Husband's Betrayal Costs Her AllChapter 3
Chapter 3

Chapter 3

Chapter 3

The marble countertop was cold beneath my palms as I faced my son across our kitchen island. The celebration at Meridian had ended in disaster—my unexpected appearance had caused a scene, though I'd maintained my composure throughout. Now, in the privacy of our home, Orion's face was flushed with an anger I'd never seen directed at me before.

"Why did you have to show up like that?" he demanded, his voice cracking. "You embarrassed everyone."

"Everyone?" I kept my voice measured, though my heart was fracturing. "Or just your father and his mistress?"

"Don't call her that!" Orion slammed his hand against the counter. "Cleo actually cares about what's happening in my life. She asks about basketball. She comes to my games. She listens."

Each word landed like a physical blow. I'd missed games for depositions, parent-teacher conferences for court appearances. Always believing I was building something that would benefit him in the long run.

"And what exactly do you think I've been doing all these years?" I asked, my voice dangerously quiet. "Working eighty-hour weeks for my health?"

"For your career," he shot back. "For your name on that fancy building. You're just a cold workaholic who cares more about cases than family."

I inhaled sharply. "Orion, that's not fair—"

"Cleo understands me," he continued, eyes glistening. "She actually listens. She doesn't just nod and then go back to her briefs."

The knife twisted deeper. This woman hadn't just stolen my husband and my work—she'd somehow managed to position herself as the mother I'd failed to be.

"She's known you for what, three months?" My voice finally betrayed me, trembling slightly. "I've been there for every moment of your life."

"Being present isn't the same as being there, Mom." The way he said 'Mom' felt like an accusation rather than a title.

I watched him storm out, the kitchen suddenly too large and too quiet. His words cut deeper than any courtroom defeat ever could.

---

Three days later, Stetson's administrative assistant dropped a note on my desk. "Conference room. Now."

When I entered, Stetson was alone, standing at the window with his back to the door. The room felt charged with a tension I recognized from countless negotiations—the moment before someone makes their power play.

"Close the door, Lucille."

I did, then remained standing. "What's this about?"

He turned, his expression a perfect mask of professional concern. "The partners met this morning. Your recent... performance issues have become impossible to ignore."

"Performance issues?" I repeated, my voice ice-cold. "You mean the Morrison case that you handed to your girlfriend after stealing my files?"

"That's exactly the kind of paranoid accusation I'm talking about." He shook his head with practiced disappointment. "Cleo won that case on merit. Your inability to accept that raises serious concerns about your judgment."

I laughed, the sound sharp and humorless. "My judgment? That's rich coming from a man sleeping with an intern."

"This isn't about our personal situation." He moved to the conference table, sliding a folder toward me. "This is about what's best for the firm."

I didn't touch it. "And what exactly do you think is best for the firm?"

"You need to step down as partner." The words hung in the air between us. "Effective immediately."

"And let me guess—Cleo will take my place?"

His silence was answer enough.

"You can't force me out of my own firm," I said, though even as the words left my mouth, I recognized the familiar sensation of quicksand beneath my feet.

"Actually, I can." Stetson's smile didn't reach his eyes. "The partnership agreement gives us the right to remove any partner whose conduct threatens client relationships. I have documentation of your erratic behavior, missed deadlines, and increasingly hostile attitude toward colleagues."

"Fabricated documentation."

"Does it matter?" He stepped closer. "By the time any arbitration concludes, your professional reputation will be in tatters. Is that really what you want?"

I held his gaze, searching for any trace of the man I'd married. There was nothing there but cold calculation.

"You have until the end of the week to clean out your office," he said, turning away. "For Orion's sake, I suggest you make this transition as dignified as possible."

---

The systematic dismantling of my professional life happened with surgical precision. First came the meeting invitations that mysteriously disappeared from my calendar. Then client calls that were redirected to other attorneys. Case files removed from my access without explanation.

I sat at my desk, watching as David Chen escorted my biggest client past my office without even a glance in my direction. The same client who had specifically requested me two years ago now laughed at something David said, completely unaware of the coup taking place.

My office phone hadn't rung all morning. My emails went unanswered. When I tried to access the firm's case management system, my credentials were suddenly "experiencing technical difficulties."

In the break room, conversations halted when I entered. Colleagues who had celebrated my victories now avoided eye contact, treating me like a contagious disease rather than a founding partner.

I returned to my office and began packing my personal items, one by one. The message was clear: Pierce & Associates had no place for me anymore.

I was being erased.