
Linda adjusted the strap of her bag and took a deep breath. Today was their fifth wedding anniversary. In her hands, she held a neat box of lemon tarts—David’s favorite dessert.
Her husband had been rarely home lately, staying late at the office, and Linda decided: no calls, no warnings—she wanted a surprise.
The building where her husband worked as a director was crowded. Linda confidently walked toward the entrance, but a security guard immediately blocked her way.
“Access by pass.”
“I’m your boss’s wife,” she said calmly. “I want to surprise him.”
The guard narrowed his eyes, then smiled with a strange sympathy.
“Sorry, but you’re mistaken. I know my boss’s wife very well. Yes, there she is. There, on the stairs.”
Linda turned around and froze in shock…
A well-groomed woman of about forty in a beige coat was walking down the spacious hall. David was next to her. He leaned toward her, said something, and the woman laughed. Then he gently took her arm and led her toward the exit, not even noticing Linda at the turnstile.
The box of tartlets slipped from her hands and hit the floor with a thud.
“This… is impossible,” Linda whispered.
Linda recognized the woman.
“This… is my sister,” she said hoarsely.
The security guard fell silent, confused.
It was Emma. The younger one. The one Linda had always helped: paying for her education, finding her a job, protecting her after every failed romance. The one who cried on her shoulder and said, “You’re my only family.”
“How long have they been… together?” “Linda asked, not taking her eyes off the couple.
“Almost a year,” the security guard replied quietly. “Everyone here is sure she’s his wife.”
Linda walked outside. There were no tears, no hysteria—only clarity. Now everything made sense: the late meetings, the disconnected phone, the cold evenings at home, and the “client visits.”
She didn’t call her husband or sister.
A week later, the company held an emergency board meeting. David walked into the room with a confident stride—and froze when he saw Linda at the head of the table.
“What kind of circus is this?” he hissed.
“It’s not a circus,” she said calmly. “It’s reality.”
Linda owned 42% of the company’s shares—an inheritance from her father, which David preferred not to remember. And there was a prenuptial agreement. A very detailed one.
When Emma tried to enter the room, security stopped her.
“Excuse me,” the same guard said coldly. “No outsiders allowed.”
Two people left the building that day—the ex-husband and the ex-sister. But Linda stayed. Not as someone’s wife. But as the new boss.