks.
Cory closed the Nox file and said we should document this conversation and create a plan on how to handle any problem that might arise.
He suggested that we treat Kox exactly like any other employee, evaluating him solely on his job performance and behavior in the office.
If Kox’s performance was affected or if it created problems due to the situation with Alexis and Richard, we would address those issues through the usual Human Resources channels, with everything documented.
Corey said that we couldn’t punish Kox preventively for something his adult daughter decided to do, although he had every right to be upset about the whole situation.
I agreed with Cory’s approach, although I found it unsatisfactory, and he took notes on our report for the HR file in case we ever needed to demonstrate that we handled everything correctly.
That night, I was at home reviewing more financial documents when my phone vibrated with a message from Richard. He asked if we could talk because he wanted to explain everything and try to solve it.
I stared at the message for a while before remembering Palmer’s instruction that all communication should go through her office. I forwarded Richard’s message to Palmer without replying and let her handle whatever he wanted to say.
Palmer responded by text message 20 minutes later saying that he would contact Richard’s lawyer and remind him that direct communication with him was not appropriate during the divorce proceedings.
The fore-setter that Palmer recommended appeared at my house two days later with a briefcase and glasses that made her look like a librarian.
His name was on his business card, but Palmer had warned me that he had the personality of a detective and that he wouldn’t stop investigating until he found everything.
I accompanied her to Richard’s home office and gave her access to all our financial records, bank statements, credit card invoices, and tax returns for the past five years.
Richard sat down at his desk with his laptop and calculator and started working while I tried to concentrate on my work in another room.
Six hours later, he called me back to the office and showed me what he had discovered.
The accountant had discovered things that even I had overlooked during my own review: small cash withdrawals that added up to thousands of dollars, mysterious transfers to accounts I didn’t know, and a spending pattern that clearly showed that Richard had been planning and financing his adventure for more than six months.
He used spreadsheets with color codes by category that showed exactly where every dollar went. And Richard and Alexis’s total spending was even more than he thought.
On Wednesday afternoon, my assistant informed me that Kox Marcato had requested a response through the appropriate channels.
I asked Cory to participate as a representative of Human Resources and the representatives of the small conference rooms instead of my office.
Kox looked uncomfortable, wearing a shirt and tie, more formal than his usual work clothes. He sat down in front of us and thanked me for taking the time to meet with him.
Kox said he wanted to address a topic directly and asked if his daughter’s relationship with my husband would affect his position at the company. I saw him gripping the edge of the table, his face tense with tension, as he waited for my answer.
I told Nox honestly that what happened between Richard, Alexis, and me was a personal matter, unrelated to his work. I explained that his job performance was what mattered in this company and that, as long as he continued to do a good job, his position would be secure.
Kox’s shoulders fell with visible relief and he thanked me for being professional in the situation.
Then her face changed and she said that Alexis had told her everything that happened in my house, how she thought I was the maid and how she had said terrible things about me.
Kox said he was horrified by his daughter’s behavior and ashamed that he had raised someone who could treat another person that way.
Nox looked at her hands and said that she had tried to raise Alexis better than this, that her mother died when she was only 8 years old, and that maybe she had spoiled her too much to compensate for the loss of her mother.
She said she gave Alexis everything he asked for because she felt guilty that he grew up without a mother.
And now he could see that he had created a spoiled young woman who thought she could take whatever she wanted without caring who she hurt.
I felt an unexpected flash of sympathy for Kox, who had been there talking about his dead wife and his regrets about raising his daughter, but I kept my professional mask in place and told him point-blank that his position in the company was secure, that I appreciated him coming to talk to me directly, and that we should all concentrate on moving forward.
Kox thanked me once again and left the conference room, and Cory took notes on the meeting for the HR file.
That night, Richard started calling me from different numbers after blocking his cell phone. I didn’t answer any of the calls, but he left voicemails that I listened to later.
The messages oscillated between apologies and anger: Richard would beg me to talk to him in one message and then accuse me of exaggerating and trying to destroy his life in the next.
I saved all the voice messages as Palmer instructed and forwarded them all to his email.
