
Give Up Loving Him and Start Over
Chapter 3
The alarm hadn't even finished its first shriek when my phone buzzed with notifications. Still groggy from the restless sleep that had followed last night's charity event, I reached for it with the muscle memory of someone who'd trained herself to be available at all hours.
The first notification was from a news app. The headline made my blood freeze: "Tech CEO's Cinderella Story: Mark Hale Steps Out with Mystery Woman."
My hands trembled as I opened the article. There we were—Mark and me, his hand on my back as we posed for photographers, my smile radiant with the kind of joy I'd never felt before. In the photo, I looked like I belonged there, like I was someone who mattered. The caption read: "HaleTech CEO Mark Hale debuts his new romance at last night's charity gala, proving that sometimes the girl next door gets the prince."
For one perfect moment, my heart soared. They thought I was his girlfriend. They thought I was worthy of someone like Mark Hale.
Then I opened the HaleTech employee group chat.
The messages had been flying since 6 AM, and they hit me like physical blows:
*Sarah from Accounting: "Well, that explains all the late nights 'working' together."*
*Mike from Sales: "Damn, she played the long game. Two years of fetching coffee to land the CEO."*
*Jessica from HR: "I always wondered why she stayed so late. Now we know what kind of 'overtime' she was putting in."*
*David from Marketing: "Smart move, honestly. Why climb the corporate ladder when you can just sleep your way to the top?"*
My stomach lurched as I scrolled through dozens of similar messages. Colleagues I'd worked alongside for two years, people I'd helped with projects and covered for during sick days, were dissecting my character like vultures picking at roadkill.
*Tom from IT: "She always seemed so innocent. Guess still waters run deep."*
*Rachel from Finance: "I feel bad for whoever has to train her replacement when this inevitably crashes and burns."*
I dropped the phone like it had burned me, my breath coming in short gasps. This wasn't how it was supposed to happen. Mark had asked me to help him, to stand by his side for one evening. How had that transformed into this narrative of calculated seduction and opportunistic manipulation?
I forced myself to get dressed, my hands shaking as I applied concealer under my eyes and tried to make myself look professional. Normal. Like I wasn't falling apart from the inside out.
The walk to the office felt like a death march. Every person on the street seemed to be staring at me, though I knew that was impossible. The news might be circulating in financial circles, but I wasn't famous enough for strangers to recognize me on the sidewalk.
But inside the HaleTech building, recognition was immediate and brutal.
Conversations stopped mid-sentence when I stepped off the elevator. Heads turned, then quickly swiveled away when I made eye contact. The whispers started before I'd even reached my desk—a low buzz of speculation and judgment that followed me like a swarm of wasps.
I sat down at my workstation, trying to focus on my computer screen, but I could feel eyes on me from every direction. Through my peripheral vision, I caught Sarah from Accounting pointing in my direction while whispering to a colleague. Mike from Sales walked past my desk twice, each time slowing down to get a better look at me like I was an exhibit in a zoo.
My email inbox was flooded with messages, but not the usual work correspondence. Anonymous accounts had somehow gotten my work address:
*"Congratulations on your promotion from secretary to mistress. Hope it was worth selling your dignity."*
*"Everyone knows what you really do during those 'late nights' at the office. Pathetic."*
*"Gold-digger alert! How does it feel to be the office joke?"*
I deleted them as fast as they came, but they kept multiplying like a virus. My hands were shaking so badly I could barely type.
Mark's office remained dark all morning. His calendar showed he was in back-to-back meetings with the board and PR team, probably dealing with the media attention. I kept glancing toward his door, waiting for him to emerge and set the record straight. He would explain that I was just helping him with a professional obligation. He would defend me against these cruel assumptions.
He had to.
Lunch came and went without any word from him. I ate a granola bar at my desk, unable to face the cafeteria where I knew the whispers would be loudest. Every time someone walked past my workstation, I felt their judgment like a physical weight pressing down on my shoulders.
By mid-afternoon, the stress had given me a splitting headache. I was reaching for aspirin when Lily from the marketing department slid into the chair next to my desk.
"Jesus, Mercy," she whispered, glancing around to make sure no one was listening. "Are you okay? The group chat is absolutely brutal."
I looked up at her, grateful for the first kind words I'd heard all day. "I don't know what to do, Lily. It's not what they think. Mark asked me to help him with a PR situation, and now everyone thinks I'm some kind of scheming—"
"Hey," she interrupted gently. "You don't owe anyone an explanation. But maybe you should talk to Mark about making a statement? This is getting out of hand."
I nodded, swallowing hard. "He's been in meetings all day. I'm sure he'll address it soon."
Lily's expression was sympathetic but skeptical. "I hope so. For your sake."
As the afternoon wore on, my hope began to curdle into something darker. Mark's meetings ended, but he remained sequestered in his office with his door closed. I could see him through the glass partition, pacing while talking on his phone, but he hadn't so much as glanced in my direction.
Then, at 4:30 PM, someone in the group chat posted a link to a live press conference.
"Mark Hale addressing the media now," the message read.
My heart hammered as I clicked the link. There he was, standing behind a podium in the building's main conference room, looking every inch the composed CEO. The camera loved him—his strong jawline, his confident posture, the way he commanded attention without even trying.
"I want to address some speculation that's been circulating about my personal life," he began, his voice steady and professional. "The woman you've seen in photos with me is Mercy Lewis, a valued employee here at HaleTech. She accompanied me to last night's charity event in a professional capacity."
Relief flooded through me. He was going to explain. He was going to make this right.
"However," Mark continued, and something in his tone made my blood run cold, "I want to be clear that Miss Lewis may have misunderstood the nature of our professional relationship. While I appreciate her dedication to the company, I've recently become concerned that she may have developed some inappropriate expectations about our working dynamic."
The words hit me like a physical blow. I stared at the screen, watching Mark's familiar face deliver my professional death sentence with the same calm authority he used to discuss quarterly projections.
"I want to emphasize that I've never encouraged any behavior that could be construed as unprofessional," he said, his eyes looking directly into the camera. "Miss Lewis is a hardworking employee, but I felt it was important to clarify these boundaries publicly to avoid any further misunderstandings."
The conference room around me seemed to tilt. This couldn't be happening. Mark—my Mark, the man I'd devoted two years of my life to supporting—was painting me as a delusional employee who had misread professional kindness as romantic interest.
He was making me the villain in my own story.
I could feel eyes on me from every direction as my colleagues absorbed his words. The whispers started immediately, louder now, emboldened by Mark's public dismissal of my character.
"Poor thing," someone murmured behind me. "She really thought he was interested in her."
"How embarrassing," another voice added. "Imagine being that delusional."
I sat frozen at my desk, watching Mark field questions from reporters with the same charming confidence that had made me fall for him in the first place. Every word he spoke felt like another nail in the coffin of my reputation, my career, my sense of self.
When the press conference ended, the office erupted in a buzz of renewed gossip. I could hear my name being passed from desk to desk like a piece of particularly juicy scandal.
My phone buzzed with a new message in the group chat: "Well, that settles it. She's officially the most pathetic person in the building."
I closed my laptop with shaking hands and gathered my purse. I couldn't stay here another minute, couldn't endure another second of their pitying stares and cruel whispers.
As I walked toward the elevator, I caught a glimpse of Mark through his office window. He was back to work already, reviewing documents with the same focused intensity he brought to every task.
He'd destroyed my reputation in front of the entire company, and for him, it was just another item checked off his to-do list.
You may also like





