
After My Sister Took My Husband, I Took Everything Back
Chapter 3
Victor's call came at seven in the morning, his voice tight with the kind of panic he reserved for quarterly earnings reports.
"The investors want something new. Something groundbreaking." A pause. Static on the line. "They're getting restless about The Alchemist's silence."
I cradled the phone against my shoulder, watching rain streak down the window of Louis's guest room. "How soon?"
"Two weeks. Margaret Chen moved up the Château Beaumont presentation." His exhale crackled through the speaker. "Can you do it?"
Can the woman you're harvesting like livestock perform on command? I swallowed the words. "Of course."
"Good. I'll tell Rosalie to expect the formula by Friday."
Of course he would.
I ended the call and stared at my reflection in the darkened screen. Then I smiled.
---
The lab felt different now. Every surface held a memory of violation—Rosalie's heel on my desk, Victor's jacket crumpled on the floor where I stored my rarest absolutes. But I moved through the space like a surgeon, precise and cold.
I pulled my journal from its locked drawer, the leather worn soft from years of formulations. My grandmother had given it to me the summer before she died, back when I still believed family meant protection.
The formula took three hours to construct. I worked with the kind of focus that used to bring me joy, layering notes that would seduce and then betray. Bergamot and neroli for the opening—bright, citrus, expensive. A heart of jasmine sambac and Turkish rose, the kind of opulence that made investors salivate. Then the base: ambergris, sandalwood, a whisper of vanilla.
And buried beneath it all, hidden in the molecular structure like a time bomb—thioacetone derivatives and butyric acid compounds, carefully balanced to remain stable for exactly ten minutes before oxidation triggered the transformation.
Ten minutes of heaven. Then the slow descent into sulfurous hell.
I wrote it all in my code, the notation system I'd developed over fifteen years. To anyone else, it would look like genius. To Rosalie, studying her stolen photographs and YouTube tutorials, it would look like her ticket to legitimacy.
I left the journal open on my desk, angled toward the door. Then I made a show of locking up, my footsteps echoing down the hallway.
From the shadows near the wine cellar, I watched Rosalie slip into my lab. She moved quickly, phone out, photographing each page. Her hands shook slightly. Good.
She was getting nervous.
---
Victor's office occupied the top floor of Hunter Corp's headquarters, all floor-to-ceiling windows and aggressive minimalism. His assistant tried to stop me at the elevator.
"Mrs. Hunter, he's in a meeting—"
"Not anymore."
I pushed through the double doors. Victor stood at his desk with James Whitmore, the CFO, spreadsheets scattered between them. Both men looked up, startled.
"Vanessa." Victor's smile was automatic, practiced. "This isn't a good time."
I set the manila envelope on his desk. "Make time."
James glanced between us, then gathered his papers. "I'll give you two a moment."
The door clicked shut. Victor stared at the envelope like it might detonate.
"What is this?"
"Open it."
He did. I watched his face drain of color as he scanned the first page. Divorce petition. Irreconcilable differences. Division of assets.
"You can't be serious." His voice came out strangled.
"Sign it."
"Vanessa, if this is about the IVF—"
"Sign. It."
He slammed the papers down, and something in him shifted. The mask cracked. "You walk out that door, and I will destroy you. Do you understand? Every connection you have in this industry, every supplier, every distributor—they all go through me."
"Through Hunter Corp, you mean."
"Same thing." He moved around the desk, crowding into my space. "And The Alchemist? That brand belongs to this company. You think you can just take it and start over? I own that name. I own the patents, the trademarks, everything."
I met his eyes, saw the desperation swimming there. He knew. On some level, he'd always known that without me, he was nothing.
"You don't own me," I said quietly.
"No?" His laugh was ugly. "Try leaving. See how far you get when I tell the world The Alchemist is a fraud. When I leak that every formula was stolen, that you're unstable, that you've been—"
"Been what, Victor? Harvested? Drugged? Sabotaged by my own husband?"
He froze.
"You think I don't know?" I leaned closer, close enough to smell the antacids on his breath. "You think I didn't figure it out?"
"Vanessa—"
"Keep the papers. Read them carefully. Because you're going to sign them." I turned toward the door, then paused. "Or I'll make sure everyone knows exactly what Hunter Corp is built on."
I left him standing there, his reflection fractured in the window glass.
In the elevator, my hands finally started shaking. But my resolve had crystallized into something diamond-hard.
Victor had just told me the truth: leaving wasn't enough. Divorce wasn't enough.
I needed to disappear completely.
And I needed to take everything with me when I did.
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