
After My Lover Replaced Me with His Greedy Mistress
Chapter 2
The taxi pulled up to the curb, its headlights slicing through the dark. I paid the driver with the last of my cash, my fingers trembling as I fumbled with the bills. The Upper East Side loomed above me, a canyon of glass and privilege that I’d once called home. My heels clicked on the sidewalk, each step an echo of the life I was about to reclaim. Or so I thought.
I stood in front of the gleaming entrance of the penthouse building, the doorman’s face blurring through the haze of my exhaustion. I fumbled in my purse, my fingers closing around the brass key—my key. The one I’d earned with my own sweat, my own sacrifice. The one I’d bought with the money from my grandmother’s pawned sapphire necklace.
I slid it into the lock, twisting. Nothing.
I tried again, my breath hitching. The key wouldn’t turn. The lock was new.
“Miss Spencer,” the doorman said, his voice low and awkward. He was a good man, had always treated me with respect. Now, he couldn’t meet my eyes. “I’m sorry, but… Mr. Grant had the locks changed an hour ago. He said… he said you wouldn’t be living here anymore.”
The words hit me like a slap. I stared at him, my mouth dry. “He can’t do that. I—I’m on the lease.”
“He’s the primary tenant, miss. He… he had the paperwork redone.”
I looked up, past the doorman, through the glass doors, into the lobby. Beyond, the elevator was open, and I could see the reflection of men in uniform—movers—hauling boxes out of the service elevator. Lilliana’s boxes. My replacement was already moving in.
“Miss?” the doorman tried again, his voice gentle. “Is there somewhere you need to go? I can call you a cab.”
I shook my head, my throat closing. There was nowhere to go. Not anymore.
***
The Bronx was a far cry from the Upper East Side. The studio apartment was a fifth-floor walkup, the stairs steep and narrow, the hallway reeking of boiled cabbage and broken dreams. I stood in the doorway, my purse hanging from my shoulder, taking in the peeling paint, the water stain on the ceiling, the mattress on the floor with its threadbare sheets.
This was what I could afford on my diner tips. This was what eight years of sacrifice had left me with.
I set my purse down on the rickety table, the sound echoing in the empty room. My phone buzzed. A text from Ian: "You should have stayed in your lane, Hayden. Now you’ll learn what happens to nobodies."
My vision blurred, the edges of the room going dark. I sank to the floor, my back against the wall, my breath coming in short, sharp gasps. My chest tightened, a vise squeezing my heart. The ulcer flared, a burning agony that spread through my gut like wildfire.
I curled into myself, my arms wrapped around my stomach, trying to hold the pieces together. Eight years. Eight years of love, of hope, of believing in a man who saw me as nothing more than a stepping stone.
The room spun, the shadows deepening. I was alone, abandoned, and utterly, completely broken.
***
The pounding on the door jolted me awake. I didn’t know how long I’d been lying there, but the light outside the grimy window had changed, the sun setting over the city. My body ached, my head throbbing in time with the incessant banging.
“Open up! I know you’re in there!”
I stumbled to the door, my legs shaking. I pulled it open, and a man in a cheap suit shoved a stack of papers into my hands.
“You’ve been served,” he said, his voice gruff. He turned and walked away, leaving me standing there, the papers crumpling in my grip.
I looked down. The top sheet bore the logo of a law firm—one of the most ruthless in the city. Below it, in bold, black letters: "LAWSUIT: GRANT V. SPENCER."
Ian was suing me. For corporate espionage. For misappropriation of funds. For stealing petty cash from the company I’d helped build from nothing.
He wanted my stock. He wanted me in jail. He wanted me erased.
I let the papers fall to the floor, my hands shaking. The door closed behind me, the sound echoing like a coffin lid slamming shut.
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