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May 19, 2026

After One Night With His Mistress, He Came Home Smiling—But His Pregnant Wife Was Already Boarding a Private Jet


Part 2

Richard’s gaze flicked to the white envelope on the table, and the corner of his mouth twitched upward into a half-smile—the familiar, condescending smirk of a superior trying to pacify a throwing-a-tantrum child.

“Another grievance letter, Clara?” He sighed, stepping past her to the mini-bar in the corner of the room to pour himself a glass of Bourbon. The clink of ice echoed sharply in the quiet room. “I told you, work has been demanding. The Foundation is prepping for the winter gala. You’re pregnant, your hormones are just making you overreact.”

He took a sip and turned back to look at her. His disheveled shirt collar proudly displayed the faint smudge of lipstick. He wasn’t even trying to hide it anymore.

“Open it,” Clara said, her voice as flat and smooth as a frozen lake.

Richard paused, thrown off by the unfamiliar tone. There was no choking back tears. No sobbing. Just an eerie, absolute stillness.

He set his drink down, walked over, and picked up the envelope with an exaggerated roll of his eyes. Tearing the seal, he pulled out the stack of documents.

For the first few seconds, the arrogant smirk lingered on his lips. At five seconds, his eyebrows drew together in a tight knot. By the tenth second, every drop of color had drained from Richard Donovan’s face.

It wasn’t a tear-stained letter.

It was a Petition for Divorce. Attached to it were detailed bank statements of hidden accounts in the Cayman Islands, property deeds for a Tribeca penthouse listed under the name Sabrina Cole, and... an emergency court order freezing all assets tied to the Donovan Foundation, signed by a federal judge at four o'clock the previous afternoon.

“What… what the hell is this?” Richard’s voice cracked. His head snapped up, eyes wide with sudden panic. “Clara, what did you do?”

“The Tribeca apartment was eight and a half million dollars. I imagine the views of the Hudson are spectacular.” Clara slowly stood up. The six-month swell of her belly made her movements slightly heavy, but her posture was as imposing as a queen looking down at a traitor. “I hope Sabrina enjoys it. Because tomorrow morning, my lawyers and the IRS are going to be knocking on that door.”

“You’re out of your mind!” Richard roared, slamming the papers onto the glass table. He lunged toward her but stopped a foot away, halted by the razor-sharp coldness in his wife's eyes. “You’re ruining my reputation! Ruining this family! Over some stupid misunderstanding—”

A misunderstanding?

Clara cut him off, stepping forward. The cheap perfume of the other woman mixed with the smell of liquor hit her senses, but it didn't make her nauseous anymore. It only fueled her contempt.

“You used my father’s inheritance, you siphoned charity funds meant for orphaned children from the Donovan Foundation to buy diamonds and luxury cars for your mistress. That’s not a misunderstanding, Richard. That’s embezzlement. That’s a felony.”

The naked truth shattered the last of Richard’s pride. His knees seemed to buckle. The man who had walked in with a triumphant smile now looked as pathetic as a cornered animal.

“Clara… just let me explain…” His voice trembled as he reached a hand out, desperate to touch her. “I swear, she meant nothing. I was just under so much pressure… please, think about our baby!”

At the word baby, a flash of pure venom ignited in Clara’s eyes. She slapped his hand away.

“You lost the right to mention this child the second you signed the check for that Range Rover. You left nothing for us but lies.”

Clara reached for her Hermès handbag on the sofa. Her phone buzzed silently. A text from her security detail. The car is ready downstairs. The jet is prepped at Teterboro, ma'am.

“Where are you going?” Richard panicked as he saw her pulling on her wool coat. “It’s three-thirty in the morning! This freeze order… Clara, you can’t leave! We need to talk! Your lawyer—”

“My lawyer, Marianne, already forwarded the files to the board of directors,” Clara said calmly, buttoning her coat. “By 8:00 AM, the news of you draining a charity fund to keep a mistress will be on the front page of the Wall Street Journal. Good luck with the press conference, Richard.”

“You are destroying me!” he screamed, his eyes bloodshot, watching helplessly as the woman he had always assumed was docile and weak dismantled his empire piece by piece.

“No.” Clara paused in front of the penthouse's private elevator. The doors slid open, revealing two men in black suits waiting inside. She looked back at the man she had spent her youth loving, feeling absolutely no pity.

“I’m just cleaning up your mess.”

The elevator doors slid shut, cutting off Richard’s desperate, echoing shout.

4:45 AM. Teterboro Airport, New Jersey.

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