The next morning, Palmer called and said he would send Richard’s lawyer a formal cease and desist letter, asking him to stop contacting me directly.
She said that if Richard continued calling after receiving the letter, we could use it as evidence of harassment and that it would only make him look worse in court.
Two weeks later, the accountant returned to Palmer’s office with her complete report, and I sat across from her as she explained each transaction to me.
He used spreadsheets with color codes by category, and the red sections of Alexis’s expenses took up three full pages.
$60,000 over 6 months, spread across restaurants that she had heard about, jewelry purchases, designer clothing stores, a weekend trip to Miami and the $12,000 for Cabo Villa that Richard paid in advance in full.
The cashier showed me receipts for $800 worth of food items that Richard ordered bottles of wine that cost more than our monthly grocery budget.
I found charges in luxury hotels in our city, places where Richard told me he was attending medical conferences, when in reality he was spending my money in hotel rooms 20 minutes from home.
The copier’s voice was professional and calm while destroying my marriage with numbers, dates, and credit card summaries.
Palmer took notes and asked questions about specific transactions, building his case piece by piece. At the end, Palmer said that this level of dissipation would be very beneficial to the tribunal.
The judges saw with good eyes the spouses who spent the marital patrimony and fidelities.
She filed for divorce that same afternoon, citing adultery and the dissipation of marital property as reasons.
Richard was reported to his doctor’s office three days later, during office hours. Palmer arranged it that way on purpose, claiming that he deserved public humiliation after what he did.
His receptionist called my cell phone by mistake, thinking I was still handling Richard’s business matters, and told me that a process computer showed up during patient service hours and handed papers to Richard in front of all his staff.
Twenty minutes after I attended to him, the telephone rang in Palmer’s office and his assistant said that Richard was on the phone shouting.
Palmer put it on loudspeaker so he could hear it, and his voice was heard furious and desperate, shouting about how he was being publicly humiliated and his reputation destroyed.
Palmer waited until he was out of breath and then said very calmly that this is what happens when you spend your wife’s money on your lover.
Richard tried to argue, but Palmer interrupted him and told him that all future communication should go through his lawyer.
Then she hung up while he was still talking.
I felt nothing when I heard him get angry, only a kind of satisfaction that finally had real consequences.
His lawyer contacted Palmer the following week and proposed mediation to avoid a complicated legal battle. Palmer called me at the office and explained the options. He said, “We had a very strong case, but litigating would be expensive and emotionally draining.”
She explained that mediation could allow us to reach an agreement faster and save money and legal fees, although she was happy to disarm Richard in court if that was what I wanted.
I thought about witnessing a trial, about our entire marriage being dismantled in public, about listening to Richard’s excuses before this judge. The idea exhausted me even before I started.
I told Palmer that I would try a mediation session and that if it didn’t work, we would go to court.
She said that was intelligent, that we could always litigate later if Richard was reasonable.
The mediation took place two weeks later in a conference room in a central office building in the center. Palmer and I arrived first and placed our materials on one side of the long table.
Richard arrived 10 minutes late with his lawyer, and when he entered, I barely recognized him. He hadn’t shaved in days. His suit was wrinkled as if he had slept in it, and he had dark circles under his eyes that made him look 10 years older.
His lawyer was a younger man who looked presumptuously at Palmer as if he knew he was not up to par.
We all sat down and I looked at Richard from the other side of the table, feeling exhausted.
This man with whom I had spent 12 years, had worked two jobs to support myself while I studied medicine, had built my whole life around him, and now he was just a stranger who had stolen from me.
The mediator was a woman of about 50 years old who explained the basic rules and asked each person to share their perspective on marriage and divorce.
Richard came first, and I saw him try to play the victim. He said that I was always working, that my success made him feel small and inadequate, that he needed someone to make him feel important and masculine.
In fact, he said that Alexis made him feel like a man the way I had never felt. As if our 12 years together hadn’t meant anything because I had the courage to triumph.
The mediator maintained a neutral expression, but I saw her frown when Richard blamed me for his infidelity.
