
Betrayal's Payback
Chapter 2
I woke to the sound of knocking, harsh and insistent against my apartment door. Sunlight streamed through curtains I'd forgotten to close, making me wince. My head throbbed—the aftermath of finishing an entire bottle of wine alone after last night's disaster.
The knocking continued. I considered ignoring it, burrowing deeper under my covers to hide from the world for at least another day. But whoever stood on the other side was persistent.
"Coming," I called, my voice raspy as I dragged myself from bed.
I didn't bother checking my appearance in the mirror. What did it matter now? My life had spectacularly imploded in front of both our families. I pulled on a robe and shuffled to the door, expecting Ryan with pathetic excuses or, worse, Isabella gloating over her victory.
Instead, Eleanor Covington stood in my hallway, immaculately dressed in a tailored navy suit despite the early hour. In her manicured hand, she held a bottle of what appeared to be very expensive wine.
"Eleanor," I managed, suddenly acutely aware of my tangled hair and puffy eyes.
"May I come in?" she asked, her voice carrying the same crisp authority I remembered from dinner parties at the Covington estate.
I stepped aside wordlessly, watching as she surveyed my apartment. Ryan and I had chosen it together, but now every corner held memories I'd need to exorcise.
"I won't waste your time with platitudes," Eleanor said, placing the wine bottle on my kitchen counter. "What my son did was unforgivable."
I crossed my arms over my chest. "I appreciate the sentiment, but—"
"We've cut him off," she interrupted, removing her gloves with deliberate precision. "Financially. Completely."
The statement hung in the air between us. Eleanor's eyes—the same shade of blue as Ryan's—held mine steadily.
"William and I agree. Ryan needs to understand there are consequences for his actions." She ran a finger along the counter, a habit I'd noticed whenever she inspected a space. "That girl—"
"Isabella," I supplied.
"Yes. She clearly expects the Covington lifestyle. They'll both discover rather quickly that won't be possible." A small, satisfied smile played at the corner of her mouth. "Ryan's trust fund is frozen, his position at William's firm terminated. He'll need to make his own way now."
I should have felt vindicated. Instead, a strange emptiness filled me. "Why are you telling me this?"
Eleanor approached, stopping just short of touching me. "Because you deserved better, Madison. You always have." She gestured to the wine. "Château Margaux, 1995. I was saving it for your engagement. I thought you might need it more now."
The unexpected kindness threatened to unravel me. I swallowed hard against the lump forming in my throat.
"Thank you," I whispered.
She nodded once, then headed for the door. "I've always admired your resilience, Madison. Don't let them take that from you."
After she left, I stood motionless in my kitchen, staring at the wine bottle. Eleanor Covington had just handed me something far more valuable than vintage Bordeaux—she'd given me the first piece of a new foundation to stand on.
* * *
"Madison, you're here!" Chloe Davis, my boss, looked up from her computer with surprise as I walked into the office. "I wouldn't have blamed you for taking a personal day."
I set my coffee on my desk, straightening my shoulders. "Work seemed better than sitting at home."
Chloe's sharp eyes assessed me. At forty-two, she'd built our marketing firm from nothing, becoming one of the few female CEOs in the industry. She'd always been my professional north star.
"News travels fast in this city," she said quietly. "Are you okay?"
"I will be," I replied, surprised to find I meant it.
She nodded, respecting my boundaries. "Well, your timing is perfect. The Archer Tech pitch needs a lead, and I want it to be you."
I nearly spilled my coffee. "Archer? But that's our biggest potential client this quarter."
"Exactly." Chloe leaned against my desk. "Their CMO was impressed with your preliminary ideas. If we land them, I'm putting you on the fast track for senior management."
The opportunity was exactly what I needed—a chance to pour myself into something that mattered, something entirely mine.
"When do they need the presentation?" I asked, already mentally reorganizing my schedule.
"Thursday. Think you can handle it?"
I thought of Eleanor's words. Don't let them take that from you.
"Absolutely," I said.
* * *
Three days later, I stood before Archer Tech's executive board, my heart racing beneath my calm exterior. The conference room fell silent as I concluded my presentation.
"The multimedia approach Ms. Vance has outlined," Chloe added from beside me, "would increase your digital engagement by an estimated forty percent within the first quarter alone."
The CMO, a woman about Eleanor's age, studied the projection screens where my strategy glowed in crisp graphics and compelling data points.
"It's innovative," she admitted. "Risky, but with potentially significant returns."
I stepped forward. "Sometimes the greatest rewards come from calculated risks."
She held my gaze for a long moment before breaking into a smile. "I couldn't agree more. You have our business, Ms. Vance."
As handshakes were exchanged and contracts discussed, Chloe squeezed my arm. "Brilliant work. The bonus on this will be substantial—and I'm giving you a team to build this campaign exactly as you envision it."
For the first time since that disastrous dinner, I felt something like power flowing through my veins. This victory was mine alone—earned through intelligence and determination, not manipulation or deceit.
As I gathered my materials, my phone buzzed with a text. Unknown number.
"We need to talk. Please. -Ryan"
I deleted it without replying, a small smile playing at my lips. Let him beg. I had an empire to build.
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