
After My Husband Let His Mistress Ruin My Career
Chapter 5
The penthouse had always been too large for two people. Eighteen hundred square feet of floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Manhattan, marble countertops that cost more than most people's cars, furniture selected by an interior designer whose retainer exceeded my former salary. Now, standing in the wreckage of our living room—because somehow it was still 'our' living room for another six weeks until the divorce finalized—the space felt like a mausoleum.
Jude's voice cracked through the air like a whip. "This is your fault. All of it."
Brooke stood by the window, her reflection ghostly against the city lights, her arms wrapped around herself. The confident PR Director who'd shredded my contracts and destroyed my privacy had been replaced by something hollow-eyed and desperate. "My fault? I didn't drive away every competent person in the company. I didn't build an empire on my wife's brain while taking all the credit."
"You told me she was replaceable!" Jude's hand slammed against the granite island, and I watched from my position near the doorway—invisible, as I'd learned to be during their arguments. I'd only come to retrieve the last of my belongings, but the scene unfolding was too grimly fascinating to interrupt. "You said we didn't need her. That she was just—"
"I know what I said!" Brooke whirled on him, and her face was ugly with rage and fear. "But you were supposed to have a backup plan. You're the CEO, Jude. You were supposed to know how to run your own goddamn company!"
Foreclosure notices covered the dining table like macabre placemats. I could see them from where I stood: red-stamped warnings, final notices, bankruptcy attorneys' business cards scattered like confetti from a funeral.
Jude's laugh was bitter. "The investors pulled two hundred million in funding. Two hundred million, Brooke. The banks won't return my calls. Our accounts are frozen. And you—" He pointed at her with a shaking finger. "—you destroyed the one partnership that could have saved us."
"That partnership was with Burke Holdings. With her new company." Brooke's voice dripped venom. "It would have been humiliating."
"It would have been survival!"
I should have left. Should have grabbed my grandmother's jewelry from the bedroom safe and disappeared before they noticed me. But something kept me rooted—the grim satisfaction of watching the infrastructure of their betrayal collapse under its own weight.
Brooke's phone buzzed. Then again. She glanced at the screen and her face went white.
"What?" Jude demanded.
"The loan." Her voice was barely a whisper. "The payment was due today."
I went very still. Loan? What loan?
Jude's expression shifted from anger to something that looked like panic. "You told me we had until next week."
"I was wrong."
The silence that followed was suffocating. Then Jude moved, crossing the room in three strides to grab Brooke's phone. His face as he read the screen went from pale to gray.
"Five million," he said flatly. "They want five million by Friday or they're sending collectors."
Brooke's laugh was hysterical. "Collectors. That's what they're calling them now. Collectors."
"What the hell were you thinking?" Jude's voice rose to a shout. "Underground lenders? Are you insane?"
"You signed the papers too!" Brooke screamed back. "You wanted the money just as badly. You wanted to keep the penthouse, keep the cars, keep pretending we were still on top!"
"I thought—" Jude's voice broke. "I thought we'd have time. I thought the company would recover, that we could—"
"Recover?" Brooke's laugh was sharp enough to draw blood. "It's over, Jude. Simpson Technologies is dead. You killed it by being exactly what Sophia always knew you were: a fraud."
The slap echoed through the penthouse like a gunshot.
Brooke's hand flew to her face, her eyes wide with shock. For a moment, neither of them moved. Then she lunged at him, nails extended, and they crashed into the dining table in a tangle of limbs and rage and foreclosure notices fluttering to the floor like dying moths.
I backed toward the door, my heart hammering. This wasn't my circus anymore. These weren't my monkeys.
But as I reached for the handle, Brooke's voice cut through the chaos: "Wait."
I froze.
She disentangled herself from Jude, breathing hard, a red mark blooming on her cheek. Her eyes locked on mine, and something in them made my skin crawl.
"You," she said softly. "You're the answer."
Jude looked up, following her gaze. I watched the realization dawn across his face—the same calculating expression he'd worn a thousand times when solving a problem by exploiting someone else's value.
"Sophia," he said, and his voice was honey over broken glass. "We need to talk."
I turned the handle and walked out, their voices rising behind me in urgent, desperate whispers.
I should have run faster.
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