
After He Made His Mistress Partner, I Built My Empire
Chapter 2
The shareholders' meeting left me numb. I sat in my car in the underground parking garage long after everyone had gone, staring at nothing, the air conditioning blasting against my flushed skin. Victoria Chen. The name alone made my stomach turn. And now she was Ryan's 'partner'? After everything I'd sacrificed?
I checked my watch—9:47 PM. The executive floor would be empty now. Security knew me well enough not to question my presence; I'd spent countless late nights in that building, after all. Nights Ryan had been conspicuously absent for, I now realized.
The elevator doors opened with a soft ping to the 32nd floor. I moved silently down the corridor, my heart hammering against my ribs. The executive archives required Ryan's keycard, but I'd made a copy months ago when he'd carelessly left it on his desk. A necessary precaution, I'd told myself then. Just in case I needed to access files when he was unavailable. How prescient that decision seemed now.
I slipped inside the dimly lit room, the glow of my tablet illuminating rows of digital servers and filing cabinets. My fingers flew across the keyboard, searching for any communication between Ryan and Victoria. The system yielded results almost immediately—emails dating back four months. Four months of secret meetings, dinner reservations, and contract negotiations.
"Regarding your integration into Sterling's leadership..." one email from Ryan to Victoria began. I scrolled through attachment after attachment—position offers, compensation packages, even a drafted press release dated two months ago. My throat constricted as I read the details of Victoria's role—the exact position I had been promised in whispered conversations years ago when we shared dreams and a cramped apartment.
"You deserve this, Sarah," he'd said then. "We'll build this empire together."
Lies. All of it.
I dug deeper, a strange calm settling over me as my anger crystallized into something harder, colder. And then I found it—buried in a subfolder marked simply "Legacy Issues." The incident report from the Westside Tower project five years ago. The scaffold collapse that had injured two workers and nearly derailed the entire project.
My hands trembled as I opened the file. There it was in black and white—the original safety inspection logs showing Victoria's signature on the falsified documents, followed by an internal memo redirecting blame to "junior team member S. Mitchell" due to "potential liability concerns."
The memory crashed over me—the panic attacks, the whispers that followed me for months afterward, the projects I was removed from. All while Victoria had walked away unscathed, her reputation intact.
I downloaded everything, my breathing shallow as the files transferred to my secure cloud storage. This wasn't just about a promotion anymore. This was about years of systematic betrayal.
The next morning, I arrived at the office early, composed and immaculate in my most severe black suit. A mask of professionalism hiding the storm beneath. The conference room filled quickly for the project status meeting. I took my usual seat, spreadsheets and design mockups arranged precisely before me.
Ryan entered with Victoria at his side, her crimson lipstick matching yesterday's power suit. They sat opposite me, Victoria's perfectly manicured fingers splayed possessively across the table.
"Let's start with the Skyline Tower progress," Ryan announced, nodding toward me. "Sarah, update us on the design modifications."
I presented the revised blueprints with clinical precision, highlighting the structural innovations I'd developed over the past three months. Innovations that had saved the project millions and would likely win industry awards.
"Interesting approach," Victoria interrupted, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "Though I wonder if we're being too... conservative with the façade elements? The Sterling brand is known for boldness, after all." Her eyes locked with mine, a subtle challenge in their depths.
"The current design already pushes engineering boundaries," I replied evenly, my voice betraying none of the rage simmering beneath. "Any further 'boldness' would compromise structural integrity."
"Sarah's always been our voice of... caution," Victoria said with a dismissive laugh, turning to Ryan. "Remember that riverside project? You wanted to extend the cantilever, but she insisted it was too risky?"
Ryan nodded absently, not even bothering to defend the decision that had ultimately saved the project from disaster during the floods last year. A decision that had been mine alone.
"Sometimes caution prevents catastrophe," I said, my eyes never leaving Victoria's. "Especially when safety protocols are... overlooked."
A flicker of unease crossed her face. She knew exactly what I meant.
I closed my laptop with a decisive click. "If there's nothing else, I have clients waiting."
As I walked out, my mind was already calculating my next move. They had no idea what was coming.
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