
After He Made His Mistress Partner, I Built My Empire
Chapter 3
The cafeteria buzzed with the usual lunchtime chatter, but I barely registered any of it. My salad sat untouched as I stared at my phone, thumb hovering over Ethan Vance's contact. We hadn't spoken in years, not since our MIT days when we'd stayed up all night debating sustainable architecture while our classmates partied. He'd gone on to establish one of Seattle's most innovative design firms while I... well, I had helped build Ryan's empire from the shadows.
I took a deep breath and pressed call before I could talk myself out of it.
"Sarah Mitchell," Ethan answered on the third ring, surprise evident in his voice. "It's been what—five years?"
"Six, actually," I replied, forcing lightness into my tone. "How's the Pacific Northwest treating you?"
"Can't complain about the view or the coffee," he chuckled. "But I doubt you're calling to discuss Seattle's rainfall patterns."
I glanced around to ensure no one was within earshot. "I'm working on some new concepts that might interest you. Thought we could collaborate."
"From Sterling? Interesting proposition." The skepticism in his voice was unmistakable.
"Not exactly." I lowered my voice. "These are independent projects. My own work."
"I'd be lying if I said I wasn't intrigued," Ethan replied. "Send them over."
I opened my tablet and selected six projects from my personal portfolio—innovative designs I'd created but that Ryan had presented as his own. "Just sent them. Nothing official, just... professional courtesy."
"I'll take a look," Ethan promised. "Good to hear from you, Sarah. It's been too long."
After hanging up, I pushed my salad away, appetite gone. The first move had been made. Not a declaration of war, but a quiet opening of a door I might need to walk through.
Three hours later, my phone vibrated against my desk. Ethan's name flashed on the screen.
"These are Sterling's latest designs?" he asked without preamble when I answered.
"No," I replied, my heart pounding. "They're mine."
Silence stretched between us. Then: "I always suspected... Ryan's name is on everything coming out of Sterling, but these have your signature all over them. That cantilevered glass concept for the riverside project? Pure Sarah Mitchell."
Something warm unfurled in my chest—recognition, after so long in the shadows.
"I need someone like you in Seattle," Ethan continued, his voice gaining momentum. "Not as a designer—as a senior partner. These concepts could revolutionize our approach to urban integration."
I gripped the phone tighter. "Are you offering me a job?"
"I'm offering you the recognition you deserve," he replied without hesitation. "Full creative control, profit sharing, your name on the door if you want it."
"I'll... need to think about it," I managed, though every cell in my body screamed yes.
"Take your time," Ethan said, though we both knew what my answer would be. "But Sarah? Don't take too long."
The weekend arrived with merciful swiftness. While Ryan was at his Hamptons retreat with Victoria—a thought that still twisted like a knife—I executed the next phase of my plan.
My apartment became command central. Spread across my dining table were three laptops: one transferring my minority shares to a blind trust my college roommate had helped me establish, another downloading my entire digital archive onto encrypted drives, and the third compiling my confidential client contact list—relationships I'd cultivated over eight years while Ryan took the credit.
I worked methodically, fueled by green tea and cold determination. Each file transferred, each contact saved, each legal document signed was another link in the chain of my liberation.
By Sunday evening, my preparations were complete. I stood in my living room, surrounded by the physical evidence of my strategic exit—neatly labeled boxes, encrypted drives, and a single carry-on suitcase.
My phone pinged with a message from Ryan: "Need you to review Victoria's integration plan before tomorrow's executive meeting."
No pleasantries. No acknowledgment of how this affected me. Just another demand.
I didn't reply. Instead, I picked up my phone and dialed Ethan again.
"I've made my decision," I said when he answered. "When can I start?"
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