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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 4

Elliott showed up on a Tuesday.

I was reviewing contracts in my new office—still small, still Brooklyn, but with actual furniture now and a window that didn't face a brick wall. Victoria had just brought me coffee when the door opened without a knock.

He looked the same. Tailored suit. That cologne. The watch I'd helped him pick out for his thirtieth birthday still gleamed on his wrist, right above the coordinate tattoo.

"Isla." He said my name like we were old friends. Like he hadn't stolen everything.

My hand found my phone in my pocket. I pressed record without looking.

"You need to leave."

"Five minutes." He closed the door behind him. Leaned against it. "I owe you that much."

"You owe me fifty thousand dollars. And my father's freedom. Five minutes doesn't cover it."

His mouth did that thing—the apologetic smile that used to make me forgive him for missed dinners and forgotten anniversaries. "I made mistakes. I know that. But what you're doing, going after James Corporation—" He stepped closer. "It's suicide, Isla. Sabrina's father has lawyers who eat startups for breakfast."

"Then I'll be lunch."

"Or—" He pulled an envelope from his jacket. Cream-colored paper. Expensive. "You could walk away. There's a check in here. Two hundred thousand. Enough to start over somewhere else. Somewhere that doesn't have the James family's attention."

I didn't touch the envelope. "Hush money."

"Smart money." He set it on my desk. "We had something good once. I don't want to see you destroy yourself over pride."

"Pride." The word tasted like copper. "You framed my father. You stole three years of my life. And you think this is about pride?"

His hand went to his cufflinks. Adjusted them. "Your father made enemies. I just—"

"Get out."

"Isla—"

"Get. Out."

He picked up the envelope. Slid it back into his jacket. At the door, he paused. "Sabrina wanted me to make this go away quietly. I tried. What happens next—that's on you."

The door clicked shut. I stopped the recording. Played it back. His voice came through clear: "Two hundred thousand... walk away... what happens next—that's on you."

Victoria appeared in the doorway. "Was that—"

"Yeah." I forwarded the audio file to three different cloud accounts. "It was."

---

I arrived at the office Thursday morning to find the door hanging open.

The lock was intact. No broken glass. Someone had used a key, or picked it clean. Professional.

Inside looked like a tornado had hit. File cabinets overturned. Papers scattered across the floor like snow. My laptop was gone. The desktop computer's hard drive had been ripped out, the tower gutted and left on its side.

My legs went numb. I grabbed the desk to stay upright.

Three months of work. Client files. Proposals. The research I'd compiled on James Corporation's contracts. Gone.

"Isla?"

Victoria stood in the doorway, her bag sliding off her shoulder. She took in the destruction, and her face went pale.

"They took everything," I said. My voice sounded hollow. "The servers, the backups—"

"The office backups." Victoria set down her bag. Pulled out a small external hard drive, no bigger than a deck of cards. "But not the paranoid backups."

I stared at the drive. "What?"

"You told me to keep copies off-site. Updated daily. I've been storing them at my apartment." She held it out. "Everything's here."

The air rushed back into my lungs. I took the drive, and my hands were shaking. "Victoria—"

"I know." She surveyed the wreckage. "This is war now, isn't it?"

I thought about Elliott's warning. Sabrina's father and his lawyers. The envelope of hush money.

"Yeah," I said. "It is."

---

The whale client was called Meridian Tech. Fifty-million-dollar logistics overhaul. The kind of contract that would put West Consulting on the map permanently.

I was signing the papers when they walked in.

Two men in dark suits. Federal badges. The kind of entrance that makes everyone in the room go silent.

"Isla West?" The taller one's voice was flat. Professional. "I'm Agent Morrison, IRS Criminal Investigation Division. We have a warrant to seize your business accounts and records."

The pen slipped from my fingers.

"There must be some mistake—"

"No mistake." He handed me papers. Official letterhead. My company name. "We have evidence of money laundering using fraudulent invoices tied to Alonso West's former business entities."

Dad's name. They were using Dad's name.

Across the table, the Meridian Tech CEO was already standing. Already backing away. "I think we need to postpone—"

"Wait—" But he was gone. The contract unsigned. The deal dead.

Agent Morrison's partner was already photographing my laptop. Bagging files. Moving with the efficiency of people who'd done this a thousand times.

"Your accounts are frozen as of now," Morrison said. "You'll need to come downtown for questioning."

I looked at the warrant. The fabricated invoices listed. All of them using Dad's old company codes, his signature forged in digital ink.

Elliott's work. Had to be.

My phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: "Told you to take the money. —E"

I pressed my thumb against the locket at my throat. The metal was cold.

They could freeze my accounts. Destroy my reputation. But they couldn't touch what Victoria had saved. Couldn't erase the recording of Elliott's bribe. Couldn't stop what I'd already set in motion.

I looked at Agent Morrison. "I want my lawyer present for questioning."

"That's your right."

Outside the window, rain started to fall. The sky had gone the color of bruises.

I thought about chess. About how sometimes you have to sacrifice pieces to win. About how the best players think ten moves ahead.

Elliott thought he'd checkmated me.

He had no idea the game had just begun.

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