
After He Erased My Legacy, I Became His Rival
After He Erased My Legacy, I Became His Rival Chapter 1
The chandeliers of the Grand Hyatt ballroom cast a golden glow over San Francisco's tech elite. I smoothed down my navy dress—the most expensive one I owned, yet still modest compared to the designer gowns floating around me. Nine years with Jason, and I still felt like an outsider at these events.
"There she is," someone whispered as I passed. "The girlfriend."
Not fiancée. Never fiancée. Just the girlfriend who'd been there since the UCLA dorm rooms, before FordTech was anything but scribbles on napkins and late-night dreams.
I scanned the crowd for Jason, spotting him near the stage in deep conversation with investors. His assistant, Lily Hart, stood beside him, her hand resting lightly on his arm. She turned her unfocused gaze in my general direction, the picture of dignified blindness. The office called her stoic, inspirational. I called her calculated.
My phone buzzed. A text from Jason: *Stay by the bar. Speech in 5.*
No hello. No are you here yet. Just instructions, as always.
The lights dimmed, and applause erupted as Jason took the stage, confidence radiating from his tailored suit and perfect smile. I remembered when that smile was just for me.
"Ten years ago, FordTech was nothing but an idea," he began, his voice commanding the room. "Tonight, we celebrate becoming the fastest-growing tech company in the Bay Area."
More applause. I clapped too, muscle memory from years of being his cheerleader.
"Success like this doesn't come from one person," Jason continued. "It comes from a team of visionaries."
My heart lifted slightly. This was it—the acknowledgment of our journey together, of the sixty-thousand dollars of my inheritance I'd invested, of the nights I'd spent proofreading proposals and bringing him coffee during coding marathons.
"I want to acknowledge someone special," Jason's gaze swept the room, landing everywhere but on me. "Someone whose contribution has been... invaluable."
The spotlight swung—not to me, but to Lily, who stood at the edge of the stage, her expression a perfect blend of surprise and humility.
"Lily Hart," Jason's voice softened with an affection I hadn't heard in years. "Who came to us two years ago and showed us that limitations exist only in the mind. Whose insights have transformed our user experience. Whose presence reminds us daily what true inspiration looks like."
The room erupted in applause. Lily's hand found Jason's, and he squeezed it warmly.
"And of course," he added, almost as an afterthought, "thanks to Olivia for her early vote of confidence and... administrative support."
Administrative support. Nine years reduced to secretarial work. The room blurred as hot shame washed over me. A few curious glances turned my way, then quickly returned to the stage where the real story was happening.
I stood frozen under the harsh lights, a prop in someone else's success story.
Two hours later, I fumbled with my keys outside my tiny apartment, the night air doing nothing to cool the humiliation still burning my cheeks. Inside, I kicked off my heels and collapsed onto the sofa—the same one we'd bought together for our first apartment, before Jason decided it wasn't "aesthetic enough" for his new condo.
My phone rang. Aunt Meredith. Strange for her to call so late.
"Olivia?" Her voice cracked. "It's your mother. She's had a stroke. A bad one. The doctors... they're not optimistic."
The world tilted. Mom. My rock. The only person who'd gently suggested that perhaps Jason wasn't treating me as I deserved.
"I'm coming," I whispered, already searching for my discarded shoes.
The hospital corridor stretched endlessly before me, antiseptic and unforgiving. I hadn't slept, hadn't changed from my gala dress. Nothing mattered except getting to her.
"Olivia."
A familiar voice stopped me. I turned to find Lucas Hayes—my childhood friend, the boy who'd taught me to ride a bike and bandaged my scraped knees. Now a man, his face etched with concern, standing outside my mother's room.
"Lucas? How did you—"
"Your aunt called me." He stepped forward, his presence solid, grounding. "I've taken care of the bills. The emergency care, specialists. Everything."
"I can't let you—"
"You can and you will." His eyes, warm and steady, held mine. "I know about Jason, Liv. The whole humiliating scene tonight. How he's been freezing you out financially."
Shame flooded me anew. "How could you possibly—"
"It doesn't matter." Lucas's hand found mine, warm and steady. "What matters is protecting you from whatever he's planning next. I have a proposition—a marriage contract. Temporary, practical. It would shield your assets, give you legal standing if he tries anything."
I stared at him, this ghost from my past offering a lifeline when I was drowning.
"Your mother needs you focused on her, not worried about Jason's next move," he said softly. "Let me help you, Olivia. Like we used to help each other."
Behind him, the monitors beeped, measuring what remained of my mother's life. And I realized I had reached the moment where everything would change.
After He Erased My Legacy, I Became His Rival of Contents
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