
Heiress' Design Revenge
Chapter 3
I was staring at Dylan's face—his smile wide and self-satisfied, his arm draped possessively around Olivia's shoulders—when my coffee cup slipped from my fingers. The ceramic shattered against the floor of the busy café, sending dark liquid splashing across my jeans and drawing startled looks from nearby patrons.
"Sorry," I murmured, kneeling to gather the broken pieces. But my eyes remained fixed on the glossy magazine someone had left on the adjacent table.
The headline read: "Power Couple Redefines Urban Architecture: Dylan Hawkins and Olivia Mason's Visionary Partnership."
I picked up the magazine with trembling hands, flipping through the four-page spread. There they were—Dylan in a tailored suit that I'd secretly paid for, Olivia in a designer dress I'd never seen before, standing in his office—the office I'd helped design with my own savings.
"The betrayal was devastating," Dylan was quoted saying, his expression perfectly somber for the photographer. "But sometimes, you have to lose what isn't right for you to find what truly fits."
Olivia's hand rested on his shoulder, her manicured nails gleaming under studio lights. "We've known each other for years," she said. "But it wasn't until recently that we realized our creative energies were meant to work together."
The article described how they'd "collaborated on groundbreaking designs" and "fought against industry skepticism" to build Dylan's company into what it was today.
My designs. My money. My sacrifice.
I stared at a particular photo—them reviewing architectural plans that I had sketched during countless nights when Dylan had fallen asleep beside me. Plans I'd created while he'd been out with clients, drinking my wine, spending my money.
Something cold settled in my chest—not heartbreak this time, but something harder, sharper. More useful.
---
Jacob Spencer's fingers moved methodically across his keyboard, each keystroke erasing another trace of my existence from the company's digital history.
"Done," he said, leaning back in his chair. The conference room was empty except for him and Olivia, who stood behind him, massaging his shoulders.
"You're brilliant," she murmured, leaning down to kiss his neck. "No one will ever know she had anything to do with those designs."
Jacob turned to pull her onto his lap. "I've altered all the metadata. As far as anyone can tell, those concepts were developed by you and Dylan last year."
"What about the employees who worked with her?" Olivia asked, her voice suddenly sharp.
"I've handled it." Jacob's smile was cold as he pulled up a document on his screen. "I've prepared talking points for everyone. Sierra Collins was an administrative assistant who became obsessed with taking credit for creative work she didn't understand."
"And if someone remembers differently?"
Jacob closed the laptop. "People remember what they're told to remember. Especially when their jobs depend on it."
Later that evening, in a hotel room paid for with company funds, Jacob and Olivia celebrated their successful manipulation.
"To naive Sierra," Olivia laughed, raising her champagne glass. "Who thought love was real."
"To the Skyline Tower project," Jacob replied. "And to making sure she never has the resources to fight back."
Neither noticed the small recording device tucked into Olivia's purse—a gift from Sierra that Olivia had kept as a trophy.
---
The law offices of Frost & Barrett occupied the top three floors of a gleaming downtown tower. I sat across from Marcus Wei in a conference room that probably cost more per hour than my entire monthly rent.
Marcus was exactly as Robert Chen had described—impeccably dressed, razor-sharp, and completely loyal to my family.
"These are impressive," he said, examining the digital files I'd brought. "Timestamped, detailed, comprehensive."
"I've kept records of everything," I replied. "Every financial transfer to Dylan's company, every design concept I developed, every meeting where I presented those concepts."
Marcus nodded, his eyes scanning the documents spread across the mahogany table. "And Anderson Vale has confirmed he corresponded with you about these designs three years ago?"
"Yes. He remembers my pseudonym—S. Carter—and has preserved all our communications."
I watched as Marcus methodically organized the evidence into categories: financial records, design documentation, correspondence with Anderson Vale, and the recording device that had captured Jacob and Olivia's conversation.
"Miss Collins," he finally said, looking up at me with shrewd eyes, "what exactly are your objectives here?"
I met his gaze steadily. "A clean divorce with no concessions. Complete exposure of the fraud and theft. Criminal prosecution for corporate espionage and defamation." I paused, feeling something fierce rise within me. "And I want the Skyline Tower project. It's mine—built on my designs—and I intend to reclaim it."
Marcus allowed himself a slight smile as he closed his leather portfolio. "We'll need to be strategic about timing. Let them get comfortable. Even overconfident." He tapped the folder containing Jacob's recorded conversation. "The higher they rise on your stolen work, the farther they'll fall."
As we began planning the precise moment of revelation, I felt something shift inside me—the last remnants of the naive woman who had sacrificed everything for false love dissolving away, replaced by someone stronger, someone who would never again mistake dignity for love.
You may also like





