
After His Mistress Destroyed My Life’s Work, I Took Revenge
Chapter 3
The Moore Tech annual gala was a study in excess. Crystal chandeliers dripped light onto the shoulders of Seattle’s elite, and the air smelled of expensive cologne and desperation. I stood near a pillar, nursing a sparkling water, watching Archer work the room. He moved like a shark in a tank of guppies, his hand resting frequently on the small of Aviana’s back. She was wearing a red dress that cost more than my first year of research grants.
He spotted me. A flicker of annoyance crossed his face, quickly masked by a practiced executive smile. He whispered something to Aviana, who giggled and drifted toward the bar, before he approached me. He didn't come empty-handed. He held a thick, cream-colored envelope.
"You came," he said, his voice low, intimate enough to look friendly to onlookers but laced with disdain.
"I still own ten percent of the stock, Archer. I have a right to see where the money goes." I gestured vaguely toward the ice sculpture of a microchip melting in the center of the buffet.
"Not for long." He pressed the envelope into my hand. It was heavy. "My lawyers drafted this this morning. It’s generous, Quinn. More than you deserve after the instability you’ve shown."
I didn't wait. I broke the wax seal right there, amidst the clinking glasses. I scanned the terms. A monthly stipend that wouldn't cover rent in the city. A complete forfeiture of all equity. And, most tellingly, a non-disparagement clause coupled with a gag order preventing me from claiming credit for any past, present, or future Moore Tech innovations.
"You want to erase me," I stated, looking up.
Archer took a sip of his scotch, his eyes gleaming with cruelty. "I'm doing you a favor. You’re past your prime, Quinn. The industry moves fast. You’re... tired. Take the money. Buy a little cottage in the Hamptons. Retire. Let the people with vision handle the future."
He expected tears. He expected me to tear the papers in half and cause a scene he could use to prove my hysteria.
Instead, I carefully folded the document and slid it into my clutch. I offered him a soft, almost pitying smile. "Thank you, Archer. Clarity is a gift."
His brow furrowed. The ice in his glass clinked as his hand twitched. My compliance didn't fit his narrative. "Just sign it by Monday," he snapped, turning on his heel to flee back to the adoration of his sycophants.
I left the gala ten minutes later. I had a more important meeting.
***
The drive to Harold Moore’s estate took forty minutes. The rain had turned the winding roads into mirrors. Harold’s home was the antithesis of Archer’s glass-and-steel penthouse; it was old stone, dark wood, and silence.
He was waiting for me in his study, a room that smelled of pipe tobacco and leather. He didn't stand when I entered. He simply gestured to the chair opposite his massive oak desk.
"He served you," Harold stated. It wasn't a question.
"Tonight. Publicly." I sat down, bypassing the emotional pleasantries. I reached into my briefcase and pulled out a different file—not the divorce papers, but a forensic accounting report I’d compiled over the last forty-eight hours. "I’m not here for sympathy, Harold. I’m here for the company."
I slid the file across the desk. Harold put on his reading glasses. I watched his eyes track the lines of data. I had highlighted the withdrawals in yellow.
"The 'consulting fees' paid to a shell company registered in Aviana’s name," I explained calmly. "Two million dollars in six months. It corresponds exactly to the purchase of a waterfront condo in Belltown and a lease on a Porsche Cayenne. He’s not just sleeping with her, Harold. He’s embezzling from shareholder funds to maintain her lifestyle."
Harold flipped the page. I pointed to the timeline. "And here. The logs from the clean room. The security footage I archived before my access was cut. It proves Aviana entered the lab at 8:00 PM. The system failure occurred at 9:15 PM. Archer told the board the failure was due to a coding error in my algorithm. The timestamps prove it was physical contamination."
Harold closed the folder. His hand was shaking, just slightly. He took off his glasses and rubbed the bridge of his nose. He looked suddenly very old.
"My son is a fool," he murmured. The words were heavy, final. "He inherited my money, but not my spine."
"He’s going to announce a merger he doesn't understand," I said softly. "If he remains CEO, Moore Tech is dead within the quarter."
Harold opened a drawer and pulled out a single sheet of paper—a proxy voting form. He signed it with a stroke of his pen that sounded like a knife cutting paper. He pushed it toward me.
"Save the legacy, Quinn," he said, his voice raspy. "Burn the rest."
***
Returning to my temporary apartment, I felt a cold, surgical calm. I had the legal leverage. I had the voting power. Now, I needed them to lower their shields completely.
I opened my laptop and logged into the old iCloud account Archer and I used to share for household bills. He hadn't changed the password; arrogance made him sloppy.
I navigated to the 'Drafts' folder. I began typing.
*To: Dean of Sciences, North Seattle Community College*
*Subject: Inquiry regarding Adjunct Professor availability*
*Dear Dean,*
*I am writing to inquire about potential openings for the fall semester. Due to unforeseen personal circumstances, I am seeking immediate employment. I am willing to teach introductory biology or general science courses...*
I made the tone pathetic. Desperate. I stripped away my accolades, my PhD, my dignity. I saved it to the drafts folder, knowing Archer’s iPad was still synced to this account. He would get the notification. He would see I was begging for scraps.
I closed the laptop and poured myself a glass of wine. I didn't have to wait long. Twenty minutes later, my phone buzzed with an Instagram notification. Aviana had posted a story: a video of them clinking champagne glasses at a late dinner, captioned *"Out with the old, in with the bold. #Winning."*
They had seen it. They thought I was defeated. They thought I was begging for a job teaching Bio 101 while they spent stolen millions.
Good. Let them laugh. It would be the last time they ever did.
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