
After His Mistress Destroyed My Life’s Work, I Took Revenge
Chapter 2
The master bedroom door clicked shut, the sound final and hollow, like a gavel striking wood. I stood in the hallway, a pillow and a duvet bundled in my arms, staring at the grain of the oak.
"It’s not permanent, Quinn," Archer had said, not bothering to meet my eyes as he scrolled through his phone. "I just need space. Mental clarity. I can’t focus on saving the company from *your* mistake when I’m sleeping next to the person who caused it."
He hadn’t just evicted me from our bed; he had confiscated my security badge. "You’re too emotional right now," he’d claimed, pocketing the plastic card that granted access to the building I had practically designed. "I can't have you spiraling in the lab while the investors are breathing down my neck."
I didn't argue. I didn't beg. I turned and walked down the hall to the guest suite, the one we usually reserved for his mother. Inside, the air was stale, smelling of unused linens and neglect. I dropped the bedding on the mattress and moved immediately to the small closet safe.
My hands didn't tremble this time. I spun the dial—left, right, left. Inside sat three black hard drives and a stack of leather-bound journals. Archer thought the value of Moore Tech was in the servers downstairs, the ones Aviana had compromised. He didn't realize that for the last six months, I had been mirroring every byte of the *true* data to these offline drives. He was locking me out of an empty shell.
I slipped the drives into my purse. If he wanted space, I would give him a void.
***
The diner was on the outskirts of the city, a place that smelled of grease and burnt coffee—a stark contrast to the sterile, filtered air of my former life. Rain lashed against the window, blurring the neon sign outside.
Marcus Chen sat in the corner booth. He wore a suit that cost more than this building, but he blended into the shadows with the ease of a man who made problems disappear.
"Dr. Lawson," he said, not standing. He gestured to the seat opposite him. "You're risky."
"I'm profitable," I corrected, sliding into the booth.
"Moore Tech is hemorrhaging," Marcus countered, tapping a manicured finger on the Formica table. "Word on the street is your flagship prototype is toast. Fried circuitry. Three years of setbacks."
I pulled a tablet from my bag and slid it across the table. "The unit Aviana Rose destroyed was the Mark IV. It had latency issues and overheated above forty degrees Celsius. It was a paperweight, Marcus. A thirty-million-dollar decoy."
Marcus picked up the tablet. I watched his eyes scan the schematics on the screen. The skepticism in his expression faltered, replaced by the sharp, predatory focus of a shark sensing blood in the water.
"This is the Mark V," I said quietly. "Fully functional neural integration. Zero latency. And the patent isn't filed under Moore Tech. It’s filed under a holding company I established three years ago, before I signed Archer’s prenup revision."
Marcus looked up, a slow smile spreading across his face. "You own the IP? Solely?"
"I own the future of the industry," I replied, taking a sip of the lukewarm water in front of me. "Nebula Corp doesn't need to acquire Moore Tech. You need to acquire *me*."
"If you can prove clear chain of title," Marcus said, his voice dropping to a whisper, "we’re talking a very different number than the one we discussed on the phone."
"I have the logs. I have the timestamps. I have the science," I said. "Archer has a burnt circuit board and a mistress who thinks 'java' is just coffee."
***
The humiliation was supposed to break me. I knew that was the goal when I returned to the office the next day to collect my personal effects, escorted by a security guard who couldn't look me in the eye.
My office door was open.
Aviana was inside. She wasn't just sitting at my desk; she was dismantling my life. My diplomas—framed proofs of the doctorate I’d bled for—were stacked haphazardly in a cardboard box on the floor. In their place, she was arranging vases of pink peonies and a framed photo of her and Archer on a yacht.
"It’s just so gloomy in here," Aviana chirped. She was speaking to three junior analysts gathered near the doorway, her audience. "Quinn had such... heavy energy. You know? Very academic. Very boring."
One of the analysts laughed nervously. "Dr. Lawson was very detailed."
"Oh, please," Aviana scoffed, tossing my Lasker Award nomination into the trash bin with a careless flick of her wrist. The heavy glass thudded against the metal. "She was a trophy wife who liked to play scientist. Archer told me everything. He practically had to hold her hand to get her to understand the basics. It’s sad, really. She just wanted to feel important."
I stood in the corridor, just out of her line of sight. The security guard shifted uncomfortably, reaching for the door handle, but I held up a hand to stop him.
I didn't storm in. I didn't scream that I had written the code she was currently failing to understand. Instead, I slid my phone from my pocket and pressed record.
I captured her voice, clear and mocking. I captured the image of her throwing company property—my property—into the garbage. I captured the hostile work environment she was cultivating with every breathy giggle.
"She’s probably crying in a spa somewhere right now," Aviana said, spinning in my ergonomic chair. "Finally out of the way so the adults can work."
I stopped the recording.
*Enjoy the chair, Aviana,* I thought, turning away before they could see me. *It’s the captain’s seat on the Titanic.*
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