
After My Lover Replaced Me with His Greedy Mistress
Chapter 3
The voicemail light on my cracked iPhone blinked like a warning beacon in the dim light of the Bronx apartment. My stomach rolled, a familiar acidic tide rising in my throat. I pressed play, and Ian’s voice filled the small, stale room.
"Hayden," he sighed, the sound heavy with a performance of pity. "Look, I’m trying to help you here. You’re spiraling. You know you’ve always been… fragile. Not corporate material. You were great at the diner, babe, but this? This is the big leagues." The tone shifted, sharpening into a blade. "Sign over the equity, Hayden. Quietly. Or the board sees the photos. You know the ones. A little Photoshop goes a long way, and frankly, who are they going to believe? The CEO of a billion-dollar unicorn, or the unstable ex-waitress? Don’t embarrass yourself further."
The message ended with a click. I stared at the phone, my hands trembling—not with fear, but with a cold, vibrating rage. He wasn’t just stealing my money; he was rewriting my history. He was turning eight years of strategy and sleepless nights into a narrative about a hysterical girlfriend who couldn't hack it.
I needed ammunition. I needed a lawyer. But my bank account was a graveyard of overdraft fees.
I met Victoria Ashford at a small coffee shop in Midtown, far away from the glass towers where people like Ian now held court. Victoria sat with the posture of a woman who owned buildings, not just apartments. She watched me slide into the booth, her gaze sharp but kind.
"You look like hell, Hayden," she said, sliding a cup of Earl Grey toward me.
"I feel like it," I admitted, wrapping my hands around the warmth. "Ian is suing me. He wants the stock. He says I embezzled."
Victoria scoffed, a short, elegant sound. "Ian Grant couldn't balance a checkbook without an abacus and three assistants. I know who wrote the Ashford contract, Hayden. I know who negotiated the terms at 3:00 AM while Ian was 'networking' at the club."
I looked down at the tea, watching the steam rise. "He says I’m not corporate material."
"He says that because he’s terrified everyone will realize *he* isn’t," Victoria countered. She reached into her purse and pulled out a checkbook. "I can have a retainer sent to my firm’s legal department within the hour. A loan. Interest-free."
My pride, battered and bruised as it was, flared up. It was the Spencer in me, the part I’d tried to kill for eight years. "No," I said, my voice quiet but firm. "I walked away from my father’s money so I wouldn’t be beholden to anyone. I won’t start now."
Victoria closed the checkbook, a faint smile playing on her lips. "Good. That fire? That’s what built *Nexus*. You weren't the help, Hayden. You were the architect. Don’t let him bulldoze the house you built."
The architect. The word settled in my chest, displacing some of the fear. I didn't need a handout. I needed proof.
An hour later, I pushed through the revolving doors of the *Nexus* building. The lobby smelled of polished marble and expensive lilies—scents I had chosen. I walked straight for the elevators, my heels clicking a sharp rhythm on the stone floors. I needed the hard drive in my bottom drawer. The one with the original timestamps, the email chains, the metadata that proved every major pivot in the last five years came from my laptop, not Ian’s genius.
"Excuse me! Miss!"
I ignored the security guard, pressing the call button. But before the doors could slide open, a hand slammed against the metal panel.
I turned. Lilliana stood there, flanked by two burly security officers. She wasn't wearing the frantic, eager expression of an assistant anymore. She wore a smirk and a cream-colored power suit that cost more than my entire wardrobe.
"Lost, sweetie?" she asked, her voice dripping with artificial concern. "Deliveries are around back."
"Get out of my way, Lilliana," I said, stepping forward. "I have personal property in my desk."
She laughed, a tinkling sound that grated against my nerves. "Your desk? Oh, honey, we cleared that out this morning. Incinerated most of it. Old takeout menus and bad sketches, right?"
My blood ran cold. The hard drive.
"You had no right," I hissed, my hands balling into fists.
Lilliana stepped closer, invading my personal space. The scent of Ian’s cologne clung to her. She reached up to touch her throat, drawing my eye to the diamond pendant resting there. A solitaire. Vintage cut.
I stopped breathing. I knew that necklace. I had circled it in a catalog three years ago, showing it to Ian, dreaming aloud about the day we ‘made it.’ He had laughed then, saying it was a waste of capital.
"Like it?" Lilliana asked, fingering the stone. "Ian said I deserved a reward for tolerating the transition. He has such… exquisite taste."
The lobby had gone quiet. Employees—people I had hired, people whose payroll I had sorted when funds were tight—were watching. They looked away when I met their eyes. Shame hung heavy in the air.
Except for Marcus Chen. The CFO stood near the reception desk, clutching a file folder. He didn't look away. His face was pale, his jaw set tight. He looked from Lilliana’s necklace to my frayed coat, and for a second, I saw something flicker in his eyes. Guilt? anger?
"Escort her out," Lilliana commanded, waving a hand at the guards as if I were a stray dog.
One of the guards grabbed my arm. "Let’s go, Miss."
I yanked my arm back, straightening my spine. I wouldn't be dragged out. I looked Lilliana dead in the eye. "Enjoy the necklace, Lilliana. Just remember—diamonds are hard, but they shatter if you hit them at the right angle."
I turned and walked out, the humiliation burning my cheeks, but my mind was crystal clear. They thought they had buried me. They forgot that I was a seed.
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