CEO’s Revenge I Exposed My Wife’s Affair at the Annual Gala

CEO’s Revenge I Exposed My Wife’s Affair at the Annual Gala

Plot Summary

Returning from a business trip, a CEO discovers undeniable evidence of his wife Mary's affair with her young assistant, Dean. After confirming the betrayal through surveillance footage, he is confronted by Dean's arrogant demeanor and a suspiciously large bonus request, setting the stage for a calculated revenge.

Search Tags

  • Character-Oriented: Dickerson, Dickerson and Mary, Dickerson and Dean
  • Plot-Oriented: what happens to Dickerson after discovering the affair, what happens to Mary at the annual gala

Character Relationships

  • Dickerson and Mary: Husband and wife, but the relationship is shattered by Mary's secret affair. Dickerson is the betrayed husband, while Mary is the unfaithful wife who has been lying about her activities.
  • Dickerson and Dean: Boss and employee, with the added tension of Dean being Mary's lover. Dean displays arrogant confidence, directly challenging Dickerson's authority, while Dickerson maintains a calm facade while planning his revenge.

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I came home from a business trip to find my personal slippers still damp.

I asked Mary Henson if we'd had visitors.

She froze for a split second, then laughed. How could we? You know I'm hopeless at socializing.

I just like staying in on weekends, nice and quiet.

Isn't that what you always said you loved about me? How well-behaved I am?

I gave a noncommittal smile and waited until she left to go shopping. Then I searched the apartment, room by room.

Someone had used the razor in the bathroom. A set of pajamas in the walk-in closet had been worn.

But the worst part? The box of Durex in the nightstand was completely empty.

Two days. Twelve condoms.

Impressive stamina.

I swallowed my rage and pulled out my phone:

"Contact the building manager. Get me all surveillance footage from the past two days."

"And make sure no one else finds out."

The next day at the office, the footage was already waiting in my inbox.

I clicked it open and dragged the progress bar.

Crystal clear. Timestamped to the second.

Starting three days ago, a man had been coming and going from my home. Frequently.

The final clip was recorded one hour before I'd arrived:

The elevator doors slid open. He stepped out with his arm around Mary's waist. They stopped just outside our front doorand kissed. Long, slow, desperate. The kind of kiss that made it hard to tell where one person ended and the other began.

Mary's hand slipped inside his coat. I'd never seen her like that. So eager. So hungry.

I recognized him instantly.

Dean Gilbert. Mary's new assistant.

I'd seen his rsum. Twenty-five years old, back from some overseas program.

Six-foot-one, with the kind of face that opened doors.

The video froze on the frame where he dipped his head to kiss the curve of her neck.

I closed the window and leaned back in my chair.

That's when the knock came. Two raps. Not too soft, not too loud.

"Come in."

The door swung open.

And there he was.

Dean Gilbert, in a tailored light-gray suit that showed off his height and long legs. Every hair in place. His eyes carried the sharp confidence of youthedged with something lazier. Almost arrogant.

He held a folder in one hand.

"Chairman Dickerson."

His voice was clear, all business.

"President Henson asked me to deliver this year-end bonus list for your signature."

He walked to my desk and set the folder down.

No small talk. No move to leave. He just stood there, waiting.

Posture perfect. But his gaze drifted past my face to the bookshelf behind me, as if this were nothing more than a trivial errand.

I looked up at him.

He didn't flinch. He even smileda smile with something unreadable beneath it.

Normally, when Mary sent documents like thisor had her secretary bring themI'd glance at the total and sign. She handled HR and Finance. I'd always given her free rein.

But today, I picked up the folder. Opened it.

Page by page, I went through the list. Bonuses ranged from tens of thousands to a few hundred thousandconsistent with this year's performance.

Then I reached the last page.

My hand stopped.

Next to Dean Gilbert's name was a long string of digits.

Year-end bonus: 0-0,000,000.

And in the remarks column, a single line: Plus one company BMW 730Li.

One million dollars. A BMW 7 Series.

For an executive assistant who'd been here less than six months.

My eyes lingered on that number for two seconds. Then I looked up.

Dean was watching me. That faint smile had deepened, and something flickered in his gazeimpatience.

"Chairman Dickerson, is there a problem?"

His tone stayed polite. But there was an edge now.

A push.

"Ms. Henson is... waiting to head out."

He made a point of emphasizing those last two words.

I picked up the Montblanc pen from my desk and uncapped it.

The nib hovered over the signature line. It didn't come down.

"Mr. Gilbert, you've been with the company for almost five months now, haven't you?"

My voice was steady. Unreadable.

"One week shy of five months."

His answer came quick and easy.

