
After His Heartless Betrayal
Chapter 3
The glass-walled conference room on the thirty-second floor gleamed under the afternoon sun, its transparent walls offering no privacy—which was exactly why the network executives had chosen it. They wanted to be seen having this meeting, wanted word to spread through the building's corridors like wildfire.
I stood in the shadows of the adjacent hallway, watching through the floor-to-ceiling windows as five men in expensive suits leaned over financial projections spread across the mahogany table. Their body language spoke of conspiracy—heads bent together, voices low, occasional glances toward the door.
Victoria appeared beside me, her tablet clutched against her chest. "The quarterly reports they're reviewing show a fifteen percent dip in advertiser confidence," she whispered. "They're blaming your 'artistic vision' for reduced product placement opportunities."
I watched as the lead executive, Harrison Webb, jabbed his finger at a chart. Even through the glass, I could read his lips: "Tyler Bryant understands the business side."
"How long have they been meeting?" I asked, my voice steady despite the ice forming in my veins.
"Twenty minutes. Tyler arrived ten minutes ago through the back entrance." Victoria's loyalty had always been absolute, but today I heard something new in her tone—protective anger. "Murphy, there's something else. I've been monitoring unusual activity in the building's key card system. Tyler's been accessing executive floors after hours for the past two weeks."
The pieces clicked together with devastating clarity. This wasn't a spontaneous coup—it was a carefully orchestrated campaign.
Through the glass, I watched Tyler lean back in his chair with practiced confidence, his hands gesturing expansively as he spoke. He wore the navy Tom Ford suit I'd bought him for his birthday, the one he'd claimed made him feel "invincible." The irony wasn't lost on me.
"What's he promising them?" I murmured.
"Higher ratings through more commercial integration," Victoria replied, consulting her tablet. "He's proposing to eliminate the 'artistic integrity' guidelines you implemented. More product placement, sponsored challenges, celebrity guest judges who'll drive social media engagement."
I felt my mother's ring press against my chest as I took a deep breath. Tyler was selling my show's soul, piece by piece, and the executives were buying it.
"And Poppy?"
"She's been busy too." Victoria's fingers flew across her tablet screen. "Three lunch meetings this week with major sponsors. She's positioning herself as the show's breakout star, promising exclusive endorsement deals and social media partnerships."
The conference room door opened, and Poppy herself glided in, her red dress a calculated choice—bold, attention-grabbing, impossible to ignore. She moved with the predatory grace of someone who knew exactly what she wanted and how to get it.
I watched her work the room, touching Harrison Webb's arm as she laughed at something he said, leaning close to whisper in another executive's ear. Every gesture was choreographed seduction, every smile a weapon.
"She's good," I admitted grudgingly.
"She's dangerous," Victoria corrected. "The sponsors are eating it up. They see her as the next big crossover star—music, fashion, lifestyle brands. They're already discussing post-show contracts."
Tyler stood, moving to a whiteboard where he began sketching out organizational charts. Even from this distance, I could see my name being erased and replaced with his own. Executive Producer: Tyler Bryant. The title I'd earned through years of eighteen-hour days and creative battles, handed over like a party favor.
"They think they're being subtle," I said, watching as the executives nodded approvingly at Tyler's presentation. "Meeting in a glass room, using company resources to plan my downfall."
"Should I contact legal?" Victoria asked.
"Not yet." I turned away from the window, my decision crystallizing. "But prepare the contingency files. All of them."
Victoria's eyes widened slightly. She knew what "all of them" meant—the nuclear option I'd hoped never to use.
"Murphy, are you sure? Once we go down that path..."
"They made this choice when they decided to betray me." I straightened my shoulders, feeling the weight of my family's legacy settling around me like armor. "Schedule a meeting with my father's legal team for tonight. And Victoria?"
"Yes?"
"Start documenting everything. Every meeting, every conversation, every promise they make. When this is over, I want a complete record of their conspiracy."
As I walked away, I could hear the muffled sound of laughter from the conference room. They thought they were celebrating a victory. They had no idea they were planning their own destruction.
The game was about to change, and I held all the cards they didn't even know existed.
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