
After My Fiancé Chose Her, I Married His CEO Rival
Chapter 3
The Sterling Technologies boardroom intimidated me more than I wanted to admit. Twelve pairs of eyes—belonging to some of the most influential figures in the tech industry—scrutinized me as I stood at the head of the polished conference table. My heart hammered against my ribs, but I refused to let my nervousness show. Not today. Not when I finally had the chance I'd been waiting for all these years.
"Ms. Martinez will be heading our new Optical Video Innovation division," Alex announced, his deep voice commanding instant respect. He sat at the opposite end of the table, his posture relaxed yet authoritative. "She brings expertise that will position Sterling at the forefront of next-generation video technology."
I caught the skeptical glances exchanged between board members. To them, I was just the woman their CEO had impulsively married after a society wedding scandal. The abandoned bride he'd rescued in a publicity stunt.
"Thank you, Mr. Sterling," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. I tapped on my tablet, and the wall screen behind me illuminated with schematics I'd sketched years ago—designs Ryan had dismissed as "too ambitious" and "impractical."
"This prototype represents a fundamental shift in how we capture and process visual data," I explained, enlarging a detailed cross-section of the lens assembly. "By integrating quantum dot technology with our proprietary compression algorithms, we can achieve resolution quality that exceeds current market standards by 40% while reducing processing demands."
A silver-haired man—Walter Grayson, if I remembered correctly—leaned forward with narrowed eyes. "Impressive claims, Ms. Martinez. But quantum dot integration has proven prohibitively expensive for consumer applications. How do you propose to scale this economically?"
I'd anticipated this question. Ryan had used the same argument to shelve my project.
"Fair point, Mr. Grayson." I swiped to the next slide. "Traditional approaches have indeed been cost-prohibitive. However, by redesigning the substrate layer and utilizing a novel fabrication process my team developed—" I highlighted the relevant section of the schematic, "—we can reduce production costs by approximately 62%."
I continued through my presentation, addressing each challenge with technical precision. With each question, I felt my confidence growing. This wasn't just about proving myself to Alex or getting revenge on Ryan. This was about the vision I'd been forced to put on hold for eight years.
When I finished, there was a moment of silence before Walter Grayson nodded slowly. "I move to approve funding for the Optical Video Innovation division as proposed."
"Seconded," said a woman to his right.
The vote was unanimous.
As the board members filed out, Alex approached me, his expression unreadable. "Well done," he said quietly. "They don't give unanimous approval often."
"Thank you for the opportunity," I replied, gathering my materials. Our eyes met briefly, and something flickered in his gaze—pride, perhaps? Before I could analyze it further, he turned and walked away.
* * *
"To the woman who just conquered the Sterling board!" Jenna raised her gin cocktail, the city lights of Seattle twinkling behind her through the rooftop bar's glass walls.
I clinked my glass against hers, the tension of the day finally melting away. "I couldn't have done it without you agreeing to come on board."
Jenna snorted. "Please. Like I'd stay with Ryan's sinking ship after what he did to you." She took a sip of her drink. "Besides, the entire team followed you. That should tell you something."
The quiet rooftop bar was exactly what I needed—far from the corporate intensity of Sterling Technologies and the suffocating sympathy that seemed to follow me everywhere since the wedding disaster.
"How are you really doing?" Jenna asked, her voice softening. "And don't give me the press release version."
I stared into my drink, watching the ice cubes shift. "I'm angry," I admitted. "So angry I can barely breathe sometimes. Eight years, Jen. Eight years of putting his dreams first, and he couldn't even give me the courtesy of a goodbye."
"He's a coward," she said simply.
"And I'm terrified," I continued, the words tumbling out now. "What if this is all just some elaborate game to Alex? What if I build this division, pour everything into it, and then..." I couldn't finish the thought.
Jenna reached across the table and squeezed my hand. "Then we'll start over. Again. But I don't think that's what's happening here."
"What do you mean?"
She gave me a knowing look. "I've seen how he watches you when you're working. That's not a man playing games, Chloe."
I felt heat rise to my cheeks and quickly changed the subject. "The prototype timeline is aggressive. We'll need to pull some all-nighters."
"Whatever it takes," Jenna said firmly. "We're building this together, every step of the way. I'm not going anywhere."
As we clinked glasses again, my phone buzzed with a text. I glanced down to see Alex's name on the screen: "Congratulations again. There's something waiting for you at home."
Home. The word felt strange—his penthouse wasn't home. But as I stared at his message, I wondered what exactly was waiting for me there... and why my heart had suddenly started racing again.
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