
After My Husband Gave Our Fortune to His Mistress
Chapter 3
The secure laptop Carson handed me felt heavier than its sleek, matte-black casing suggested. It was a weapon, and I was about to pull the trigger. We were in a soundproofed conference room at NovaTech, the glass walls frosted for privacy. Carson sat across from me, not watching the screen, but watching *me*. His trust was terrifying. He was handing me the keys to a kingdom he didn’t even own yet, betting everything on a woman who had been scraping her knees on hotel floors just hours ago.
"One hour," I said, my voice steady despite the adrenaline flooding my veins. "That's all I need."
"Take your time," Carson replied, his voice low and anchoring. "Maddox is too busy popping champagne to check the server logs."
I cracked my knuckles—a habit Maddox used to slap my hands for—and logged in. The familiar terminal of *Aetheria* blinked to life. Green text on black. My world.
Maddox had revoked my bank access, but he was a fool when it came to the architecture. He didn't know that the supreme admin credentials—the "God Mode" keys—were hard-coded into the kernel, tied to my biometric typing rhythm. He couldn't revoke what he didn't understand.
I navigated past the firewall like a ghost walking through walls. I didn't delete the assets. I didn't corrupt the save files. That would be petty vandalism, easily fixed with a backup. I wanted total, systemic collapse.
I located the `Monetization_Core.js` file. This was the heart of the beast—the script that processed microtransactions, the engine of Maddox's greed. My fingers flew across the keys, the rhythmic clatter the only sound in the room.
I wrote a new function: `Protocol_Zero`.
It was elegant in its simplicity. I set a timer for the Global Launch date, three weeks from now. When the server received the command to "Go Live," the protocol would intercept every transaction call. Instead of debiting a credit card, the system would invert the value. Buying the $100 "Emperor's Pack" wouldn't cost a cent; it would credit the user's account with premium currency. And the store items? I set their cost to negative integers.
Every purchase would be free. Every player would become a billionaire in seconds. The game's economy would hyperinflate and implode instantly, rendering the entire ecosystem worthless.
I compiled the script and buried it deep within the lighting render engine—a place no sane developer would look for payment code.
"Done," I whispered, closing the laptop. My hands were shaking, but this time, it was from the thrill of the kill.
***
Two weeks later, I didn't recognize the woman in the mirror. The hollow cheeks were filling out, the dark circles under my eyes fading. The secure apartment NovaTech provided was small but filled with light—real sunlight, not the fluorescent hum of a storage closet.
My life had fallen into a rhythm of healing. Mornings were for coding alongside Carson in his open-plan office, where ideas were shared, not stolen. Afternoons were for Charlie.
"You look different, Ev," Charlie said one Tuesday, his voice stronger as he sat up in his hospital bed. The transplant was scheduled, the donor heart secured. "You look... awake."
"I feel awake," I smiled, peeling an orange for him.
But the real awakening happened in the quiet moments at NovaTech. Carson didn't treat me like a broken bird; he treated me like a partner. He brought me green tea—never coffee, he remembered it made me jittery—and actually listened when I spoke.
One late night, we were the last two in the building, debugging a physics simulation for NovaTech’s upcoming project. The city lights of Seattle sprawled below us, a glittering grid of ambition.
"The friction coefficient is off," I murmured, frowning at the monitor. "It needs to be point-zero-four."
Carson leaned in, his shoulder brushing mine. The heat of him was distracting, a gravitational pull I hadn't accounted for. He reached past me to point at a line of code, and for a second, he didn't pull back.
He turned his head. We were inches apart. I could smell the cedar and rain scent that I now associated with safety. He reached out, his fingers brushing a stray lock of hair behind my ear. His touch was hesitant, reverent.
"You're the most brilliant person I've ever met, Evelyn," he said softly. The intensity in his dark eyes made my breath hitch. "Maddox was a fool for a thousand reasons, but not seeing *this*... that was his greatest crime."
My heart hammered against my ribs, a chaotic rhythm that had nothing to do with fear.
***
The day of the Global Launch arrived with the fanfare of a coronation. Carson and I stood in his office, watching the massive flatscreen on the wall. Maddox was live-streaming from the convention center, standing on a stage bathed in blue lasers and fog.
He looked triumphant. He was wearing a new tuxedo, his smile dazzling the flashing cameras. Beside him stood Margot.
My breath caught in my throat. Around her neck glittered a diamond pendant. *My* grandmother’s pendant. The one I had left in the safe when I fled.
"He's announcing the projections," Carson said, his voice hard. He moved to stand behind me, his hands resting on the back of my chair—a silent wall of support.
"Ladies and gentlemen!" Maddox boomed into the microphone. "*Aetheria* is not just a game. It is a revolution. Our pre-orders have shattered records. We are projecting one hundred million dollars in revenue within the first thirty days!"
The crowd roared. Investors clinked glasses. Margot preened, touching the stolen diamonds at her throat.
"And now," Maddox shouted, raising a hand toward the giant countdown clock behind him. "The moment you've been waiting for. We go live in ten seconds!"
*Ten. Nine. Eight.*
Carson’s hand moved from the chair to my shoulder, squeezing gently. "Are you ready for this?"
I watched Maddox's arrogant grin. I thought of the mud on the floor. I thought of Charlie's flatline. I thought of the years of my life he had devoured.
*Three. Two. One.*
"Let him fly high," I whispered, my eyes locked on the screen as Maddox pressed the giant ceremonial button. "So the fall kills him."
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