
After My Husband Let His Mistress Ruin My Career
Chapter 3
The elevator ride down from the boardroom felt like descending through layers of a life I no longer recognized. My reflection stared back at me from the polished brass doors—composure intact, shoulders straight, not a hair out of place. The woman looking back could have been heading to another meeting, another negotiation, another victory.
She wasn't.
The doors opened onto the executive floor. My floor. For now.
My office still smelled like Brooke's Chanel No. 5, a sickly-sweet contamination that made my stomach turn. I didn't let myself hesitate. I pulled my leather messenger bag from beneath my desk and began filling it with surgical precision. The leather-bound planners first—three years of strategic notes, market analyses, financial projections that had built Jude's empire from ambitious startup to IPO darling. My Mont Blanc pen, the one I'd bought myself after closing the Chen Industries deal that Jude had somehow taken sole credit for. My mother's Cartier watch, which I'd stupidly left in my desk drawer on days when negotiations required a less expensive timepiece for psychological leverage.
The framed photo of Jude and me at our wedding stayed on the desk. That woman in white, smiling like she'd won the lottery, had no idea what she was signing up for.
I pulled out my laptop, fingers flying across the keyboard with the same efficiency I'd applied to every term sheet, every contract, every strategic memo that had made this company millions.
*To the Board of Directors,*
*Effective immediately, I resign from all positions held at Simpson Technologies. This resignation is irrevocable and requires no transition period, as my contributions have been systematically erased from company records and my expertise publicly devalued.*
*All proprietary strategies, financial models, and client relationships I developed remain my intellectual property and may not be utilized following my departure without explicit written consent and appropriate compensation.*
*I will be pursuing all available legal remedies for the hostile work environment, sexual harassment, and criminal invasion of privacy I have endured.*
I didn't sign it "Regards" or "Sincerely." I signed it "Sophia Lawrence," and that was enough.
The printer hummed. I pulled the still-warm paper out, placed it in an envelope, and walked it directly to the Board Secretary's desk. Janet looked up, her eyes widening as she read the address.
"Sophia—"
"It's done, Janet." I met her gaze steadily. "Make sure they get it within the hour."
I walked past the conference rooms where I'd presented strategies that saved the company during the market downturn. Past the innovation lab I'd convinced Jude to fund. Past the rows of employees who'd seen those photographs, who'd heard Brooke's humiliating roast, who'd watched me be reduced to a punchline.
None of them met my eyes.
I didn't need them to.
The morning air hit my face as I pushed through the building's glass doors, and I kept walking, my heels striking the sidewalk with the rhythm of a woman who knew exactly where she was going.
---
The law offices of Sterling & Associates occupied the forty-second floor of a building that made Simpson Technologies' headquarters look like a suburban strip mall. Margaret Chen, the attorney I'd researched until three in the morning, had a reputation for eviscerating unfaithful spouses in divorce proceedings. Her win record was ninety-four percent. Her retainer was obscene.
I could afford it.
"Mrs. Simpson." Margaret's handshake was firm, her gaze assessing. "Or should I say Ms. Lawrence?"
"Ms. Lawrence," I confirmed, settling into the chair across from her desk. "I want to file for divorce immediately. No reconciliation period. No mediation. I want this done as quickly and ruthlessly as New York law allows."
Margaret's smile was sharp as a scalpel. "Tell me everything."
I did. Every humiliation. Every stolen idea. Every credit Jude had claimed for work I'd done. I handed her the flash drive I'd prepared—financial records showing the stark correlation between my strategies and the company's success, emails proving Jude's incompetence, documentation of Brooke's harassment.
"The photographs," Margaret said carefully. "Those constitute revenge porn under New York law. Criminal charges are possible."
"I want everything possible," I said. "I want him to understand that I'm not his convenient genius anymore. I'm his worst nightmare."
Margaret's eyes gleamed. "Consider it done."
---
Burke Holdings' offices felt different. Cleaner somehow. The receptionist greeted me by name—my actual name, not as someone's wife. The executive team was already assembled when I arrived: Richard Burke himself, silver-haired and sharp-eyed; their CFO, Amanda Zhao; and Marcus Chen, head of security, whose presence I didn't quite understand yet.
"Ms. Lawrence." Richard stood, extending his hand. "We've been hoping for this conversation for quite some time."
Amanda slid a folder across the table. "We know you were the architect behind Simpson Technologies' success. We've known for two years. Every major strategic pivot, every successful market entry—your fingerprints were all over them."
"We'd like to offer you a position as Senior Vice President of Strategic Development," Richard continued. "Full equity package. Your own team. Complete autonomy. And a salary that reflects your actual value, not what your soon-to-be ex-husband decided you were worth."
The contract was already prepared. I read every word, my trained eye catching the details that mattered: the non-compete clause that wouldn't restrict my future options, the intellectual property protections, the performance bonuses tied to metrics I could actually control.
Marcus leaned forward. "We also provide comprehensive security for our executive team. Given the circumstances of your departure, we want to ensure your safety."
I looked up. "You think that's necessary?"
"We think it's prudent," Amanda said quietly. "Desperate people do desperate things."
I picked up the pen they'd provided—a Mont Blanc, I noticed, the same model as mine—and signed my name with steady strokes.
"When can you start?" Richard asked.
I smiled, and it felt like the first genuine expression I'd made in years. "I already have."
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