
After My Husband Let His Mistress Ruin My Career
Chapter 2
The applause was still echoing in my skull when I left Jude standing in the wings, his relieved smile already fading into irrelevance. My heels struck the marble corridor with purpose as I navigated the backstage maze toward my office. The Burke Holdings term sheet. I needed to secure it, get it to our legal team, ensure the partnership survived whatever reputational damage Brooke's little performance had inflicted.
The office door was ajar.
I stopped. I always locked it. Always.
The sound reached me first—a mechanical whir, rhythmic and deliberate. I pushed the door open.
Brooke stood beside my desk, the burgundy portfolio open in her hands, my carefully organized documents scattered across the mahogany surface. The paper shredder at her feet growled hungrily as she fed it page after page of cream-colored contract stock.
The Burke Holdings term sheet.
"Brooke." My voice came out strangled. "What are you doing?"
She looked up, and her smile was radiant. Genuinely, brilliantly happy. "Oh, Sophia! I was just tidying up. You know how cluttered your office gets. All these papers everywhere—it's so hard to know what's important."
I lunged forward, but she'd already fed the signature page into the shredder's teeth. I watched Burke Holdings' embossed seal disappear into mechanical oblivion, transformed into confetti.
"Those were the only signed hard copies." My hands were shaking. "The only ones. Burke's legal team explicitly required physical signatures for their compliance protocols."
Brooke's eyes widened with theatrical innocence. "Oh no. Really? I had no idea." She glanced down at the shredder, then back at me. "Well, I'm sure you can just print more. You're so good at paperwork, after all. It's basically all you do."
The portfolio slipped from her fingers, landing on my desk with a hollow thud. Empty.
"Get out," I whispered.
"Excuse me?"
"Get out of my office before I call security."
Brooke's smile never wavered as she stepped around me, her shoulder deliberately brushing mine. "You should really learn to take a joke, Sophia. First the roast, now this. So uptight."
The door clicked shut behind her.
I stood there, staring at the shredder's bin, filled with the remains of eighteen months of negotiations. My phone buzzed against my hip. Then again. And again.
The buzzing didn't stop.
I pulled it out. Notifications flooded the screen—Slack messages, dozens of them, all from the company's #general channel. My fingers moved on autopilot, opening the app.
The first image loaded.
My breath stopped.
It was me. In our bedroom. In a state of undress I'd never intended anyone but Jude to see. The photo was from last month, a private moment I'd foolishly allowed him to capture during a rare weekend when we'd pretended our marriage still meant something.
I scrolled. There were more. Six images total, each more intimate than the last, posted with clinical efficiency to a channel that included every employee, every intern, every contractor who had access to our company systems.
Brooke's comment sat beneath them: "Found these in the shared drive! 😂 Guess someone forgot to make their folder private. #WorkplaceHazards #NSFW"
My private cloud storage. She'd hacked my private cloud storage.
The replies were already accumulating. Jokes. Lewd comments. A few horrified reactions, but not enough. Not nearly enough.
I didn't remember walking to the boardroom. Didn't remember pushing open the heavy oak doors. But suddenly I was there, and Jude was sitting at the head of the table with Brooke perched on the armrest of his chair, and they both looked up at me with matching expressions of mild annoyance.
"Jude." My voice sounded distant, like it belonged to someone else. "Brooke destroyed the Burke Holdings term sheet. She also illegally accessed my personal files and distributed private photographs to the entire company. You need to fire her immediately and contact the authorities."
Jude leaned back in his chair. "Jesus, Sophia. Do you hear yourself? You sound paranoid."
"I have the Slack messages right here—"
"Those photos were on the shared drive." Brooke's voice was syrup-sweet. "If they were really private, you should have been more careful."
"That's a lie. They were in my personal cloud account. You hacked—"
"Hacked?" Jude laughed. Actually laughed. "Babe, you're being dramatic. Again. First you can't take a joke at the event, now you're accusing Brooke of corporate espionage? Maybe you need a vacation."
I stared at him. At the man I'd married. The man I'd built an empire for.
"Or maybe," Jude continued, his smile turning cold, "you need a role that's more suited to your current... capabilities." He stood, buttoning his suit jacket with deliberate slowness. "Effective immediately, I'm removing you from all executive functions. No more board meetings. No more strategic planning. No more client contact."
Brooke's hand found his shoulder, her fingers curling possessively.
"In fact," Jude said, "I think we have a janitorial position opening up. That seems about right for someone who can't even manage her own files properly."
He walked toward me, and I held my ground. He reached past me, pulled the boardroom door open wider, then gestured toward the hallway with mock gallantry.
"Out."
I didn't move.
He pulled a key from his pocket—my boardroom key, the one I'd been issued three years ago—and locked the door from the inside, physically barring me from the room I'd helped design.
Through the glass panel, I watched him return to his seat. Watched Brooke lean down and whisper something in his ear. Watched them both laugh.
My phone buzzed again. Another Slack notification.
I turned and walked away, my heels clicking against marble that suddenly felt like the floor of a prison I'd built myself.
But prisons, I was learning, had exits.
You just had to be willing to burn them down on your way out.
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