
Heiress' Design Revenge
Chapter 2
I sat by the window of my modest apartment, watching the city lights blur through my tears. The simple furniture—secondhand finds I'd carefully selected over three years—surrounded me like silent witnesses to my humiliation. My fingers traced the worn edge of the armchair, a twenty-dollar find from a thrift store that Dylan had once mocked as "quaint."
Sleep hadn't come. How could it, after last night? The image of Dylan placing Olivia's cheap soap in a display case while my hundred-million-dollar contract lay forgotten played on endless loop in my mind.
"You think you can survive without me?" His words echoed in the darkness. "You're just an ordinary girl with unrealistic dreams."
Was that all I'd been to him? A convenient supporter he could discard when someone shinier came along?
My phone vibrated on the coffee table. The private number—the one I'd maintained for emergencies with my grandfather's office. I'd never used it before. My fingers trembled as I answered.
"Miss Collins," came the crisp voice of Robert Chen's assistant. "Mr. Chen will be collecting you at eight this morning. Will that be convenient?"
I closed my eyes. Three years of hiding who I truly was, of living in this modest apartment with its secondhand furniture and carefully budgeted meals—all ending today.
"Yes," I replied simply. "I'll be ready."
After hanging up, I moved to my closet. The choices were deliberately limited—part of my carefully constructed ordinary persona. I selected a simple blue dress that had seen better days, but something in my bearing had changed. My spine straightened as I pinned my hair back, my jaw setting with new determination.
At precisely eight, I heard the distinctive purr of an engine outside. I peered through the curtain to see a sleek black Rolls-Royce Phantom glide to a stop before my building. Thomas, who had driven for my family for twenty years, emerged in his impeccable uniform.
I gathered my small purse and stepped outside just as he reached the door.
"Miss Collins," Thomas said with a formal bow that somehow conveyed genuine warmth. "It's truly wonderful to see you again. Your grandfather has missed you terribly."
"Thank you, Thomas," I replied, my voice steadier than I expected.
As I moved toward the car, a flash of movement caught my eye. Dylan, in his expensive running gear—purchased with money I'd quietly transferred to our joint account—had stopped mid-jog. His mouth hung open, his eyes darting between me and the Rolls-Royce.
Our gazes locked for one electric moment. His face contorted with rage and disgust, as if he'd discovered something foul on his shoe.
I turned away and slid into the leather interior of the car without looking back.
---
"She's been having an affair with some rich old man," Dylan's voice was venomous as he paced the private room of Café Laurent. "That explains everything—why she never seemed worried about money, how she had 'connections' for that contract. She's been playing me for a fool."
Olivia sat perfectly poised, her expression a masterclass in false sympathy. "Dylan, I hate to say this, but... I've suspected for a while. Remember when she'd disappear for hours claiming she was 'running errands'? And she always had those expensive leather notebooks—where would she get those on her budget?"
Jacob Spencer, Dylan's VP, leaned forward. I'd never liked him—there was something calculating behind his technical brilliance.
"We should get ahead of this," Jacob said, his voice low. "If word gets out that your wife was cheating, it damages your reputation too. Unless..." He paused meaningfully. "Unless we control the narrative. What if she wasn't just cheating—what if she was stealing company secrets to give to her lover? Industrial espionage. That makes you the victim."
Dylan's eyes lit up with vindictive excitement. "Brilliant. We'll say she's been selling our designs, our client list—everything."
Over the next hour, the three crafted their poisonous story. Sierra Collins, desperate social climber, had seduced Dylan while secretly servicing a wealthy older man. She'd used Dylan's company resources and confidential information to impress her paramour and help him invest in competing businesses.
As they made call after call—to mutual friends, business associates, industry contacts—each conversation carefully designed to spread the poison while maintaining plausible deniability.
---
The destruction was swift and merciless.
Former colleagues who had once praised my work ethic now returned my calls with suspicious silence.
My email inbox filled with messages ranging from disappointed to accusatory.
"I thought you were different, Sierra."
"How could you betray Dylan like this?"
"We trusted you with confidential information."
Anonymous accounts appeared on social media and professional networking sites, posting detailed accusations of my alleged affair and corporate theft. Someone—likely Olivia—had created a fake timeline with photoshopped evidence of me at luxury hotels and restaurants, implying clandestine meetings.
When I attempted to defend myself, my denials seemed weak without revealing my true identity—something my pride and the terms of my wager prevented.
A former coworker I'd helped secure her first major client crossed the street to avoid speaking with me.
I sat in my apartment, scrolling through the avalanche of hate and accusation, feeling utterly alone. My phone buzzed with a text from Dylan: "You thought you could humiliate me? Now everyone knows what you really are."
Outside, the Rolls-Royce waited to take me to my grandfather's office—and to whatever came next.
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