I said nothing more. I signed.

"Thank you, Chairman Dickerson."

He took the folder I handed back, flipped through to confirm the signature, then closed it.

And in that split second as he turned to leave, I saw it clearlyhis lips moved, fast and silent.

No sound. But the shape was unmistakable. Three syllables:

Old bastard.

He didn't even bother closing the door behind him.

I stayed in my chair. Didn't move.

The pen cap clicked back into place with a soft snap.

Sunlight streamed through the window, falling across one corner of my desk. Almost too bright.

I pressed the intercom for my secretary.

"Chairman Dickerson?"

"Close the door."

"Yes, sir."

A soft click, and the office fell silent again.

My eyes drifted to the minimized surveillance email icon. My finger brushed the mouse once, then stilled.

I didn't open it.

Ten minutes later, the front desk called.

"Chairman Dickerson, Ms. Henson and Mr. Gilbert just left together. They took... your Porsche."

"Noted."

I hung up.

Rising from my chair, I walked to the floor-to-ceiling windows.

Below, the black Porsche Panamera glided out of the underground garage, merged into traffic, and vanished at the edge of my vision.

The glass reflected my silhouettetailored suit, expressionless face.

A few minutes later, I opened the car's dashcam app.

The image was crisp. The audio, crystal clear.

Dean had his left hand on the wheel. His right rested on Mary's stockinged thigh.

His fingers traced lazy patterns there, the motion practiced. Familiar.

Mary had one hand draped over his arm, her face tilted up toward him, eyes curved with laughter, cheeks flushed pink.

The modest cream blazer she'd worn at the office was gonetossed in the backseat.

All that remained was a silk blouse, the top two buttons undone.

Not a trace of the composed executive she played at work.

"You said he looked at it carefully?"

Mary's voice came through, soft and coy, with an undercurrent of tension she couldn't quite hide.

"Flipped through several pages. Even paused on mine."

Dean chuckled, his fingers trailing higher along her thigh.

"What's wrongscared?"

"Just... surprised, that's all."

Mary hesitated, then leaned closer into him.

"He never used to look twice at anything I brought him. Always just signed."

"Worried he noticed something?" Dean shot her a sidelong glance, lips curling. "Relax. That old fool's got nothing in his head but business and money. Spends all day scheming how to make his next million. Never occurs to him his own house is already on fireand the horns on his head are glowing bright green."

Mary swatted his arm, the touch playful, barely a tap. "That mouth of yours."

"My mouth?"

Dean laughed outright, his hand sliding higher, fingertips slipping beneath the hem of her skirt.

"I can say worse. Want to hear? Last night, someone was whispering in my ear"

"Shut up!"

Mary clamped her hand over his mouth, her face burning redder now, but her eyesher eyes shimmered, dark and inviting.

The light turned red. The car stopped.

Dean caught her wrist, drew it to his lips, and pressed a kiss to her palm.

Then he turned and kissed her.

It wasn't a fleeting peckit was deep, lingering, consuming.

Mary pushed against his shoulder, but the resistance was token at best. Within seconds, she melted into him, arms winding around his neck, returning the kiss with equal fervor.

I watched. Expression blank. Pulse steady.

A horn blared from behind. The light had turned green. Dean finally pulled back, tongue dragging slowly across his lower lip, savoring her. He shifted the car into drive.

Mary sank against the headrest, fingers combing through her disheveled hair, smoothing her rumpled blouse. Her chest rose and fell in shallow breaths, cheeks still flushed with color that had nothing to do with makeup.

"Hotel's booked?"

Her voice came out slightly breathless.

"Same place as always." Dean's eyes stayed on the road, but his smirk was audible. "Suite with the floor-to-ceiling windows. River view. You like that one, don't you?"

"Mm." A low hum of approval. Her hand drifted back to his thigh, fingernails tracing lazy circles. "And my... bonus? You know how much work it took to balance those books. A million dollars plus a carI nearly didn't get it past those fossils on the board."

"My Mary. Always so capable."

Dean reached over and pinched her cheek, gaze heavy with undisguised want and smug satisfaction.

"Don't worry. I'll reward you properly tonight."

The car glided through the glittering downtown streets before pulling into the curved driveway of a five-star hotel.

I didn't watch the rest. I closed the feed.

Seven days later. The annual company gala.

The ballroom blazed with lightcrystal chandeliers refracting into a thousand prismatic shards, champagne flutes catching the glow as they clinked in endless toasts.

I stood by the head table, exchanging pleasantries with the board members. My gaze, however, kept drifting toward the entrance.

Mary and Dean were the last to arrive.

