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After My Fiancé Stole Our Apartment Fund for His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Fiancé Stole Our Apartment Fund for His Mistress

The cursor blinked at me from the bank's transfer page, mocking. I'd typed in the routing number for the Manhattan apartment three times, my fingers steady despite the coffee I'd skipped that morning. Fifty thousand dollars. Three years of double shifts, skipped vacations, and homemade lunches packed in Tupperware. The down payment that would finally give Elliott and me a real home in the city. I hit confirm. The screen refreshed. My stomach dropped. Available Balance: $87.43. The apartment around me—our cramped one-bedroom in Queens with its perpetually dripping faucet—suddenly felt smaller.
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Chapter 2

The visiting room at Rikers smelled like industrial cleaner and desperation. I sat across from Dad, separated by scratched plexiglass that made his face look distorted. He'd lost weight. The orange jumpsuit hung loose on shoulders that used to fill out tailored suits.

"You shouldn't be here," he said. His voice crackled through the phone receiver. "You should be planning your wedding, buying that apartment—"

"Elliott recommended your attorney." I cut through the pleasantries like I was severing a limb. "David Brennan. You told me Elliott found him."

Dad's hand tightened around the phone. "Isla—"

"Did Brennan ever fight for you? File motions? Challenge evidence?"

The silence stretched. Outside, a guard's radio squawked.

"He said the case was airtight," Dad finally said. "That a plea deal was my best option."

I pulled out the printouts I'd spent three nights compiling at the public library. Bank records. Court filings. A paper trail that led nowhere and everywhere at once. "Brennan had gambling debts. Two hundred thousand dollars to an offshore casino. Paid off two days after your conviction by a shell company called Meridian Holdings."

Dad leaned forward. The plexiglass fogged with his breath.

"Meridian Holdings is owned by James Corporation." My voice didn't shake. It should have. "Elliott didn't just steal my money, Dad. He stole your life."

The phone slipped in Dad's grip. He caught it, but his eyes had gone somewhere distant. Calculating. When he looked at me again, I saw the businessman who'd built an empire from nothing.

"Get out," he said. "Get as far from Elliott as you can. Forget about me. Rebuild."

"I'm not forgetting anything."

---

The pawn shop on Flatbush Avenue had bars on the windows and a flickering neon sign. I laid Grandma's jewelry on the counter—the pearl necklace she'd worn to my college graduation, the gold bracelet Dad had given her on their anniversary. The owner examined each piece through a loupe, his expression bored.

"Fifteen hundred."

"They're worth five thousand."

He shrugged. "Fifteen hundred. Take it or leave it."

I took it.

The studio in Brooklyn had water stains on the ceiling and a radiator that clanked like it was trying to escape. The previous tenant had left a mattress that smelled like cigarettes. I dragged it to the curb and slept on the floor that night, my coat as a blanket, listening to sirens wail through thin walls.

The laptop I bought was refurbished, the screen flickering when it got too warm. I sat cross-legged on the hardwood, the glow illuminating my face in the dark. The business registration form loaded slowly. I typed: West Consulting.

The cursor blinked in the field marked "Business Purpose."

I thought about Dad's face through that plexiglass. Elliott's smirk at the gala. Sabrina's diamonds catching the light.

I typed: Strategic business consulting and operational optimization.

What I meant was: Resurrection.

---

Rejection tastes like cheap coffee and forced smiles. I spent three weeks cold-calling companies, pitching services I'd deliver from a studio with no furniture. The responses were variations on a theme: "We'll keep your information on file." "Not interested." "How did you get this number?"

The tech mixer was in a converted warehouse in DUMBO, all exposed brick and craft beer. I'd worn my one good blazer, the one I'd bought for job interviews before Elliott. It didn't fit right anymore. I'd lost weight.

I spotted him near the bar—late thirties, expensive sneakers, the kind of casual that cost money. His name tag read: JASON CHEN, CEO, STREAMLINE TECH. He was alone, scrolling through his phone with the intensity of someone putting out fires.

I walked up. "Your supply chain is bleeding money."

He looked up, startled. "Excuse me?"

"I read about your Series B funding in TechCrunch. Congratulations. But your operational costs are thirty percent higher than industry standard. That's not scaling. That's hemorrhaging."

His eyes narrowed. "And you are?"

"Someone who can fix it. For free."

"Nothing's free."

"You're right. If I save you double my fee, you pay me. If I don't, you owe me nothing. One week."

He studied me. I didn't blink.

"One week," he said.

I worked twenty-hour days in that studio, surviving on instant noodles and black coffee. The numbers told a story—redundant vendors, inefficient routing, contracts that hadn't been renegotiated in years. I built a model that cut costs by forty percent. When I sent the report, my hands shook.

Jason called the next morning. "How soon can you start?"

The check was for fifty thousand dollars. I stared at it in that empty studio, the paper trembling in my grip. Not enough to replace what Elliott stole. But enough to begin.

I pressed my thumb against the locket at my throat. "Brick by brick, Dad," I whispered to the empty room. "Brick by brick."

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