
After My Lover Replaced Me with His Greedy Mistress
Chapter 4
The diner smelled of stale grease and despair, a scent that had clung to my hair and clothes for eight years. I was double-shifting, my feet throbbing in shoes that had lost their support months ago. The lunch rush was a blur of shouting cooks and impatient customers, a cacophony that usually faded into background noise. Today, it felt like a physical assault.
"Order up! Table four needs ketchup!" the line cook bellowed, slapping a plate onto the metal counter.
I reached for it, but my hand wouldn't cooperate. A sharp, hot pain bloomed in the center of my stomach, radiating outward like a supernova. It wasn't the dull ache I’d grown accustomed to; this was a tearing sensation, as if something vital had finally given way. My vision tunneled. The clatter of silverware and the drone of conversation warped into a high-pitched whine.
I dropped the plate. The crash was deafening.
"Hayden?" someone asked, their voice sounding underwater.
The floor rushed up to meet me. I hit the linoleum hard, but I barely felt it. All I felt was the wet, metallic taste of blood filling my mouth.
***
I woke up to the rhythmic beeping of a monitor and the smell of antiseptic that couldn't quite mask the underlying odor of sickness. The ceiling tiles were stained brown, a map of neglect. I wasn't in a private room at Mount Sinai. I was in a charity ward, separated from the next patient by a thin, frayed curtain.
A doctor with tired eyes and a clipboard stood at the foot of my bed. He didn't look like the specialists my father used to summon for a sore throat. He looked exhausted.
"Miss Spencer?" he asked, glancing at my chart. "You have a perforated ulcer. You lost a lot of blood. We managed to stop the bleeding, but..."
He sighed, rubbing the bridge of his nose. "Your body is shutting down. Stress, malnutrition, exhaustion. You're twenty-six, but your insides look like you've been fighting a war for forty years. Whatever you're doing, you need to stop. Next time, you won't wake up."
He walked away to attend to a coughing man three beds down.
I lay there, staring at the water stain above me. I was dying. I was literally killing myself for a man who was probably, at this very moment, sipping vintage Dom Pérignon in the penthouse I had secured, laughing with a woman wearing diamonds bought with my stolen future.
Ian wasn't just breaking my heart. He was liquidating my existence.
A cold clarity washed over me, sharper than the pain in my gut. The tears didn't come. I had cried enough in that Bronx apartment. Crying was for the girl who believed love was about endurance. That girl died on the diner floor.
I discharged myself three hours later, against medical advice. I had no insurance, no money for the bill, and my cell phone service had been cut off that morning. I walked out into the gray afternoon, the city moving around me with indifferent speed.
My legs were shaky, but my resolve was iron. I walked two blocks to a payphone near a bodega, the kind covered in graffiti and smelling of urine. I fished a quarter out of my pocket—one of the last coins I had to my name.
My fingers hovered over the keypad. I knew the number. I had never forgotten it, even through eight years of silence, eight years of pride, eight years of pretending I didn't need the safety net I was born into.
I dialed.
It rang once. Twice. Then, a voice I hadn't heard in nearly a decade. Gruff. Commanding. Familiar.
"Spencer residence."
My throat tightened, the words catching on the scar tissue of my pride. "Dad?"
Silence stretched across the line, heavy and suffocating. I could hear the faint tick of the grandfather clock in his study, a sound from another life.
"Hayden?" His voice cracked, losing its corporate polish. "Is that you?"
"It's me," I whispered, gripping the receiver until my knuckles turned white. "I... I made a mistake. I'm ready to come home. And I'm ready to fight."
***
The black limousine looked like a spaceship landed in the middle of the Bronx. It idled at the curb, its sleek, polished surface reflecting the crumbling brick of the tenements around it. Neighbors peeked out from behind curtains, whispering.
The back door opened. My father stepped out.
He looked older. The gray at his temples had spread, and lines were etched deep around his mouth. He wore a charcoal suit that cost more than this entire block. He scanned the street, his eyes landing on me standing by the stoop with my single, battered suitcase.
For a moment, we just looked at each other. The billionaire mogul and the prodigal daughter in thrift store clothes.
Then he moved. He didn't walk; he strode, closing the distance between us in seconds. He didn't offer a handshake or a lecture. He pulled me into a hug that knocked the wind out of me, his arms shaking slightly.
"I've got you," he murmured into my hair, his voice thick. "I've got you."
He ushered me into the car, the leather interior smelling of cedar and safety. As the driver pulled away, leaving the Bronx behind, the transformation began.
We didn't go to the city penthouse. We went to the Hamptons estate, a fortress of solitude by the sea. For the next week, I didn't see a lawyer. I saw doctors, nutritionists, and tailors. I ate meals that weren't instant noodles. I slept in sheets with thread counts higher than my previous monthly income.
But I didn't just rest. I prepared.
On the seventh day, I walked into my father's study. I was wearing a navy Alexander McQueen suit, tailored to within an inch of its life. My hair was sleek, my skin clear, the hollows in my cheeks filled out. The waitress was gone.
My father sat behind his mahogany desk, flanked by three of the most vicious corporate litigators in New York.
"Gentlemen," I said, my voice steady and cold. "Let's talk about *Nexus*."
I didn't need notes. I didn't need spreadsheets. I had lived every cent of that company's history. I began to recite dates, account numbers, shell companies, and the exact clauses in the bylaws Ian had violated. I laid out the roadmap of his fraud from memory, dissecting his empire with surgical precision.
The lead attorney, a man known for making grown men cry, stopped taking notes and looked up at my father.
"Robert," he said, a slow smile spreading across his face. "She's not just back. She's lethal."
My father looked at me, pride warring with regret in his eyes. He nodded once.
"She's a Spencer," he said. "Now, let's go get her company back."
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