The Robot Mistress Exposing My Cheating Husband

The Robot Mistress Exposing My Cheating Husband

I brought the impoverished college student I'd sponsored for three years into my home.

She was well-behaved, sensible, and her emotional responses were calibrated to perfection. When dealing with complex feelings, she always performed exactly as required.

In just five days, my husband couldn't take his eyes off her.

He claimed I was too intense, too rigidnothing like the gentle, understanding Caroline Dickerson.

My in-laws held her hand and showered her with meticulous care, treating this stranger more like a cherished daughter-in-law than the woman who had served them for years.

They turned a blind eye to my decade of sacrifice.

That is, until the day my husband handed me the divorce papers. His parents, feigning heartbreak, cut ties with me immediately. They even joined forces to cyberbully me, pushing me into a maelstrom of public scorn and accusations.

Disappointed, I reached into my pocket and pressed the controller.

And finally, the world went quiet.

It started five days ago.

I decided to bring the student I'd sponsored for three years back to the house. When I told my husband, Alex Finch, about the arrangement, he immediately objected.

"It's inappropriate," he insisted, brow furrowing. "If she's struggling, we can just spend a little extra to rent her a studio apartment."

I actually felt relieved by his resistance, but my hands were tied. This was a directive from company leadership; I had no authority to refuse.

That first night, I tested the waters.

"What do you think of Caroline? She seems so pitiful. Shouldn't we just let her stay?"

Alex's attitude shifted. He didn't cling to his previous objections.

"She really is having a hard time," he conceded, voice softening. "I'll clear out the guest room tomorrow."

Caroline Dickerson was stunning. Tall and slender, with large, animated eyes that seemed to capture every light in the room. Her voice was soft, measured, unhurriedher personality programmed for maximum likability.

I quietly studied my husband's reaction but said nothing.

The next day, my in-laws came to visit their son.

Caroline answered the door, startling the older couple. Once introductions were made, however, realization dawned on them.

Since entering our home, Caroline hadn't lifted a finger. She didn't do housework; she simply offered "emotional value." Her mouth was sweeter than honey, charming Alex and his parents effortlessly.

Meanwhile, I dragged myself home after a full day of work, only to start my second shift cleaning the house.

My efforts earned no praise. Instead, I was constantly nitpicked by my mother-in-law, who compared me to their new favorite at every turn.

"Look at Caroline. So gentle, so considerate. Why can't you be more like her?" she scolded. "I really don't know what to say about you anymore."

Then came the incident with the walnutsheirlooms my father-in-law had been polishing for years. Caroline accidentally crushed them.

She simply cried out, "Uncle!" in a pitiful, trembling tone, acting as if she were the victim.

If I had so much as touched those walnuts, I would have been berated. But for her? Silence.

The way Alex looked at Caroline had already changed. His gaze grew heavy, lingering on her.

Every evening, his eyes scanned the room for her the moment he walked through the door. He wouldn't relax until he confirmed she was there.

Two days later, the cracks began to show. Caroline's "bad habits" surfaced.

She sat cross-legged on the sofa with her shoes still on, spitting sunflower seed shells directly onto the floor. She tossed items carelessly and began eating before anyone else reached the table.

Seeing her eating alone again, I marched out of the kitchen, dishes in hand.

"How many times have I told you?" I snapped. "We wait for everyone before eating. Is that so hard to understand?"

Unexpectedly, my mother-in-law shot me a glare.

"What's wrong with Caroline eating first? There's no problem. She's a young girl; let her eat."

My father-in-law lowered his reading glasses and chimed in. "Having a healthy appetite is good. We don't mind, so why are you making a fuss?"

Their words were so absurd I actually laughed.

Who is the master of this house?

I owned the property. I cleaned the floors. I cooked the meals. Yet correcting a rude guest was now my sin?

"Dad, Mom," I said, trying to keep my voice steady. "Do you really think this is appropriate behavior?"

My mother-in-law scoffed. "What's inappropriate? You brought her here, didn't you? We haven't complained."

"You should be grateful she treats you well."

Caroline Dickerson stood up, her expression a mask of concern. "Uncle, Auntie, please don't fight because of me. I'll work harder to change. I promise."

