
After My Husband Replaced Me with His Mistress at Work
Chapter 3
The silence in the hallway was heavier than the marble slabs beneath my feet. Employees I had hired—analysts whose résumés I had vetted, assistants whose birthdays I had memorized—kept their heads down, furiously typing at silent keyboards. They knew better than to witness a execution.
Atlas didn't lower his voice. He projected it, a CEO addressing a subordinate who had missed a KPI.
"You're being territorial, Madeline. It's unbecoming," he said, crossing his arms. The fluorescent lights caught the gold of his cufflinks, flashing like warning signals. "Layla is trying to help this company evolve. You standing here, clutching that binder like a security blanket... you're embarrassing yourself."
Layla leaned against the doorframe of my former office, inspecting her manicure. "I didn't mean to upset her, Atlas. I just thought... since she doesn't actually work here..."
"She knows," Atlas cut in, his eyes locking onto mine. They were cold, stripped of the charm he reserved for investors. "Apologize to her, Maddy. Tell her you're sorry for making a scene."
My knuckles turned white against the leather of the binder. Every instinct screamed at me to throw the Kensington Deal files at his feet, to scream that without my "security blanket," his stock would plummet by noon tomorrow. But I looked at Layla—smug, untouchable in her ignorance—and then at Atlas, who looked at me not with love, but with the annoyance one feels for a malfunctioning appliance.
Rage is a fire, but calculation is ice. I felt the temperature in my chest drop, crystallizing into something sharp and unbreakable.
"You're right," I said. My voice was steady, terrifyingly calm. I loosened my grip on the binder. "I apologize, Layla. I shouldn't have assumed my contributions mattered more than your... aesthetic vision."
Layla blinked, missing the barb, but Atlas frowned, sensing the shift in atmospheric pressure. Before he could analyze it, I turned and walked toward the elevators. I didn't look back. I didn't go to the archives. I took the binder with me.
***
Forty minutes later, I sat in a booth at a dimly lit coffee shop in Tribeca, far from the prying eyes of the Financial District. Across from me sat Victoria Chen, the senior partner at Sterling & Harth. She was a legend in consulting—a woman who ate CEOs for breakfast and didn't bother with the crumbs.
She took a sip of her espresso, her eyes flicking from my face to the binder on the table. "You have five minutes, Mrs. Webb. I usually charge a thousand dollars for five minutes, but I'm curious why the wife of my competitor is calling me on a burner phone."
"I'm not here as a wife," I said, sliding the binder across the table. "I'm here as the architect."
Victoria raised an eyebrow, her skepticism palpable. She opened the binder. I watched her gaze scan the pages—the debt restructuring models, the risk analysis for the Kensington acquisition, the psychological profiles of the opposing board members.
"Atlas is pitching this tomorrow," I said, leaning forward. "But he's going to fail. He thinks the leverage lies in the tech stack. It doesn't. It lies in the regulatory loopholes in the Singapore market. Page forty-two."
Victoria flipped to the page. She read it once. Then she read it again. When she looked up, the skepticism was gone, replaced by the predatory focus of a shark smelling blood.
"This is... comprehensive," she admitted, tapping a manicured nail on the paper. "Who wrote this? Their CFO?"
"I did," I replied. "Just like I wrote the prospectus for the Lunar IPO and the crisis management strategy for the data leak last month. Atlas is the face, Victoria. I'm the foundation."
"And why are you handing me the blueprints to his destruction?"
"I don't want to destroy him," I lied smoothly. "I want to outgrow him. I want a position. Senior Consultant. Trial basis. Give me the impossible accounts—the ones your team can't close. I'll close them."
Victoria closed the binder, her hand resting atop it like a gavel. "You bring me the Singapore contract, and we'll talk about partnership. Until then, you're a ghost. If this blows back on us, I've never met you."
"Done."
***
The penthouse was silent when I returned, the panoramic view of Central Park obscured by a curtain of rain. I placed the empty binder in the recycling bin and checked the time. 8:00 PM.
It was my thirtieth birthday.
I had spent the morning convincing myself he wouldn't forget. Atlas was selfish, yes, but he was socially astute. A thirtieth birthday was a milestone; it required a performance. I had dressed for dinner—a emerald silk gown he used to say brought out my eyes—and waited.
At 9:30 PM, the front door unlocked.
Atlas stumbled in, loosening his tie. He smelled of rain and expensive scotch. When he saw me sitting on the sofa, fully dressed, he stopped, a flicker of confusion crossing his face before he masked it with exhaustion.
"Hey," he breathed, dropping his keys in the bowl. "God, what a day. The board was breathing down my neck about the Kensington numbers. I've been at the office since you left."
"The office," I repeated.
"Yeah. Just... endless meetings." He walked past me toward the bedroom, not even pausing to kiss my cheek. "Why are you dressed up?"
"It's October 14th, Atlas."
He froze in the hallway. I saw the gears turning, the realization hitting him. He turned slowly, putting on a sheepish, boyish grin that used to melt me. Now, it just looked like a grimace.
"Babe. Shit. Is that today?"
"It is."
"I am so sorry," he said, walking back to squeeze my shoulders. His hands felt heavy, suffocating. "I completely lost track with the merger. Look, we'll do something big this weekend. Hamptons? Or Paris? Name it."
"I don't want a trip, Atlas."
"Well, I didn't get you a gift," he laughed, a hollow sound. "I mean, what do you get the woman who has everything? You have the apartment, the clothes, the life... honestly, Maddy, you're impossible to shop for."
He patted my shoulder and went into the bedroom to shower. I listened to the water run, the sound of him washing away the day's sins.
I walked over to his suit jacket, draped over the armchair. I didn't know why I did it—maybe I needed the final nail in the coffin. I reached into the inside pocket.
My fingers brushed against a slip of paper. I pulled it out.
A receipt from Le Bernardin. Timestamped 7:45 PM tonight. The total was over six hundred dollars. The itemized list included the chef's tasting menu for two, a bottle of vintage Pinot Noir, and a special instruction: *Candle on dessert. Happy Birthday, Layla.*
I stared at the paper. Layla's birthday was in June.
He hadn't just forgotten me. He had celebrated her on my day. He had looked me in the eye, smelling of the wine he drank with her, and told me I had "everything."
I didn't cry. The tears I had saved for five years had evaporated in the heat of that receipt. I folded the paper meticulously and placed it in my own pocket. Then, I walked to the table, picked up the phone, and dialed Victoria Chen's personal number.
"I'll take the Singapore account," I said into the dark. "And I start tomorrow."
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