
Abandoned at the IPO Bell
Chapter 3
The fluorescent lights of the emergency room buzzed overhead, casting an unnatural pallor across my skin as a nurse gently cleaned the gash on my forehead. My body ached from the impact, but the physical pain was nothing compared to the hollow feeling in my chest. Ryan hadn't called back. Not once.
"You're lucky," the nurse said, her kind eyes crinkling at the corners. "Just a mild concussion and some cuts. Nothing that won't heal." She paused, her voice dropping lower. "You're Madison Wells, aren't you? From VisionCore?"
I nodded, wincing as the movement sent a spike of pain through my temple.
"I saw what happened this morning," she continued, applying a butterfly bandage with practiced fingers. "My brother works in tech. He couldn't believe Mr. Carter just... left like that."
My stomach clenched. Of course it was already everywhere. Our bell-ringing ceremony—or rather, my solo performance—had been livestreamed to millions.
"The board's been calling," she added, handing me my phone. "Someone named Lawrence keeps leaving messages about investor concerns and a 'family emergency statement.' Is that what they're calling it?"
I stared at the screen. Seventeen missed calls from Lawrence Bryer, our head of investor relations. Four from David Chen. None from Ryan.
"Thank you," I said, my voice sounding distant to my own ears. "For everything."
As she left, I scrolled through the messages. Lawrence wanted me to approve a press statement claiming Ryan had rushed to aid a family member in a skiing accident. The perfect cover story—technically true if you considered your secret girlfriend "family."
My phone buzzed with a text from David: *Need to see you ASAP. Not at the office.*
David Chen had been with us since the beginning—our first hire, the brilliant engineer who'd helped translate my theoretical algorithms into functioning code. If anyone knew the truth about VisionCore's development, it was David.
* * *
Two hours later, I sat across from him in a quiet corner of a coffee shop in Palo Alto, far from our corporate headquarters. David's usually animated face was solemn as he slid a USB drive across the table.
"What's this?" I asked, though something in his expression told me I already knew.
"Insurance," he replied, his voice barely above a whisper. "Source code logs dating back to our first year. Email threads. Internal chat transcripts." He tapped the drive with his index finger. "Proof that the core AI algorithm—the one that's the backbone of our $4.2 billion valuation—came from your work, not his."
I stared at the tiny device, feeling the weight of what it represented. "You kept all this?"
David's eyes met mine, unwavering. "I saw how he started taking credit for your innovations in investor meetings. How he'd present your ideas as his own when you weren't in the room." He shrugged, a small, sad gesture. "I figured someday you might need to remember who really built VisionCore."
My throat tightened. "David, I don't know what to say."
"Say you'll fight," he replied simply. "The company needs you, Madison. Not him."
I closed my fingers around the drive, feeling something shift inside me—grief hardening into resolve.
* * *
Eleanor Vance's office occupied the top floor of a sleek high-rise in downtown San Francisco. Floor-to-ceiling windows offered a panoramic view of the bay, but the attorney's attention was fixed entirely on the documents spread across her glass desk.
"These logs are comprehensive," she said, scrolling through the files I'd provided. "And damning." She looked up, her sharp eyes assessing me over rimless glasses. "You understand what you're starting here?"
"I'm not starting anything," I replied, my voice steadier than I'd expected. "Ryan did that when he built our company on my work while building his life with another woman."
A hint of a smile crossed Eleanor's face. "Good answer." She pushed a document toward me. "This is a retainer agreement. Once you sign, we begin immediate proceedings to revoke Mr. Carter's board privileges and secure your position as sole CEO."
I stared at the paper, pen poised above the signature line. This wasn't just business anymore—it was war. And wars had casualties.
"He'll fight back," Eleanor warned, reading my hesitation. "Men like Ryan Carter don't surrender power willingly."
I thought of the identical necklaces. The abandoned bell-ringing. His voice on the phone as I sat bleeding in my wrecked car: *Is this for real? Or is this more drama for attention?*
The pen moved across the paper, my signature a declaration of independence.
"Let him fight," I said, meeting Eleanor's gaze. "I've been coding workarounds for impossible problems since I was sixteen. Ryan Carter is just another bug in the system."
As I stood to leave, my phone lit up with a notification. Ryan had finally texted: *Found the dog. Can we talk tonight? I can explain everything.*
I slipped the phone back into my pocket without responding. He had no idea what was coming.
Nor did I realize that my signature on those papers would set in motion events that would destroy not just a relationship, but lives.
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