His lawyer seemed uncomfortable and still uneasy about Richard talking about more reasonable topics, but Richard was excited about how difficult it was to be married to someone more successful than him.
When Richard finally stopped talking, the mediator turned to me and asked for my point of view.
I didn’t scream or cry or do anything Richard probably expected. I simply stated the facts with the same calm I used in business meetings.
I told the mediator that I supported Richard during his medical studies, working two jobs while studying. I explained that I founded my company eight years ago and that it now employs 200 people.
I explained to him how Richard’s medical practice had been losing money for three years and that I covered every loss without complaining.
I described to him how I paid our mortgage, his car payment, our entire lifestyle while he played at being a sugar daddy with my money.
I saved the $60,000 that his lover spent six months on. Money that came from our joint account and that I paid with my salary.
The mediator’s face said it all about who he believed, and Richard’s lawyer began checking his hands as if he were looking for some way to save this.
Palmer opened his folder and took out the counter’s report. He explained the findings to the mediator, documenting and verifying each figure.
60,000 euros for the matter, broken down by category. Another 150,000 euros in practice losses that I covered for three years. The house, the two cars, our savings, all financed mainly with my income.
Richard’s lawyer made a visible grimace when Palmer got to the total amount of marital property that Richard had dissipated or that my income had been squandered.
His face turned red and he asked for a 15-minute break to consult with his client.
Palmer agreed and left the conference room while we stayed.
When they returned, Richard looked defeated in a way I had never seen before. His shoulders were slumped and he wouldn’t look me in the eye.
His lawyer cleared his throat and proposed an agreement.
Richard would keep his medical practice and all his debts. I would keep the house and my company. We would divide the remaining marital assets 60/40 in my favor as compensation for his extravagance.
Palmer didn’t even blink before counterattacking.
7030 divided and Richard pays my legal fees, which until now had reached around $15,000.
Richard’s lawyer tried to negotiate, saying that 6535 was more reasonable, but Palmer remained impassive and said that 7030 plus hours was his only offer.
He reminded them that we had documentation of everything and that a judge would probably be even less generous with Richard after seeing how he spent the marital funds.
Richard’s lawyer looked at him, and Richard just nodded as if he had conceded defeat. He knew we would destroy him in court with the evidence we had.
Palmer pulled out the settlement agreement she had drafted with the support of [name omitted], certain that we would reach this point. She reviewed the terms while Richard’s lawyer took [something – likely a drink].
The agreement included very specific clauses: Richard had no right over my company. Not now, not in the future, regardless of my growth or future success.
He had to refinance all the debts of his office in his name in just six months. If he didn’t get the refinance, he would have to sell the office and use the profits to pay me back for the losses he had covered over the years.
Palmer had thought of everything. Of all the possible ways Richard could think of coming to get my money later.
His lawyer read the agreement carefully and could see that he realized there was no way out, that we had Richard completely cornered.
Richard signed without reading it. He simply trusted his lawyer’s assessment: it was the best deal he could get.
Palmer slid the settlement agreement onto the table and handed me a pen.
I signed my name on each marked line, the pen scratched the paper with a sound that seemed definite and strange.
Richard signed his pages without rereading them. Just mechanical movements, as if he were signing something he no longer cared about.
The mediator witnessed our signatures and collected the documents, saying that she would present them to the court that same afternoon.
Palmer told me that the 60-day waiting period starts today and that the divorce will be final in exactly 2 months.
Richard stood up when the mediator left the room and approached me with his hand outstretched. He said we should talk in private, that he had things to explain, but I grabbed my bag and walked past him without looking at him.
Palmer followed me and I heard Richard call my name behind us, but I kept walking down the hall towards the elevator.
The building’s lobby felt too bright after the dark conference room and I stayed outside on the sidewalk breathing in the cold air.
Palmer squeezed my shoulder and told me I had done well, that the agreement was fair and fully protected my interests.
I drove back to the office because going home seemed impossible and I needed to be in some place that made sense.
Gita was in her office when I returned and looked me in the face and closed the door.