My mother-in-law sneered, gesturing at the girl. "Look at that. What a good kid. Unlike youso petty."

Petty? The word lodged in my throat like a fishbone.

Just then, the front door opened. Alex walked in, pausing as the heavy atmosphere hit him. He loosened his tie, his gaze darting between us. "At it again?"

Before I could speak, my mother-in-law launched her offensive.

"Some people are just too thin-skinned. They can't handle a little criticism." She cast a doting look at Caroline. "Unlike Caroline here. She knows when she's wrong, she fixes it, and she knows how to make us happy."

Alex turned to me, his brow furrowed. "Are you getting jealous of Caroline again?"

A bitter laugh escaped me. Three days. Three days, and this house had transformed into a battlefield where I was the only casualty.

"Jealous?" I asked, my voice tight. "Of what? She's just a"

"If you're not jealous," Alex cut in, "then why can't you cut her some slack?"

I stared at him, stunned. I never imagined that bringing Caroline into our home would dismantle my marriage so thoroughly.

All my years of effort, of sacrifice, felt like a punchline to a joke I didn't understand. They didn't need a wife or a daughter-in-law. They needed a sycophant. A sweet-talking doll who would stroke their egos.

My flaws were magnified under a microscope, while Caroline's glitches were ignored. I had become optional. Dispensable.

When I didn't answer, Alex scoffed, dismissing my silence as guilt. He tossed his overcoat onto the sofa and turned to Caroline.

"Vivian's just like that. Don't mind her."

Caroline shook her head, her eyes wide and glistening. "No, Alex. Vivian is right. I was wrong."

A masterclass in manipulation. One sentence, delivered with perfect, rehearsed innocence.

My mother-in-law ate it up. "What a sensible child. If only she were my daughter-in-law."

I stood frozen, staring at the woman I had cooked and cleaned for. I had been married to Alex for five years. Our life had been stable. Boring, perhaps, but stable.

I didn't expect a single stranger to shatter it all.

My mother-in-law shot me a sideways glance, her lip curling. "Unlike some people. Married five years and still no heir. Just a dead end."

I swallowed the defense rising in my throat. Useless. The medical reports were clearthe fertility issues were ninety percent on Alex's side. But in this house, biology bowed to ego. It was always my fault.

I pulled out a chair to sit at the dining table.

"If I were you," my mother-in-law muttered, picking at her nails, "I'd be too ashamed to eat."

I laughed then, a cold, sharp sound. "I cooked every dish on this table. Why shouldn't I eat?" I glared at her. "You sat on the couch watching TV while I slaved away in the kitchen. Where do you get the nerve to lecture me?"

My mother-in-law's eyes bulged. She slammed her hand on the table. "You... what did you just say to me?"

"We are your elders! Is this how you show respect?" she screeched. "We raised Alex with our own hands! Do we not deserve a little peace in our old age?"

I picked up my bowl, my grip tightening on the porcelain. "Sure. Then talk less. If you want me to work like a servant, stop pointing fingers."

Smack!

The sound cracked through the room like a whip.

My head snapped to the side. The bowl slipped from my fingers, shattering against the floor tiles.

Alex stood over me, his chest heaving, his hand still raised. He pointed a trembling finger at my face.

"Have you said enough? Apologize to Mom and Dad! Apologize to Caroline! Now!"

I touched my burning cheek, looking up at him calmly.

In five years, he had never raised a hand against me. Not once. But today, for themfor herhe struck me.

Seeing my silence, Alex roared, "Are you deaf? Did you hear me?"

"I heard you," I said, my voice dangerously quiet. "And?"

I met his gaze, refusing to blink, refusing to let him see me cry. "What exactly did I do wrong?"

"You still don't get it, do you?"

Alex sneered. With a sudden, violent motion, he swept his arm across the table.

Plates crashed. Soup splattered across the walls. Glass shards skittered across the floor.

The dinner I had spent over an hour preparing after a full day of work lay in ruins at my feet. Before I could take a single bite, he had destroyed it all.

I stared down at the culinary disaster splattered across the floor. They say there is no grief greater than a heart that has ceased to feel. Looking at the mess, I understood exactly what that meant.