They swept in side by side. Mary wore a wine-red gown that bared her shoulders, her makeup immaculate. But the flush lingering on her cheekbones was harder to concealthe telltale remnant of whatever had delayed them.

Dean walked half a step behind her, draped in a midnight-blue velvet suit. The arrogance of youth radiated from him, untempered, almost deliberately flaunted.

I watched from across the room. A soft exhale escaped through my nosenot quite a laugh.

I raised my glass, took a measured sip, and said nothing.

"Chairman Dickerson." Drew Finch appeared at my elbow, touching his glass to mine with an amiable smile. "The company's numbers look excellent this year. You should be pleased."

"I should be."

I returned the smile and drained my glass in one smooth motion.

Three rounds of drinks later, the atmosphere had reached a fever pitch.

The emcee took the stage, voice booming with theatrical energy as he announced the evening's main event.

The year-end bonus presentation.

Cheers and applause erupted from the floor. Every eye in the room locked onto the stage.

I straightened my lapels and ascended the steps.

Taking the microphone, I let my gaze sweep across the sea of faceseach one bright with anticipation, practically vibrating with excitement.

Mary sat at the head table, posture elegant, composed. Only the slight tightening of her hands in her lap betrayed anything beneath the surface.

Dean occupied the seat beside her. Spine ramrod straight. A faint smile playing at the corner of his mouth. His eyes held the certainty of a man who already knew he'd won.

"First," I began, my voice carrying through the speakers to every corner of the hall, "I want to thank each of you for your dedication this past year."

Thunderous applause.

I worked through the list, calling names one by one.

Each recipient bounded up to the stage, beaming, accepting their envelope with effusive thanks. The amounts variedtens of thousands here, over a hundred thousand therebut every face wore the same delighted grin.

Dean watched the proceedings with hooded eyes.

When a mid-level manager collected his two-hundred-thousand-dollar bonus, I caught the subtle curl at the corner of Dean's lips. Contempt, barely concealed.

He leaned toward Mary, murmuring something. She pressed her lips together in a knowing smile and reached over to pat the back of his hand.

The gesture was casual. Intimate.

A few people in the crowd noticed. Curious glances flickered their way.

Dean didn't pull back. If anything, he sat up straighterbasking in the attention, savoring the whispered speculation.

The standard awards wrapped up quickly.

The emcee's voice rose with practiced excitement: "And now, the moment you've all been waiting forthe Annual Special Contribution Award!"

"One million dollars in cash, plus a BMW 7 Series!"

The ballroom fell silent for a heartbeat, then erupted into a buzz of speculation.

Everyone knew the weight of this prize.

"Who could it be? Vice President Zhang?"

"My money's on Director Wang from Marketinghis department doubled their numbers this year."

"What about..." someone lowered their voice, "Assistant Gilbert? He's President Henson's golden boy."

Dean Gilbert clearly heard that last remark.

The curve of his lips deepened, a flicker of smug certainty crossing his eyes.

Beside him, Mary smoothed an invisible wrinkle from her skirt, her smile perfectly composed.

I picked up the golden envelope and slid it open, taking my time.

"This year, our company welcomed an exceptional new member." My gaze swept across the audience. "She joined the R&D department less than six months ago, yet she spearheaded the core algorithm breakthrough for the Starsea Projectsaving the company nearly ten million dollars and pioneering an entirely new technical pathway."

Whispers rippled through the crowd.

As my words sank in, the smugness on Dean's face slowly calcified. Mary's polished smile evaporated.

I continued reading: "She is young, yet possesses extraordinary talent and focus. She keeps a low profile, yet her achievements shine brilliantly."

"By unanimous decision of the Board of Directors, this year's Special Contribution Award goes to..."

I paused, letting my gaze land squarely on Dean's face.

The color had already begun draining from his cheeks. That confident smirk hung frozen in placea poorly fitted mask starting to crack.

I looked away and announced clearly:

"From the R&D DepartmentMabel Mason!"

"Winner of the Annual Special Contribution Award!"

Applause and cheers detonated simultaneously.

The spotlight swung to an unremarkable table tucked in the corner.

A young woman in black-framed glasses, her hair pulled back in a simple ponytail, scrambled to her feet. Bewilderment and disbelief were written across every feature.

A colleague gave her a nudge, and she finally snapped out of her daze, making her way to the stage on unsteady legs.

In that instant, Dean's face turned the color of raw liver.

It was a shade born of shock, humiliation, and barely contained rage all churning together.

His fists clenched so hard his knuckles went white. His once-straight spine curved forward slightly, coiled tight, his stare boring into Mabel on the stage.

Mary was clearly rattled too.