I sat down in the chair in front of his desk and told him everything about the agreement, the division 7030, Richard kept his practice bankrupt, I kept the house and the company.
She said it was a good result, that Richard got what he deserved, but then she leaned forward and said: “He seemed too calm about everything.”
She told me that I was acting as if I had just closed a business deal instead of ending my marriage, and that she was worried that I was keeping everything from her.
I said I was fine, that I just wanted to finish this once and for all, but Gita hit me with her head and said she knew me better than that.
I changed the subject to work things and she let me, but I could see the worry in her eyes.
That night, I returned home and found it empty. I stood in the kitchen, staring blankly. The divorce papers were in my purse and my wedding dress was still on my finger. I realized I had been married for 12 years to someone I had never really met.
I went upstairs to our bedroom, sat on the edge of the bed and finally allowed myself to cry.
It wasn’t silent tears, but loud and ugly sobs that came from the deepest part of my chest.
I cried for the 25-year-old girl who worked two jobs to pay for her husband’s medical studies. I cried every time I covered his office losses without complaining.
I cried for the future I thought we would have. Children, retirement, and growing old together.
I cried because of who I thought Richard was. The man I married and who apparently existed.
I cried until my throat hurt and my eyes watered and I had no tears left.
And then I lay down on the bed still wearing my work clothes and stared at the ceiling until I fell asleep.
The following weeks seemed strange and disconnected to me, as if I were living somewhere in between.
Technically, I was still married, but Richard was gone and the house was just mine. I didn’t care about redecorating or changing anything because everything seemed temporary, as if I were waiting for something to begin.
I threw myself into work, arriving at the office at 7:00 and staying until 8:00 or 9:00 at night. Gita watched me with concern, but she didn’t pressure me. The empty house was more bearable when I was too married to think about her.
Kox came to my office on Tuesday to deliver quarterly reports and was professional and meticulous as always.
After leaving, Cory stopped by my house and closed the door. He said Kox had been seeing a therapist to deal with the guilt over what Alexis did.
Kox blamed himself for raising a daughter who could hurt someone in that way. Cory said that Kox kept him away from work and maintained a low profile, but that therapy was helping him process everything.
Seпtí uprespeto por Kпox, qυe asumiera la respoпsabilidad de su parte, aυп cυaпdo Ñlexis era υпa adυlta qυe tomaba sus sú s propia decisioпes.
A few weeks later, Kox found me in the hallway and asked if he could talk to me for a moment.
He told me carefully, as if I were walking through a patched field, that Alexis had returned home after Richard could no longer pay for his apartment.
She told me that her daughter was in therapy and that she deeply regretted what she had done, and that she wanted to apologize someday if I was willing to listen to her.
I looked at Nox’s weary face and saw a father hurt by his son’s mistakes. I didn’t respond to what he said about Alexis because I wasn’t ready for that conversation. I just nodded once and walked away.
Kox did not return to rock it.
I learned from friends that Richard’s medical office was in worse condition than if my financial support…
Someone told me that he was getting together with stockbrokers to sell the office, and that maybe he would have no other option if the situation didn’t improve soon.
Part of me felt vindicated that the consequences were real and immediate, but above all I felt sad because 12 years of marriage ended with him selling the dream I helped him build, and because it all came down to money, lies and a 25-year-old girl who thought she could have someone else’s life.
Eight weeks after signing the agreement, Palmer called me on my cell phone while I was in a meeting. I went outside to answer and he told me that the court had processed everything and that the divorce was final that same morning.
At 37 years old I became officially single again.
Palmer said the documentation would arrive in a few days and that he should call if he needed anything else.
I thanked him, hung up, and stood in the hallway trying to process that it was really all over.
Twelve years of marriage dissolved after 60 days of waiting.
It seemed surreal and anticlimactic to me, as if I should feel something greater than that strange, empty relief.
Ga iпsistir eп iпvitarme a ceпar esa пoche para celebrar la ocacióп, auпqυe estυvo de acuЅerdo eп qυe “celebracióп” пo era la palabra adecυada. Fυimos a хп restauraЅraпte italianaпo caro eп el ceпtro y pide хпa botella de viпo.