I set down my chopsticks and shifted my gaze to Caroline. For a split second, a look of pure, malicious delight flickered across her facea glitch in her programmingbefore she smoothed her features back into a mask of innocence.

"Fine," I said, my voice steady. "I'll go. She stays."

I retreated to the bedroom and dragged out my suitcase. It took less than an hour to pack my life away. Not once did anyone come to the door. No one tried to stop me.

When I finally emerged, my in-laws were fawning over Caroline, while Alex sat slumped on the sofa, eyes glued to the television. He didn't even look up. Only Caroline acknowledged my presence.

"Vivian, why don't you just apologize?" she asked, her voice dripping with faux concern. "They won't hold a grudge."

I scoffed, my gaze sweeping over Alex and his parents.

"Isn't this exactly what you wanted? A daughter-in-law like her? Fine. I'm granting your wish." I tightened my grip on the suitcase handle. "I just hope you don't live to regret it."

The elevator doors were sliding shut when my mother-in-law's shrill voice cut through the air.

"Good riddance! As long as Caroline is here, we're happier than we've ever been!"

I walked out of the complex and dialed Sophia.

"Congratulations," I told her the moment she picked up. "You're about to host a homeless woman."

At first, Sophia thought I was joking. But when she heard the hollow tone in my voice, the laughter died in her throat. She arrived twenty minutes later.

During the drive, I recounted the entire absurdity without embellishment. Sophia, however, was practically vibrating with rage.

"Alex isn't just a man," she spat, gripping the steering wheel until her knuckles turned white. "He's a disease."

For the next two days, I holed up at Sophia's apartment. The Finches treated my absence as a vacation. They didn't call. They didn't text. But they made sure to perform in the family group chat, knowing I could see every word.

They acted as if I had simply ceased to exist.

[Mom: Ask Caroline what she wants for dinner. I'll pick it up.]

[Alex: Mom, Caroline says she wants seafood.]

[Dad: Got it. I'll grab some after work.]

[Mom: Don't bother cooking. We're taking Caroline out. Meet us at the Haitian Tower.]

[Mom: Caroline is such a delight. Unlike someone who drags a long face around the house all day and ruins the mood for everyone.]

Reading that last message, a humorless smile touched my lips.

The distance had given me clarity. Caroline hadn't ruined my marriage; she had simply illuminated the rot that was already there. Cutting ties wasn't a loss. It was an amputation of gangrenous tissue.

But before I could even file the divorce papers, Alex and his parents launched a preemptive strike.

That night, Sophia was scrolling through short videos when she gasped. "Vivian, look at this."

It was Alex.

He had spun a web of lies so thick it was suffocating. In the video, he played the tragic hero perfectly. Fresh, bloody scratches marred his armssuperficial, but visually shocking. He looked into the camera with teary eyes, claiming his wife was abusing him.

He painted me as a monster: a woman who refused to have children, who was lazy and greedy, and who treated his saintly parents like dirt.

The moment the video went live, the internet exploded.

[A woman beating a man? That's new. She sounds like a nightmare.]

[That's not domestic violence; that's assault! Lock her up!]

[Call the police! That woman is dangerous.]

[Society is going to hell. Poor guy.]

Sophia threw her phone down, her face flushed with anger.

"That's it. Get your shoes. We're going back there to settle this now. If we don't, they'll think you're an easy target!"

I shook my head, signaling her to calm down. The video made my blood boil, yes, but panic was useless.

"No," I said quietly. "Going there now just makes me look guilty. It feeds the narrative."

"So you're just going to let him destroy you?" Sophia demanded, pacing the room. "There are three thousand comments already! By tomorrow, who knows how many?"

She was right. At the speed the internet moved, a video like this would spread like a virus. The court of public opinion was already in session, and the verdict was going to be brutal.

It was precisely because of the complexity of the situation that I couldn't immediately prove my innocence. I needed them to overplay their hand.

My best friend sat across from me, scrolling through comments on her phone. She gave me a grim thumbs-up. "You have the patience of a saint, Viv. If it were me, I'd have kicked down their door and dragged them out by their hair. If he wants a war, I'd make sure we both went down in flames."

"Violence isn't the answer," I said, checking the recording software on my laptop. "Strategy is."

My phone buzzed. Alex.

