The Day My Husband’s Mistress Thought I Was the Maid-giangtran

My husband’s mistress rang the doorbell, handed me her coat, and said, “Tell Stephen I’m here.”

She thought I was the maid.

In my own home.

She had no idea I was his wife of twelve years—or that I owned the company where her father worked, a detail she would never guess from her arrogant stance.

I held her designer coat while she strutted through my foyer like she owned the place, every step commanding attention, her heels clicking against the polished hardwood as if the room belonged to her.

Blonde, mid-twenties, dress worth more than most people’s rent, she surveyed the space with critical eyes.

“This place needs a renovation. I’ll talk to Stephen,” she said casually, as though announcing plans for a hotel lobby rather than a family home.


Stephen is my husband.

He was my husband—the man I built this house with, brick by brick, working two jobs while finishing medical school, investing sweat, time, and love into every corner.

And here was a girl young enough to be his daughter, critiquing our home like it was hers, moving through the rooms with condescending ease, feet brushing our carefully chosen rugs.

“Where is Stephen?” she asked, voice sharp, impatient, assuming compliance.

“He’s not here,” I said, keeping my voice steady, masking the surge of anger that burned beneath my calm exterior.

“Well, when will he be back? I don’t have all day,” she continued, as if I were a servant on call for her convenience.

“Who are you?” I asked, voice measured, understanding more than I wanted to about the audacity and sense of entitlement she carried.

“I’m Amber, Stephen’s girlfriend. And you’re the maid, apparently?”

Có thể là hình ảnh về cửa trượt


She laughed at the notion, a sharp, tinkling sound meant to belittle, settling on the sofa with her feet on the coffee table we refinished together.

She ordered water—wrongly prepared, as though testing me—and lectured me like I was part of the staff, ignoring the years I had invested in this house, in this marriage, in the life we built.

She referenced my “book club” in a mocking tone, insulting my choices, my appearance, my career, as if the hard work of a lifetime were invisible to her judgmental eyes.

I listened quietly, allowing her to reveal the depth of her ignorance and arrogance, knowing that every word was a mirror of her own insecurities, and a test of the restraint I could muster.


Hours passed, or it felt like hours, as she wandered through rooms, inspecting furniture, lighting, and even the artwork we had carefully curated, leaving a trail of verbal criticism in her wake.

Each comment cut, yet I did not rise to confront her directly; patience and strategy were my weapons, my calm façade masking the tempest building behind my eyes.

I could see Stephen in her every glance and movement, the way she measured him as though he were a prize to be displayed rather than a man with a life, a wife, and a family.

When she finally moved toward the study, I followed silently, aware that she had no clue about my control over the business empire her father had worked for, a subtle leverage she would soon learn I wielded effortlessly.


I stood behind her as she began rifling through papers, offering unsolicited advice on organization and décor, and I realized this girl had never understood consequence, authority, or the boundaries between privilege and power.

Có thể là hình ảnh về bộ vét và đám cưới

Her voice, confident, patronizing, yet tinged with the innocence of someone accustomed to getting her way, echoed through the room, and I decided it was time to act, to reveal the truth she had so arrogantly ignored.

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