When he arrived, he raised his cup and said: “For new beginnings, for new beginnings, for remembering who you are so that nobody stops you.”
I clinked my glass against hers and tried to feel optimistic about the future instead of simply feeling exhausted by the past.
The food was good and Gita made me laugh by telling me stories of her terrible first dates. And for a few hours, I almost felt normal.
The following week, I made an appointment with a therapist because Gita was right to say that I was keeping everything for her. The therapist’s office was in a quiet building, with comfortable chairs and soft lighting.
I sat down on his sofa and told him the whole story from the beginning.
She listened without interrupting and then said something that shocked me. She told me that she had been so committed to the life I built that I ignored the warning signs about Richard.
I chose to believe his lies because admitting the truth meant admitting that I had wasted years with the wrong person.
She said that recognizing those patterns was the first step to making sure not to repeat them and that understanding why she made those decisions would help me make better decisions in the future.
I left his office feeling vulnerable and exposed, but also lighter. As if talking about it might help me get over it.
Three months have passed since the divorce papers arrived and I adapted to a routine that seemed more mine than anything else in years.
Kox emailed me through the company’s official channels asking if he could meet with me. He said it was a personal meeting and that he would understand if I declined.
I accepted because Kox had been more than professional since everything happened.
And I met him in my office on Thursday afternoon.
Eпtró coп Aspecto пervioso y apeпado.
And then Alexis followed him.
She looked completely different from the blonde woman who gave me her coat that Saturday.
She wore her hair in a simple ponytail, no makeup, jeans, and a simple sweater that was probably from a regular store instead of a designer boutique. She kept her gaze lowered and waited for Kox to speak first.
She told me that Alexis had been working a lot on herself, seeing a therapist twice a week, and wanted to apologize properly if I was willing to listen to her.
I looked at Alexis and finally she looked me in the eyes and I saw something real there instead of the arrogant attitude of apes.
I told them to sit down.
Alexis took a deep breath and began to speak. He said that he knew words couldn’t fix what he had done, but that he needed to say it anyway.
She explained that she grew up spoiled after her mother’s death, that Kox gave her everything to compensate for the loss, and that she became this person who believed that the world existed to satisfy her desires.
She knew Richard was married when they started dating. But she convinced herself that it didn’t matter because his wife was just an abstract idea, not a real person with feelings and a life.
Meeting me that day surprised her and made her realize that she had hurt a real human being, someone who built a home, a company and an entire life that she assumed was her own.
He said he had been working with his therapist to understand why he made those decisions, why he thought he deserved things that belonged to someone else, and was beginning to see how disordered his thinking had been.
I heard her speak and, at some point during her apology, I realized that I was no longer angry. The rage that burned within me when she sat on my sofa and insulted me had faded into something tired and heavy, and I was exhausted from carrying it.
I told Alexis that I appreciated her being honest and sincere, that I could see she was trying to change. I told her I forgave her, not because she had earned it or because what she did was right, but because she needed to let go of that weight in order to move forward.
She started to cry and thanked me, and Nox seemed relieved and grateful in a way that made me feel happy to have accepted this response.
Se fυeroп desfυés a υпos mпυtos más y me seÿté eп mi oficiпa siпtiéпdome más levпo que υe eп meses.
Six months after Richard’s lover rang my doorbell, my life was nothing like what I expected and, somehow, it was better than I imagined.
My company achieved record profits that quarter and we hired 50 new employees and expanded into two new markets that I had been planning for years.
I started dating someone I met through Gita, a consultant who worked with tech startups, and she got really excited when I talked about business strategy instead of seeming boring or threatened.
He earned more money than me and didn’t care about my success. He saw it as something to celebrate rather than compete against.
The house felt full again because I filled it with my own things, my own decisions, my own life instead of accepting to build something with someone who reviewed each brick I laid.
Some days I was really grateful that Alexis showed up that Saturday afternoon in her designer dress and her attitude because she freed me from a marriage that was suffocating who I really was.