He didn't waste time with pleasantries.

"Divorce me," he demanded, his voice dropping low. "If you don't sign the papers, get ready to be ruined. I will make sure you can never show your face in public again."

I hit record. "Let me get this straight. You hit me, cursed at me, drove me out of my own home, and now you're inciting cyber-violence against me. All this just to force a divorce?"

He didn't even hesitate. "That's right. I just want out."

He had me on speaker, because his mother's shrill voice cut through a second later.

"The Finch family can't afford to keep a daughter-in-law like you," she sneered. "Agree to the divorce and sign over the house, and we'll stop. We won't post anything else online."

I let out a dry laugh. "Stop exposing me? With what? Those baseless lies?"

After watching his performance in the video, I had to admitAlex was convincing. A shame he hadn't applied to film school. Wasted talent.

They wanted me gone, and they wanted my property. Bottomless greed.

"I won't divorce you," I said, voice steady. "And you're never getting that house. Final."

A low chuckle came through the receiver.

"Vivian, you're a professional. You care about your reputation, don't you?" Alex taunted. "What you saw today was just an appetizer. When I release the next two segments, let's see if you can maintain that composure."

He thought he had me cornered. Thought he held all the cards.

Little did he know, every step he took was landing exactly where I wanted it.

His parents erupted in the background. His mother, in particular, was shrieking, egging him on to destroy me completely. Scorched earth.

She called Caroline over to join the performance.

Caroline was perfectly cooperative. Whatever command was input, she executed.

"Caroline, oh, how I wish you were my daughter-in-law," the old woman cooed, loud enough for me to hear. "So obedient. So sensible."

She remained blissfully ignorant of what Caroline actually was.

"Once I'm divorced, you can be my wife," Alex declared. "My family has done you a huge favor, after all. And my parents like you."

Caroline replied instantlynot a millisecond of processing delay. "Sure. Whatever you say, Alex. I'll listen to whatever you say."

The next day, Alex sent a message to our group chat:

[Vivian Hartley, I'll give you one last chance: divorce, and leave with nothing.]

I didn't reply.

His mother followed up immediately:

[If you still don't agree, you'll bear the consequences.]

Not long after, a second video hit the internet.

This time, the subject wasn't Alex. It was Caroline.

On camera, she looked devastatingly pitiful. Face streaked with tears, eyes wide with terror. The camera panned over her body, revealing shocking, bloody welts across her abdomen, shoulders, arms, and calves. Whip marks.

She sobbed into the lens, claiming I was the monster behind her injuries.

According to her narrative, I had sponsored her college education not out of kindness, but to bind her as a slave. Beatings and verbal abuse were her daily reality. When my temper flared, I would imprison her in the house.

The video ignited the internet like a match thrown into gasoline.

Comments rolled in by the thousands.

[Is she even human? Worse than a devil! Beating and imprisoning a poor student? I hope she dies a horrible death!]

[Pure evil walks among us. Hell is empty because the demons are right here!]

[That poor girl looks so broken. Thank god the husband is standing up for justice.]

[I called the police. This is a crime! Arrest her now!]

Public opinion reached a fever pitch. The entire internet stood united behind Alex Finch, ready to burn me at the stake.

That afternoon, Alex Finch materialized on Sophia's doorstep. He wasn't alonephone raised high, camera trained on us, broadcasting live.

"Look, everyone." His voice trembled with practiced emotion. "This is her. My wife. The monster who ruined us." He angled for his best angle. "Caroline and I have suffered unimaginable trauma, yet here she is, living her best life without a shred of remorse!"

Sophia surged forward, but I caught her arm.

"Don't."

I met the camera with ice-cold calm, then shifted to Caroline, who cowered theatrically behind him.

"Living my best life?" My tone was bone-dry. "Is that what you call this?"

Alex sneered at the lens. "Still acting? You forced this! You drove us here!"

"Forced you to do what?" I stepped into frame. "Self-harm? Coach Caroline into slandering me?" I locked eyes with him. "Swear to the heavens you didn't cause those injuries yourself."

Not that oaths meant anything to him. Lies came as easily as breathing.

I turned to the girl behind him. "And you, Caroline? Going to continue this charade?"

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