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After His Mistress Called Me a Gold Digger, I Took Revenge Novel Cover

After His Mistress Called Me a Gold Digger, I Took Revenge

The 1946 vintage Macallan had possessed a satisfying, heavy density. When I purchased the two bottles earlier that afternoon from a private vault in Manhattan, I had traced the wax seals with my thumb, imagining the warmth it would bring to my first meeting with Lincoln’s parents. At eight thousand dollars a bottle, it was a quiet gesture of immense respect, wrapped discreetly in unmarked velvet bags. I had handed them to Lincoln in the foyer of my modest rented apartment. "Keep these safe," I had told him, suppressing the polished cadence of my upbringing to sound like the ordinary girl he thought I was. Now, standing in the suffocatingly warm dining room of the Bryants’ faux-Tudor home in Westchester, the air felt entirely wrong. My fingers drifted to my collarbone, a nervous habit I usually kept buried. Across the table, Reagan Miller swirled a glass of cheap Pinot Grigio. She wasn't supposed to be here. This was a private family dinner, a milestone for a newly engaged couple.
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Chapter 4

I didn't make it to the end of the block before the heavy loft door groaned open behind me. Footsteps splashed through the shallow puddles on the Brooklyn pavement.

"Addie, wait," Lincoln called out, his voice thin against the damp night air.

I turned, the streetlamp casting long, jagged shadows across the wet concrete. I stepped toward him, intending to pull him out of the earshot of his friends. "Lincoln, we are going to address what was just said in there. The gold-digger comment. You stood there and let her—"

The sharp click of stilettos cut me off. Reagan materialized from the gloom, wrapping a possessive hand around Lincoln’s bicep. The cloying scent of her synthetic floral perfume instantly suffocated the crisp night air.

"Oh, Addie, don't make a scene," Reagan cooed, her lips curved into a blade of a smile. Her eyes drifted down my body, performing a slow, theatrical assessment of my garments.

I was wearing a bespoke silk-cashmere trench coat, hand-stitched in Milan. It had no logos. It didn't need them.

"We all know things are tight for you," Reagan continued, her voice dripping with weaponized pity. "Honestly, if you’re struggling this much to keep up with Lincoln's lifestyle, I’d be happy to take you to the outlet mall in Jersey. They have some lovely discount racks. We just want to make sure you don't keep embarrassing Lincoln at these corporate gatherings."

My gaze shifted to my fiancé. His hand twitched toward his collar. He looked away, staring intently at a pothole.

"Thank you, Reagan," I said, my voice a perfectly smooth, frictionless surface. "I'll keep your generous offer in mind."

By Tuesday afternoon, the humiliation had been outsourced to the older generation.

The café in Midtown was a masterclass in aggressive mediocrity—sticky laminate tables, the sour tang of burnt espresso, and a display case of stale, mass-produced pastries. Mrs. Bryant sat with her posture rigidly straight, clutching a faux-leather handbag like a shield, while Mr. Bryant drummed his fingers against his coffee cup. They had summoned me here without Lincoln's knowledge.

"Let’s not waste time, Adelina," Mr. Bryant said, his tone adopting the faux-authoritative cadence of a man who watched too many business movies. He reached into his breast pocket and withdrew a slip of paper.

He slid it across the sticky laminate. A personal check.

I looked down. *Five thousand dollars.*

I had tipped the sommelier at Le Bernardin more than this for my father's birthday dinner.

"Break the engagement," Mr. Bryant instructed, folding his hands. "It’s nothing personal. But Lincoln is on the partner track now. He needs the right caliber of woman by his side. Someone with connections. Someone like Reagan, who can elevate our family's social standing. This should help you transition to an apartment more suited to your... background."

My pulse didn't spike. My hands didn't shake. I simply placed my index finger on the edge of the cheap paper and slid it smoothly back across the table.

"Keep it, Mr. Bryant," I murmured, my expression an unreadable, glacial mask. "It seems you need it far more than I do."

Before he could sputter a response, I stood up and walked out into the blinding afternoon sun.

The storm broke that evening in the cramped confines of Lincoln’s living room.

He paced the faded rug, his cheap maroon tie loosened around his neck, his face flushed with panicked defense. I stood by the kitchen island, perfectly still, letting him drown in the silence I had brought with me.

"Your parents tried to pay me off today," I said, the words falling like heavy stones into the quiet room. "And Reagan has spent the last week publicly assassinating my character. I want the truth, Lincoln. I want you to look me in the eye and tell me why you refuse to defend me."

Lincoln stopped pacing. His hands balled into fists at his sides, the knuckles whitening as his cowardice finally curdled into defensive rage.

"Defend you?" he spat, the veins in his neck bulging. "From what? The truth?"

The air in the room seemed to vaporize.

"You are suffocating me, Adelina!" he shouted, closing the distance between us. "You contribute nothing! You embarrass me in front of my friends, you bring cheap cider to my parents—"

"You swapped the bottles," I stated, my voice dropping to a lethal whisper.

He ignored me, his fragile ego shattering outward. "You should be grateful! Do you have any idea how lucky you are? I am a rising corporate director! I could have anyone! My family bends over backward to tolerate your lack of ambition, and you just stand there acting like you're better than us! You’re a nobody, Adelina! A nobody!"

His chest heaved. The echo of his outburst rattled the cheap glassware in the cabinets.

I looked at the red, sweaty face of the man I had loved. The illusion was entirely gone. There was no misunderstanding, no subtle manipulation he was blind to. He was just a small, greedy man who worshipped at the altar of a status he didn't possess.

My hand drifted to my collarbone, resting there for one final heartbeat.

"You're right, Lincoln," I said, my voice carrying the quiet, terrifying authority of the Zenith Financial empire. "I am a nobody to you."

I picked up my coat.

"But tomorrow," I whispered, stepping past him toward the door, "you are going to find out exactly who I am."

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