
After My Lover Replaced Me with His Greedy Mistress
Chapter 1
The elevator doors chimed, sliding open to reveal the pulse of Manhattan—a bass-heavy thrum that vibrated right through the soles of my thrifted heels. The rooftop of the Skylark was a kaleidoscope of diamonds, champagne flutes, and the kind of aggressive ambition that smelled like expensive cologne and ozone. Tonight was the *Nexus* IPO launch. Tonight, eight years of instant noodles, double shifts at the diner, and scrubbing grout off bathroom tiles were supposed to turn into gold.
I smoothed the front of my black dress. It was vintage—code for used—but I’d tailored it myself until it hugged my frame like armor. My hands trembled, just a little. Not from the cold, but from the adrenaline of knowing that Ian had done it. *We* had done it.
"Excuse me, miss," a server muttered, maneuvering a tray of hors d'oeuvres around me as if I were a piece of misplaced furniture.
I didn't mind. I was used to being invisible. It was the only way I could pull the strings I needed to pull without my father finding out.
I scanned the VIP section, the blue mood lighting turning the guests into aquatic ghosts. I was looking for Ian. I needed to see his face when he realized the Ashford contract was signed and resting in my tote bag. That piece of paper was worth five million dollars, a safety net I’d woven by calling in a favor I swore I never would.
I found him near the glass railing, silhouetted against the Empire State Building. But he wasn't looking at the view.
My breath hitched, lodging somewhere in my throat like a shard of glass.
Ian was pressed into the corner, his hand tangled in the blonde waves of a woman’s hair. Lilliana. His executive assistant. The girl I’d hired because she seemed "eager to learn."
I stopped, the noise of the party fading into a high-pitched ringing in my ears. He was kissing her the way a starving man eats. Desperate. Possessive. He pulled back, his forehead resting against hers, and I saw his lips move. I didn't need to hear the words; I knew the shape of them. He was promising her the world. The same world he’d promised me when we were sharing a twin mattress in Queens.
My stomach twisted, a sharp, acidic burn flaring up—my ulcer, right on cue.
*Move,* I told myself. *Scream. Throw a drink.*
But I stood frozen, watching the man I’d built from the ground up tear down my future with a smile on his face.
Suddenly, the music cut. A spotlight swept across the deck, blindingly bright, landing squarely on Ian. He didn’t flinch. He just straightened his tie, unentangled himself from Lilliana with a smooth, practiced motion, and stepped toward the microphone stand. He beckoned her to follow him.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Ian’s voice boomed, smooth as velvet, amplified across the rooftop. The crowd hushed. He looked every inch the tech mogul now—the bespoke suit I’d paid for with my tips fitting him perfectly. "Tonight is about vision. It’s about seeing what others can’t."
I stepped out of the shadows, walking toward the stage. My legs felt heavy, like I was wading through wet concrete. He would see me. He would call me up. He had to.
Ian’s gaze swept over the crowd. For a micro-second, his eyes locked on mine. There was no warmth. No recognition. Just a flicker of annoyance, like I was a smudge on a camera lens.
He looked away.
"None of this would be possible without the person who has been my rock," Ian said, his voice thickening with manufactured emotion. He reached out, grabbing Lilliana’s hand and pulling her into the halo of light. "The woman who secured our Series A funding when everyone else said no. My brilliant partner, Lilliana Dunn."
Applause erupted. A thunderclap of betrayal.
Lilliana beamed, feigning surprise, clutching her chest.
"And to show my appreciation," Ian continued, pulling a massive, ceremonial check from behind the podium, "The Board and I have authorized a performance bonus of two hundred thousand dollars."
The numbers swam before my eyes. That was my money. That was the Series A funding *I* had secured by begging an old college friend to take a meeting with Ian. Lilliana had merely brought the coffee.
The clapping was deafening. I felt stripped bare, the cold wind off the Hudson biting through my thin dress. I wasn't just the girlfriend; I was the stepping stone he’d just kicked away.
Ian stepped off the low stage, the toast over, bringing Lilliana with him. The circle of admirers opened for them, but I stood my ground, blocking his path to the bar.
"Ian," I said. My voice was low, devoid of the tremor shaking my hands.
He stopped. Lilliana looked at me, her eyes narrowing into slits of pitying amusement. She squeezed his bicep.
"Hayden," Ian sighed, the sound sharp with impatience. He didn't look at me; he looked over my shoulder, scanning for someone more important. "Not now. Can't you see I'm working?"
"Working?" I stepped closer, smelling her perfume on his lapel. "You just credited her for my work. For eight years of my life."
Ian’s jaw tightened. He leaned in, his voice dropping to a hiss meant only for me. "Don't make a scene. You’re embarrassing yourself. Look at you, Hayden. You’re a waitress. You don’t fit in this tax bracket anymore. Go home."
Something inside me snapped. It wasn't a loud break, but a quiet, definitive severance. The girl who scrubbed floors died in that moment. The Spencer heir woke up.
"A waitress," I repeated, testing the word.
"A burden," he corrected, his lip curling. "We’ve outgrown you. *I’ve* outgrown you."
I reached into my tote bag. My fingers brushed the thick, textured paper of the Ashford contract. Five million dollars. The ink was barely dry.
I pulled the folder out. Ian’s eyes flicked to it, recognition dawning. He knew the Ashford crest. He knew what I had been doing all week while he was 'working late.'Greed flared in his pupils, replacing the disdain.
"Is that...?" He reached for it.
I took a half-step back. "The Ashford exclusivity deal. Five million in capital. The key to the Asian markets."
"Give it to me," he demanded, his hand open, palm up. The arrogance was breathtaking.
I held his gaze. I didn't blink. With slow, deliberate movements, I slid the contract out of the folder. The paper made a crisp *shhh* sound.
"You want the vision?" I asked softly.
I tore the contract down the middle.
The sound was like a gunshot in the intimate space between us. Ian’s face went slack, the color draining away until he looked like the ash of a cigarette.
I put the halves together and tore them again. And again. Quarters. Eighths.
"Hayden!" he choked out, lunging forward, but it was too late.
I threw the confetti into the air between us. The pieces fluttered down, landing on his polished Italian leather shoes.
"I resign," I said, my voice steady, cold, and final. "Good luck with the tax bracket, Ian."
I turned on my heel and walked toward the exit, leaving him standing in the ruin of his own greed, the applause of the party sounding like a distant, mocking joke.
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