
He Divorced Me, So I Destroyed His Empire.
Chapter 2
Mia POV
The glass elevator climbed twenty floors, and with each one, I shed another piece of the woman Tyler thought I was.
The woman who'd smiled politely while he dismissed four years like they were nothing. The woman who'd let him walk away thinking he'd won.
That woman stayed in the lobby.
By the time the elevator doors opened on the twentieth floor, I was someone else entirely.
"Good morning, Ms. Garcia." The receptionist smiled warmly, her voice bright and professional. "Ms. Rivera is waiting for you in your office."
"Thank you, Rachel." I stepped out into the sleek, modern space that was D&M Solutions headquarters. My company. My empire.
The lobby was all glass and steel, minimalist and powerful. Floor to ceiling windows overlooked the city, and on the far wall, framed certificates and awards caught the morning light. Government contracts. Tech innovation awards. Business excellence recognition.
Every single one earned with my strategies, my connections, my late nights while Tyler thought I was home watching reality TV.
I walked past the open floor plan where my employees were already at their desks, coffee in hand, starting their day. Some looked up and nodded. Others called out morning greetings. They knew me. Respected me. Here, I wasn't Tyler's soon to be ex wife or the woman who'd been traded in for a younger model with better connections.
Here, I was the boss.
"Morning, Ms. Garcia," a young analyst said, rushing past with a stack of folders. "The Morrison proposal is ready for your review."
"Leave it on my desk. I'll look at it after my meeting."
"Yes, ma'am."
Ma'am. I was thirty-two years old and they called me ma'am because I'd earned it while Tyler was out sleeping with his secretary, I was securing multi million dollar contracts.
The irony was almost beautiful.
I pushed open the double doors to my office and found Cassandra Rivera standing by the window, two cups of coffee in her hands and that knowing smile on her face.
"Well?" she asked, turning to face me. "How does it feel to be a free woman?"
I closed the door behind me, leaning against it for a moment. "Ask me in six months."
Cassandra laughed, her dark curls bouncing as she shook her head. She handed me one of the coffee cups, the expensive kind from the Italian place downstairs. She'd been my best friend since college, my Chief Operating Officer for three years, and the only person who knew every detail of what I'd been planning.
"He signed without reading, didn't he?" she asked, settling into one of the leather chairs across from my desk.
"Every single page." I took a sip of coffee, letting the bitterness ground me. "Didn't even ask questions."
"Arrogant bastard."
"That's what I'm counting on."
I walked to my desk, setting down my bag and sinking into my chair. The city sprawled out behind me through the massive windows. From up here, everything looked small like chess pieces I could move at will.
"So it begins?" Cassandra asked, her voice softer now. “If he finds out D&M is yours before we’re done…”
I met her eyes. Dark, intelligent, fierce. She'd been there for everything. The late night crying sessions after I'd found the first affair. The moment I'd decided to fight back instead of walking away. The day we'd filed D&M Solutions as an LLC, carefully hidden from Tyler's greedy eyes.
"It began three years ago, Cass," I said quietly. "This is just the endgame."
She nodded, understanding passing between us without words. "Where do you want to start?"
"Project Riverside." I pulled up my laptop, fingers flying across the keyboard. "D&M Solutions is their primary tech consultant. We withdraw our team, the whole thing collapses. No tech infrastructure, no project."
"Tyler will scramble to find a replacement."
"He can try." I smiled. "But we both know there isn't a firm in this city that can deliver what we do, not on his timeline or with his budget."
Cassandra pulled out her tablet, making notes. "What about the Monroe contract?"
"Already handled. I called our contact this morning. They're pulling out, citing concerns about D'Stone Construction's financial stability."
"Financial stability he won't have once we're done."
"Exactly."
We worked through the details for the next hour. Every contract D&M Solutions had funneled to Tyler was now being dismantled.
It should have felt good, empowering or at least triumphant but instead, I felt... empty.
"Mia?" Cassandra's voice pulled me back. "You okay?"
I blinked, realizing I'd been staring at the screen without seeing it. "Yeah. Just... thinking."
"About?"
"Year one."
Her expression softened immediately. She knew. Of course she knew. She'd been the one I'd called, sobbing, after I'd found that hotel receipt.
Four years ago. Our first anniversary.
I'd planned everything perfectly. Dinner reservations at the restaurant where Tyler had proposed, and even bought him a Rolex, that was way beyond our budget, but I didn't care. I loved him. I wanted to celebrate us.
He'd called at six, voice rushed and apologetic. "Babe, I'm so sorry. Client meeting ran late. I'll be home by nine, I promise."
I'd believed him. Why wouldn't I? Tyler was building his construction company from the ground up. Long hours were part of the deal.
