
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 4
Kensley ambushed me in the parking garage.
I'd just left Landon's room, the signed documents secure in my portfolio, when she materialized between two concrete pillars. The fluorescent lights overhead cast her face in sickly yellow, turning her desperation into something almost feral.
"We need to talk." She thrust a manila envelope at me, her manicured nails chipped at the edges. "Privately."
I glanced at the envelope, then back at her face. The performance from three days ago had crumbled entirely. No tears now. Just raw, cornered panic.
"I'm listening."
She pulled out a sheaf of documents, fanning them like a poker hand she believed was unbeatable. Patent applications. Corporate filings. A forensic accounting report stamped with an official-looking seal.
"Your father stole those patents from Ross Holdings," she said, her voice shaking with manufactured conviction. "He was a fraud. A thief. And I have proof."
I took the papers, my expression carefully neutral. The forgery was competent—someone had invested real money in aging the documents, distressing the edges, even replicating the typewriter font from the era. But the filing dates were wrong. Off by three months. My father's original patents predated the Ross family's supposed claim by nearly a year.
I'd memorized every document in my father's workshop. Every notebook entry. Every timestamp.
"Where did you get this?" I asked, my voice soft, almost curious.
Kensley's confidence surged. She thought she'd rattled me. "It doesn't matter. What matters is that if you don't back off—if you don't drop whatever you're planning—I'll release this to the Wall Street Journal. Your father's legacy will be destroyed. The Campbell name will be synonymous with corporate theft."
I let my hand tremble slightly as I held the papers. Let my breathing quicken just enough for her to notice. "You can't—"
"I can." She stepped closer, her perfume cloying in the stale garage air. "Landon loves me. He's leaving you everything in writing. But I'm not cruel, Sloan. Sign the divorce papers. Walk away quietly. And I'll bury this."
I looked down at the forged documents, then back at her face. The desperation there was real, even if the evidence wasn't. She'd gambled everything on this bluff.
"I need time," I whispered. "To think."
"You have forty-eight hours." Kensley snatched the papers back, clutching them to her chest like a shield. "After that, I'm going public."
She turned and walked toward the elevator, her heels echoing off concrete. I waited until the doors closed before I allowed myself to smile.
She'd just committed extortion. On camera. In a hospital parking garage with security footage timestamped and archived.
I pulled out my phone and texted Marcus Webb: *Add extortion to the federal charges. I have it on tape.*
Then I headed back inside, where Richard Ross was waiting.
---
The hospital cafeteria smelled of burnt coffee and institutional despair. Richard sat at a corner table, his silver-tipped cane propped against the chair, his posture radiating the kind of authority that came from generations of inherited power.
"Sit," he commanded, not looking up from his phone.
I sat, folding my hands on the laminate tabletop.
He finally met my eyes, his gaze cold and assessing. "Landon's indiscretion is unfortunate, but manageable. The board has been briefed. The family will handle the business transition while he recovers."
"I have his power of attorney," I said quietly.
Richard's jaw tightened. "A temporary measure. Once he's stable, we'll revisit the arrangement. In the meantime, I suggest you focus on what you do best—charity galas, interior design, whatever it is you occupy yourself with."
He dismissed two decades of strategy, of late nights rebuilding his son's failing algorithms, of the connections I'd leveraged to secure Ross Holdings' first major contracts. To Richard, I was decorative. Disposable.
"The business is complex," I said, keeping my voice deferential. "I wouldn't want to overstep."
"Precisely." He stood, gripping his cane. "Leave the thinking to those equipped for it. We'll ensure you're comfortable, naturally. The family takes care of its own."
I touched my father's signet ring, the metal cold against my skin, and smiled up at him. "Of course, Richard. Whatever the family thinks is best."
He nodded, satisfied, and walked away.
I sat alone in the fluorescent glare, watching him disappear through the double doors. In my mind, I added his name to the list—right below Kensley's, right above the rest of the Ross dynasty.
They'd murdered my father for patents.
I was going to destroy them for existing.
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