The Last Supper in the Hamptons
The rhythmic thud of the knife against the marble countertop was dry and hollow, like the heartbeat of a patient declared brain-dead. Inside this gold-veined kitchen, I—the rightful owner of this estate—was meticulously preparing Foie Gras with a Blackberry Red Wine reduction for my husband and his mistress.
“Make sure mine is well-done, honey. I can’t do rare meat; it’s terrible for the skin,” Tiffany’s high-pitched, nasal voice drifted from the living room. She was lounging in the silk Victoria’s Secret robe Mark had bought for our 10th anniversary, her long legs draped over the custom velvet sofa I had spent months sourcing from Italy.

Mark sat beside her, stroking her hair. His eyes met mine without a flicker of guilt, only cold command: “Hurry it up. Tiffany’s starving. When you’re done, take your plate to the basement laundry room. Don’t ruin our appetite by lingering.”
Three months ago, Mark brazenly moved her in. He refused a divorce—not out of love, but to avoid a messy asset split under New York’s equitable distribution laws. Instead, he used his control over our joint accounts to turn me into a high-end maid. I was evicted from the master suite—a room filled with a decade of memories—to make way for their nightly, muffled laughter. I stayed silent. I endured. I cooked for them every single day.
But they didn’t know that the silence of a woman pushed to the edge is the silence of a ticking time bomb.
The Climax: A Banquet of Shadows
7:00 PM. Candlelight flickered on the mahogany dining table. Mark and Tiffany sat opposite each other, looking every bit the power couple. I stood in the shadows of the hallway, watching them taste the appetizers.
“This Cabernet is exquisite, babe,” Tiffany winked, taking a deep sip of the dark, full-bodied red.
Mark grinned, satisfied. “Enjoy it, sweetheart. Starting tomorrow, this house is officially ours. I’ve got the quitclaim deed ready; I’m just waiting for ‘my wife’ to sign it tonight.”
I stepped out of the shadows, carrying a silver tray with the main course. My face was a mask of indifference, but my lips curled into a smile that—if Mark had been paying attention—looked exactly like the Grim Reaper’s.
“Main course is served. Specialty Foie Gras, seasoned with… the secret of patience,” I whispered.
The Horrid Truth
They began to eat. One bite, then two. Suddenly, Tiffany dropped her fork, clutching her throat. Her face turned a sickly shade of grey. “Mark… I can’t… I can’t breathe. I’m burning up…”
Mark tried to stand, but his knees buckled. The wine glass in his hand shattered against the hardwood floor—as fractured as their fake happiness. He glared at me, his voice a ragged gasp: “You… what did you put in…”
I pulled out the head-of-the-table chair and sat down leisurely, pouring myself a glass of chilled sparkling water.
“Relax, it’s not a lethal poison. I’m not stupid enough to go to Rikers Island for the two of you,” I said calmly, my voice cold as ice. “The wine contains a potent hallucinogen and a temporary muscle relaxant. And the Foie Gras? That was seasoned with the massive debts you secretly forged my signature on over the years.”
I pulled a thick folder from my apron pocket.
“Mark, did you think I was blind? You used my family’s private equity firm to launder money for shell companies. And Tiffany? You thought you were the pampered mistress? You’re actually a ‘plant’ from Mark’s rivals to gather intel. Too bad you both fell into a much larger trap.”
I pulled out my iPhone and hit play on a recording. It was Mark’s voice, detailing a plan to stage a “boating accident” for me to collect a $10 million life insurance policy. Mark’s face went from pale to ghostly white.
“The State Police are on their way. Not for this dinner, but for the white-collar crime and conspiracy to commit murder charges I filed this afternoon,” I leaned into Mark’s ear, whispering: “The bedroom you let her sleep in? I had 4K cameras installed months ago. Every cent of company money you spent on her… it’s all on the board of directors’ desks now.”
The wail of sirens echoed from the distance, piercing the quiet New York night.
I stood up, untied my grease-stained apron, and tossed it over Tiffany as she writhed on the floor. I grabbed my Birkin bag and walked toward the door without looking back.
Dinner tonight was delicious. It tasted like freedom.