I'd waited.
Nine came and went, then he stumbled in at one in the morning, tie loose, smelling like expensive perfume that wasn't mine.
"Where were you?" I'd asked, trying to keep my voice steady.
"I told you. Client meeting."
"For seven hours?"
He'd looked at me like I was being unreasonable. "This is important, Mia. I'm building something here. I need you to be supportive."
Supportive. Right.
I crawled into bed next to him while he fell asleep immediately, but I couldn't sleep. So I'd gone through his jacket pockets. Just to quiet the paranoid voice in my head.
That's when I'd found it.
The receipt from The Meridian Hotel. Room 412, charged to his credit card on the same night he was supposed to be in client meetings.
I'd held that piece of paper in my shaking hands, staring at it until the numbers blurred.
I'd cried for three days straight. Called in sick to my job at the non-profit.
Cassandra had come over, held me while I fell apart, told me I deserved better.
"Leave him," she'd said. "You're too good for this, Mia. You're too smart, too talented, too everything for a man who cheats on your anniversary."
I'd wanted to. God, I'd wanted to pack my bags and never look back but then I'd looked at our finances.
Everything, every single dollar that had built Tyler's fledgling construction company, had come from the two million dollars my grandmother had left me when she died. The money I'd believed in him enough to invest.
He'd taken my money, built his dream, and repaid me with infidelity.
That's when something had shifted inside me.
I'd stopped crying and pulled myself together.
If Tyler wanted to play games, I'd play better.
I'd spent the next six months learning everything I could about construction, contracts, business development. I'd used my connections from my non-profit days and I'd started D&M Solutions.
Tyler never even noticed. He was too busy with his new secretary, then the account manager after that, then whoever came next.
While he was sleeping around, I was building an empire.
I became his silent partner, funneling contracts his way through D&M Solutions. Making him look brilliant. Making him successful.
All while planning his destruction.
"Mia?" Cassandra's hand on my arm brought me back to the present. "Where'd you go?"
I blinked, the memory fading. "Just remembering why I'm doing this."
"Do you still love him?" she asked quietly. "Be honest with me."
I thought about it. Did I still love Tyler?
I loved the man I'd thought he was. The ambitious, charming guy who'd swept me off my feet in college. The one who'd promised me forever on a beach in Mexico and looked at me like I was his whole world but that man never existed. He was a fantasy I'd created, a role Tyler had played until he got what he wanted.
"I don't even recognize the woman who did," I said finally.
Cassandra nodded, satisfied. "Good. Because that woman would hesitate, and you can't afford to hesitate now."
She was right. The plan was in motion. Tyler had signed the papers, given me everything I needed to destroy him. All I had to do was follow through.
"Timeline?" I asked, pushing my emotions down deep where they couldn't interfere.
"Six months," Cassandra confirmed. "We pull the Riverside funding next week. Monroe contract gets cancelled by end of month. After that, we gradually withdraw tech support from every project D&M Solutions is consulting on."
"What about his new investors? Samantha's father?"
"Marcus Webb." Cassandra pulled up a file on her tablet. "Real estate mogul, lots of money, but he's cautious. One whiff of financial instability and he'll pull out faster than Tyler can say bankruptcy."
"Then we make sure he smells it."
"Already on it. I've got contacts at the financial press. One anonymous tip about D'Stone Construction's project failures, and Webb will be running for the hills."
I smiled. This was why Cassandra was my COO. She thought three steps ahead, just like me.
"What about the wedding?" she asked, switching gears. "Are you going to..."
My phone buzzed on the desk, I glanced at the screen and froze.
You're invited to celebrate the wedding of Tyler D'Stone and Samantha Webb.
Date: Two weeks from Saturday.
Location: The Grand Hotel Ballroom.
RSVP requested.
Two weeks.
Tyler was marrying Samantha in two weeks.
I stared at the elegant digital invitation, the cursive font, the photo of them looking disgustingly happy. Tyler in a tux, Samantha in white, both of them smiling like they'd won the lottery.
"Mia?" Cassandra leaned forward. "What is it?"
I turned the phone around, showing her the screen.
Her eyes widened. "Two weeks? Jesus, he doesn't waste time."
"No," I said slowly, my mind already racing. "He doesn't."
Two weeks. That changed things. The timeline just got shorter. I'd planned for six months of his destruction, but if Tyler was getting married in two weeks, I needed to accelerate.
"Are you going?" Cassandra asked, her voice careful.
I looked at the invitation again. At the future they thought they had.
A future I was about to burn to the ground.
I smiled, coldly. "Wouldn't miss it for the world."
Cassandra studied me. “Mia… what are you planning?”
I looked back at the invitation.
“I’m going to give them a wedding they’ll never forget.”
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