
After My Lover Replaced Me with His Greedy Mistress
Chapter 5
The conference room at Spencer Holdings was less a room and more a fortress of mahogany and silence. The air conditioning hummed a low, expensive note, chilling the sweat that had threatened to bead on my neck just days ago. Now, in a tailored McQueen suit that fit like armor, I felt nothing but cold precision.
David Martinez, my father’s head of legal, slid a thick dossier across the polished table. He didn't look like a lawyer; he looked like a shark in a three-piece suit.
"We found it, Hayden," David said, his voice a gravelly rumble. "Ian was thorough with the Series A and B rounds. He diluted you just enough to strip your equity if he could prove 'cause'—which, with his fabricated embezzlement claims, he thinks he has."
I stared at the papers, my mind racing through the late nights I’d spent poring over those very contracts, bleary-eyed from a double shift. "He always said the initial seed money came from an angel investor who wanted to remain anonymous. 'The Ghost,' he called them."
"The Ghost had a name," my father said from the head of the table.
I turned to him. He was looking out the floor-to-ceiling window at the Manhattan skyline, his back straight, shoulders set. He turned slowly, his eyes locking onto mine with an intensity that made my breath hitch.
"It was me, Hayden."
The room seemed to tilt. "You? But... you hated Ian. You cut me off."
"I cut off your trust fund," he corrected, his voice softening just a fraction. "I never stopped watching you. When that boy came sniffing around for capital five years ago, desperate because no bank would touch him, I set up a shell LLC. I funded the seed round. Not for him. For you."
David tapped the document. "And here's the kicker. That initial seed money? It came with Class A voting rights. Ten votes per share. Ian was so arrogant, so focused on the big VC money later on, he never tried to buy out the original LLC. He thought it was just passive income."
My father picked up a fountain pen—the heavy, gold-nibbed one he used to sign billion-dollar acquisitions—and uncapped it. "I own fifty-one percent of the voting rights of *Nexus*, Hayden. And as of this morning..."
He signed the document with a flourish and slid it toward me.
"...you do."
I looked down at the signature. *Robert Spencer.* And next to it, the transfer line waiting for mine. The pen felt heavy in my hand, heavier than any tray I’d ever carried. This wasn't just paper. It was a weapon.
I signed.
***
The *Nexus* boardroom was a glass cage on the forty-fifth floor, designed to intimate anyone who wasn't Ian. Through the frosted glass walls, I could see the silhouettes of the board members taking their seats. I checked my watch. 9:00 AM sharp.
"Ready?" my father asked, adjusting his cufflinks.
"No," I said honestly, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. "But I'm going in anyway."
David Martinez flanked my left, my father my right. We were a phalanx.
Inside, Ian stood at the head of the table, his posture radiating that specific brand of unearned confidence I used to mistake for genius. Lilliana sat to his right, her hand resting conspicuously on his forearm, a massive diamond weighing down her finger.
"...and so," Ian was saying, his voice smooth and practiced, "it is with a heavy heart that I move to invoke the 'Bad Actor' clause against Ms. Spencer. Her erratic behavior and financial improprieties leave us no choice but to reclaim her unvested shares. Furthermore, I'd like to announce that Lilliana will be stepping into the role of..."
I pushed the double doors open. They swung wide with a heavy *thud* that silenced the room instantly.
Every head turned. The silence that followed was absolute, a vacuum sucking the air out of the room.
Ian froze, his mouth still half-open. His eyes darted from me to my father, and for the first time in eight years, I saw true fear flicker behind his contact lenses. Lilliana snatched her hand back as if burned, her eyes widening at the sight of David Martinez—the legal grim reaper of New York.
I didn't stop walking. My heels struck the floor with a rhythmic, predatory click-clack that echoed off the glass walls. I didn't look at the board members. I didn't look at Lilliana. I kept my eyes locked on Ian.
He looked small. Without the lighting, without the stage, without my adoration propping him up, he was just a man in a suit that was slightly too tight across the shoulders.
"Hayden," Ian stammered, a nervous chuckle escaping his throat. "This is a closed meeting. Security—"
"Sit down, Ian," my father said. He didn't raise his voice. He didn't have to. The command cracked like a whip.
Ian flinched. "Now look here, Robert, you have no standing in this company. This is *Nexus* property."
"Actually," David Martinez interjected, sliding a single sheet of paper down the long conference table. It glided over the polished wood and came to a stop directly in front of Ian. "It's Spencer property. Always has been."
Ian picked up the paper, his hands trembling. As he read, the blood drained from his face, leaving him a pale, waxen gray. He looked up at me, his eyes pleading, searching for the girl who used to make him coffee and soothe his ego.
She wasn't there.
I walked to the head of the table, stopping inches from him. I could smell his cologne—sandalwood and arrogance. It used to smell like home. Now it smelled like a corpse.
"You're sitting in my chair, Ian," I said softly.
The room held its breath.
"Move."
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