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After His Assistant Stole My Life Novel Cover

After His Assistant Stole My Life

I heard New York before I saw it. The terminal noise hit me the second the customs doors swung open — rolling luggage, overhead announcements, a crying kid somewhere near gate B. JFK smelled like recycled air and burnt coffee, same as it always had. Some things don't change while you're gone. I had been counting on that. I pulled my carry-on and scanned the arrivals hall. My eyes moved fast, the way they always do in a new room — clocking exits, reading faces, looking for the one I actually wanted. Landon Rivera was six-foot-two and impossible to miss. Broad shoulders. That particular stillness he carried, like the air around him had decided to behave.
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Chapter 3

I started with the board members.

Not publicly. Not loudly. The kind of work I do best happens in the margins — a targeted email here, a private call there, a carefully worded shareholder communication that lands in the right inbox at the right moment and plants a question that doesn't go away.

Cristian Morris had been building his position in Rivera Holdings for eighteen months. Patient work. I respected the patience, the way you respect a blade for being well-made before you take it apart. He had three allied directors on the board — Reyes, Cho, and a quiet man named Ellerbee who voted with whoever he thought was winning. He had Aliza feeding him internal intelligence. He had a shell company absorbing capital that I'd traced back to a secondary holding structure under Morris Group within two hours of Cooper handing me that folder.

I worked through my own vehicles. Carpenter Capital had shareholding positions in four companies with overlapping board exposure to Rivera Holdings' allied partners. I spent four mornings making calls before the sun was fully up, sitting at my kitchen counter with black coffee and a yellow legal pad, moving pieces on a board that Cristian Morris didn't know I was playing on.

The counter-acquisitions were quiet. Surgical. By Thursday, I had effectively neutralized Ellerbee's incentive to vote against Rivera Holdings' interests by acquiring a controlling stake in one of his family office's preferred vehicles. He didn't know it was me yet. He would.

I also isolated the intelligence leaks. Three internal documents that had shown up, in altered form, in a Morris Group-linked analyst report. I traced the access logs through Nora Castillo in HR — a twenty-minute conversation, efficient and clinical, both of us understanding exactly what we were doing without needing to say it directly. Aliza's access credentials. Specific timestamps. A clean evidentiary record.

I filed it. I did not act on it yet.

Landon was getting results he couldn't fully account for. I watched him register it — a slight pause over his morning briefings, a second glance at a counterparty withdrawal report that shouldn't have landed as well as it did. He didn't ask. I didn't explain. That was fine. Let him wonder.

I had always worked best when no one was watching.

The conference room was quiet by nine-fifteen. Everyone else had gone home. The city outside the floor-to-ceiling windows was doing its nighttime thing — all that dark and light and relentless motion, forty floors below us, indifferent.

Landon and I had been in here for two hours. Contract revision. A media licensing agreement, third draft, and there was a clause in section seven that I wanted restructured and he thought was fine as written. We had been disagreeing about it, calmly and precisely, the way two people disagree when they are actually arguing about something else and both know it.

'The indemnity window is too narrow,' I said. 'Eighteen months doesn't cover the exposure on a deal this size.'

'Eighteen months is industry standard.'

'For deals half this size.' I tapped the clause with my pen. 'This one warrants thirty-six.'

'Counterparty won't move on it.'

'Then we go back to counterparty.'

He looked at me across the table. That flat, controlled look he used when he was deciding how much to say.

'Not everything,' he said, 'can be reopened and restructured after the fact.' His voice was even. Too even. 'Some things, once they've been built a certain way, don't survive being taken apart and put back together. You lose the integrity of the original.'

I set my pen down.

The room went very still.

We both knew he wasn't talking about the clause. We both knew neither of us was going to say that out loud.

I looked at him for a moment. Just a moment. Long enough to let him know I had heard the thing underneath the words, and long enough to let him see that I wasn't going to hand him the opening he hadn't quite allowed himself to ask for.

'Let's focus on the clause,' I said.

I picked my pen back up.

We worked in silence for another hour. The good documents, the bad clauses, the careful avoidance of every landmine we had both already mapped. When I finally stood and gathered my pages, he didn't move. Just sat there at the far end of the table with his jacket off and his sleeves rolled and his eyes on the middle distance.

I left without saying goodnight.

In the elevator, I pressed the lobby button and leaned back against the wall and stared at the ceiling and breathed.

Some things, once they've been built a certain way.

Yeah. I knew.

The coffee happened on a Tuesday.

I had been preparing for the Halcourt client presentation all morning. Twelve slides, annotated, printed and ordered in a folder on the conference room table. Thirty minutes out.

Aliza walked by with a full cup — too close to the table, too close to my folder — and then it was everywhere. White pages, black coffee, the specific ruin of two hours of work spread across the table in a slow, soaking bloom.

'Oh God,' she said. Her hand was at her mouth. Her eyes were doing the right things — wide, dismayed, professionally horrified. 'Madelyn, I'm so sorry, I don't know how —'

'It's fine,' I said.

I picked up my phone and called down to the print center. Twelve slides, same format, twenty minutes. Then I blotted the table, moved the ruined folder to the bin, and walked to the window.

She was still apologizing. I let her.

The reprints arrived in nineteen minutes. I walked into the Halcourt meeting on time, documents in hand, and did not mention it.

The filing delay came the next morning — a data room I needed for the Morris counterplay, suddenly inaccessible, a credentials error that should have taken a day to untangle. I went to Nora directly. Nora, who had already seen the access log documentation I'd filed, who understood without being told what kind of errors tended to cluster around certain employees. The data room was accessible within forty minutes.

The photograph I saw on my phone Thursday morning. Industry press, a company event from six weeks ago, Aliza and Landon standing together at a reception — his attention directed somewhere off-frame, her chin turned toward the camera, smiling like a woman with a claim. The caption called them a 'formidable professional partnership' in language that had exactly one degree of separation from something warmer.

I looked at the photo for about four seconds.

Then I put my phone face-down on the desk and went back to my shareholder communications.

Aliza was getting scared. Scared people got sloppy. They overplayed hands they should have held. They moved too fast and left evidence where careful people left nothing.

I had the access logs. I had the financial traces. I had Cooper's folder, and Nora's documentation, and eighteen months of a cover story that was starting to develop cracks along every seam.

I didn't need to rush.

I picked up my coffee and looked out at the city and thought about nothing in particular.

Outside, forty floors down, New York went on doing what it always did.

So did I.

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