She twisted toward him, one hand pressing down on his rigid arm, her lips moving rapidly as she whispered something urgent.

Dean didn't seem to hear a word. His chest heaved violently.

Growing desperate, Mary reached under the table and seized his hand, her fingers locking around his palm, fighting to contain the explosion building inside him.

From the stage, I saw it all with perfect clarity.

Mabel had reached me now, still looking dazed.

I handed her the oversized award plaque and the ceremonial car key. Her hands trembled as she took them.

"Th-thank you, Chairman Dickerson... thank you to the company..."

She was so overwhelmed she could barely string words together.

"You earned it."

I smiled, shook her hand, and gave her shoulder a light pat.

The applause continued below. People rose to their feet, cheering.

Mabel clutched her prizes, her face flushed apple-red, bowing again and again.

After stammering through her acceptance speech, she floated off the stage in a happy fog, still hugging the award.

I cleared my throat and raised the microphone.

"Everyone, may I have your attention please."

The ballroom gradually quieted, all eyes returning to the stage.

"The year-end awards have now concluded."

"However, this year we have one more award... a very special one."

A ripple of curiosity stirred through the audience, whispers spreading like wildfire.

I gave a slight nod to the secretary standing at the side of the stage.

She approached carrying a square gift box draped in deep blue velvet, a silver ribbon tied around it that caught the light with understated elegance. Her steps were measured, unhurried. She placed the box on the podium before me.

It wasn't large, but it was exquisite.

Dean's facewhich had been dark with barely contained furyshifted the moment he saw it.

The resentment and rage drained from his eyes like a receding tide, replaced by rekindled anticipation. He straightened in his seat and glanced toward Mary.

Mary's brow furrowed slightly, a flicker of confusion crossing her features. But within seconds, she gave Dean an almost imperceptible nodpart reassurance, part signal.

I reached out and let my fingers glide over the smooth velvet surface.

"This award has no monetary value attached. It's not tied to performance metrics." My voice was steady, even carrying a hint of warmth. "It simply represents the company's... appreciation for one employee's rather unique contributions."

Dean's spine went ramrod straight. The corner of his mouth twitched upward, impossible to suppress.

A look of smug certainty flashed in his eyesI knew it.

He probably assumed the hundred thousand dollars and the car were just window dressing, and that this "special award" was the real prize prepared specifically for him.

Perhaps a check with an obscene number of zeros. Or something even more valuablestock options, property deeds?

The audience seemed to share his speculation, their gazes ping-ponging between Dean and me.

I lifted my head, caught his eyes with precision, and smiled.

"Dean Gilbert. Assistant Gilbert."

I called his name.

In that instant, the anticipation on Dean's face peaked.

He drew a deep breath and smoothed the lapels of his midnight-blue velvet suit, trying to project an air of composure. But the eagerness and triumph in his eyes were practically spilling over.

He walked to the front and stopped before me, a dazzling smile spreading across his face.

"Chairman Dickerson."

His voice rang out, vibrating with barely contained excitement.

I said nothing more. I simply gestured toward the box on the podium.

Dean stepped forward and lifted the velvet box with both hands.

It was lighter than expected.

A flicker of confusion crossed his face, but it was quickly buried beneath a fresh wave of anticipation.

He turned to face the audience, holding the box aloft like a trophy. His gaze found Mary's direction for a brief, triumphant moment.

Then, projecting to the entire room, he declared:

"Thank you, Chairman Dickerson! Thank you for the company's recognition! I will continue to work hard and never disappoint this... special favor the company has shown me!"

Scattered applause trickled through the audience.

It was obvioushe wasn't well-liked here.

In her seat, Mary's face relaxed into a relieved smile. She clapped along, soft and measured.

Dean, brimming with self-satisfaction, couldn't wait any longer. His fingers attacked the silver ribbon.

They trembled slightly with excitement, and it took him several seconds to undo the elegant knot.

The velvet lid finally lifted.

The smile on his face froze solid the instant he saw what lay inside.

The host and the secretary, standing closest on stage, saw it first.

The secretary's hand flew to her mouth, her eyes going wide as saucers.

The host's professional smile calcified into something almost comicalpure, undisguised shock.

The front rows began to see it too.

The whispers ignited like water hitting hot oila sharp sizzle, then a rapid spread into an uproar that could no longer be contained.

Someone adjusted the spotlight. The beam tightened, centering on the box in Dean's hands.

No check inside. No keys. Nothing of value.

Just five chicken butts.

Cleaned and cooked, they gleamed with that distinctive pale-yellow sheen of braised meat. Arranged in a perfect circle on the white silk lining at the bottom of the box.

Each one plump. Glistening with oil.

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