
After Public Humiliation, I Became His CEO Boss
Chapter 3
The glass towers of Century City gleamed in the morning sun as I stepped out of the black town car. My heels clicked against the marble as I entered Luminary Pictures headquarters, a building I'd avoided for three years. The lobby stretched before me—all chrome and crystal, designed to intimidate and impress.
I kept my chin high, my stride confident. Around me, employees in sharp suits paused their conversations, heads turning. Whispers followed in my wake.
"Who is she?"
"Must be someone important..."
"Never seen her before."
If they only knew. I'd walked these halls as a child, playing hide-and-seek between board meetings while my father built his empire. Now I returned not as Richard Reed's daughter hiding from her birthright, but as a woman ready to claim it.
The executive elevator required a special key card—one Frank had quietly maintained for me all these years. As the doors closed, shutting out the curious stares, I caught my reflection in the polished steel. Gone was the broken girl from last night's apartment floor. This woman wore power like armor.
The top floor was exactly as I remembered—understated elegance that whispered rather than shouted its authority. My father's assistant, Margaret, looked up from her desk. Her eyes widened in recognition before a warm smile crossed her face.
"Miss Reed. He's expecting you."
I nodded, pushing through the heavy oak doors to find my father standing at the floor-to-ceiling windows, hands clasped behind his back. Richard Reed commanded the room without trying—silver hair perfectly styled, suit impeccable despite the early hour.
"Olivia." He turned, and I saw the concern in his eyes despite his controlled expression. "Tell me everything."
I settled into the leather chair across from his desk, the same one where I'd once curled up to read while he worked late. "You've seen the news?"
"Frank briefed me." His jaw tightened. "That boy—Marcus—he dared to lay hands on you?"
"It's worse than that." I pulled out my phone, showing him the screenshots I'd taken of Marcus and Victoria's messages. My father's expression darkened with each swipe.
"They planned this," he said, voice deadly quiet. "Used you, then discarded you like—"
"Like I was nothing." I met his gaze steadily. "But I'm not nothing, am I?"
A ghost of a smile crossed his lips. "No, my dear. You're a Reed."
He moved to the window again, studying the city below. "We could destroy them tomorrow. One phone call, and Marcus Cole never works in this town again."
"No." I stood, joining him at the window. "That's too easy. Too... impersonal."
"What do you have in mind?"
"The Golden Globe Awards." I watched understanding dawn in his eyes. "Marcus's film—my film—is nominated for Best Picture. The entire industry will be watching."
"A public revelation." He nodded slowly. "Poetic justice."
"I want them to know exactly who they betrayed. I want Marcus to understand that every success he's achieved, every door that opened—it was all me."
My father studied me for a long moment. "You've changed."
"I've learned." I turned from the window. "I need Frank to gather evidence. Every receipt, every investment I made in Marcus's career. The hospital records from when I drank myself sick securing his investors."
"Already in motion," my father assured me. "What else?"
"Recording devices. Marcus won't be able to resist contacting me once his world starts crumbling. I want every threat, every desperate plea documented."
"Consider it done." He pressed a button on his desk. "Frank, please come in."
My assistant appeared within seconds, as if he'd been waiting just outside. His expression was carefully neutral, but I caught the protective anger in his eyes.
"Miss Reed has some instructions," my father said.
I outlined my needs with clinical precision. Frank took notes on his tablet, occasionally nodding. When I finished, he looked up.
"The financial records are already compiled. Three years of transactions, all traceable to Mr. Cole's productions. The hospital records from St. Mary's, Cedar Sinai, and UCLA Medical are being retrieved as we speak."
"The recording devices?"
"I'll have them installed within the hour. Any communication attempt will be captured and stored on our secure servers."
"Perfect." I felt the pieces of my plan clicking into place. "And Frank? Thank you. For everything."
He inclined his head. "It's my honor, Miss Reed."
As Frank left, my father touched my shoulder gently. "Are you certain about this path? Once revealed, there's no going back to anonymity."
"Anonymity brought me Marcus." I thought of the shattered crystal camera, of three years dissolved in a moment of cruel theatre. "I think it's time I try being myself."
Before my father could respond, his desk phone buzzed. Margaret's voice filled the room. "Mr. Reed? Entertainment Tonight is about to air a segment on the Marcus Cole situation."
My stomach tightened. "Put it on."
The wall-mounted screen flickered to life, revealing Marcus's face—perfectly lit, eyes glistening with what looked like tears.
The game, it seemed, had already begun.
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