
Bleeding On His Carpet Before Taking His Company
Chapter 4
"The algorithm doesn't just predict market trends; it dictates them," Julian said, his voice booming across the St. Regis ballroom. "We aren't just looking at a tech revolution. We're looking at the future of global finance."
He stood on a small riser, surrounded by a swarm of reporters and photographers. He looked exactly like the man I had married—confident, charismatic, and utterly hollow.
"Mr. Miller," a woman from the Financial Times shouted, "there are rumors that your Series B funding was nearly pulled this morning. Can you confirm a new majority shareholder stepped in at the eleventh hour?"
Julian adjusted his silk tie, a smug grin tugging at his lips.
"Visionaries recognize visionaries," he replied, tilting his champagne flute toward the cameras. "A major partner saw the value in what I've built. They'll be making their formal introduction tonight. In fact, we're expecting them any moment."
I stood behind the heavy oak double doors, the cool air of the hallway biting at my bare back.
"Are you ready?" Alexander asked.
He stood beside me, tall and immovable in a bespoke tuxedo. He didn't offer a platitude or a comforting pat on the shoulder. He simply waited for my command.
"The pain medication is holding," I said. "That's all I need."
"You look like a Vanger, Chloe."
"I am a Vanger. I just forgot for a few years."
I smoothed the silk of my gown. It was the color of fresh arterial blood, a stark, violent red that felt like a second skin. The back was cut low, exposing the pale line of my spine and the memory of the bruises from the staircase. I wanted them to see. I wanted him to see what he tried to break.
"Open the doors," I said.
The handles turned.
The roar of the ballroom died instantly as the doors swung wide. The sudden silence was more deafening than the music had been.
I stepped onto the white marble floor. My stilettos struck the stone with a sharp, rhythmic snap that echoed against the vaulted ceiling. I didn't rush. I didn't look down. I kept my chin level, my gaze fixed on the man at the center of the room.
Alexander walked a half-step behind me, his presence a silent threat that kept the security guards from moving.
"Is that...?" a reporter whispered.
"No way. That's his wife. The one who had the accident."
Julian's laughter died in his throat. He froze, his glass halfway to his lips. His eyes traveled from the hem of my crimson dress up to my face, and for a fleeting second, I saw it—the flicker of genuine, unadulterated fear.
We reached the edge of the riser.
Alexander stepped to the side, bowing his head slightly as he moved behind me. He was no longer the lead; he was the herald.
"Julian," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but in the vacuum of the room, it carried to every corner.
"Chloe?" Julian stammered. He stepped down from the platform, his face flushed a sickly shade of gray. "What are you doing here? You're supposed to be—"
"In the hospital?" I finished for him. I took a step closer, invading his personal space. "In a grave? You'll have to be more specific."
"You're making a scene," he hissed, leaning in so the microphones wouldn't catch his words. "Get out of here before I have security drag you out. You're mentally unstable. Everyone knows about the... the loss."
"The loss you didn't want to pay a funeral for?"
I glanced at the glass in his hand. His fingers were shaking so violently the champagne sloshed over the rim, wetting his expensive sleeve.
"I'm here for the meeting, Julian. The one with your new majority shareholder."
"Don't be ridiculous," he snapped, trying to find his bravado. He turned to the crowd, forcing a laugh. "My wife has had a very difficult forty-eight hours, as you can imagine. The grief has clearly affected her—"
"I'm not your wife," I interrupted.
I reached into the small clutch Alexander was holding and pulled out a single, embossed card. I held it out to Julian.
"The loan you took out for your firm? The one that was called in at 8:00 AM this morning?" I asked. "I bought the debt. And then I bought the equity."
Julian's hand spasmed.
*CRACK.*
The stem of the champagne flute snapped between his fingers. Shards of crystal bit into his palm, and pale yellow wine mixed with the red of his own blood, dripping onto the pristine floor. He didn't even flinch at the pain. He just stared at the card in my hand.
"You don't have that kind of money," he whispered. "You're a housewife. You're nothing."
"I was a Miller for three years," I said, my voice dropping to a jagged edge. "That was my mistake. But I was born a Vanger. And a Vanger always collects what's owed."
"Chloe, wait," he started, his voice cracking. "We can talk about this. The apartment—you can have the apartment back. I'll make Mia move out tonight."
"It's not about the apartment anymore, Julian. It's about the interest."
I turned my back on him, facing the cameras. The flashes were a constant strobe light now, blinding and hot.
"Ladies and gentlemen," I announced. "The Vanger Group is officially assuming control of Miller Tech, effective immediately. Mr. Miller's services as CEO are no longer required."
"You can't do this!" Julian yelled, stepping toward me.
Alexander moved instantly, his hand landing on Julian's chest with enough force to send him stumbling back against the riser.
"Stay back, Mr. Miller," Alexander warned. "You're no longer authorized to be in this building."
"This is my event! My algorithm!"
"It's my capital," I shot back.
The side door near the bar opened. Mia stepped out, patting her hair and smoothing the silk of my pajamas—now tailored into a mock-wrap dress. She looked radiant, the Vanger diamond around her neck catching every light in the room.
"Julian, honey, what's taking so long?" she called out, her voice high and melodic. "The press is waiting for the—"
She stopped dead.
Her eyes landed on me. Then they traveled to the massive digital display behind the stage.
The screen, which had been looping a promotional video for the algorithm, suddenly flickered. The Miller Tech logo dissolved, replaced by a high-resolution, black-and-white portrait.
It was a photo of me.
Not the tired, grieving woman Julian had pushed down the stairs. It was a photo from five years ago—sharp, cold, and lethal.
Underneath the image, bold gold letters scrolled across the screen:
**CHLOE VANGER: CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD**
Mia's jaw dropped. She looked from the screen to me, then back to the screen. Her hand flew to the diamond necklace at her throat, her chest heaving.
"Julian?" Mia whispered, her voice trembling. "Why is her face on the screen?"
I smiled at her. It wasn't a kind expression.
"Because, Mia," I said, "it's time to settle the bill."
Mia took a staggering step back, her eyes wide with a realization that came too late, while Julian stared at the screen as if watching his entire world turn to ash.
The silence in the room broke as the first reporter lunged forward with a microphone, but my eyes stayed on the diamond necklace Mia was clutching—the one I was about to take back.
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