
His Mistress Wore My Promotion
Chapter 3
The discovery of those divorce papers changed something fundamental inside me. As I sat in the dusty records room, holding physical proof of Ethan's betrayal, I felt a strange clarity washing over me. This wasn't just about a smoke ring or a diamond necklace for Ashley. This was about years of calculated deception.
I carefully photographed each page of the divorce documents before returning them exactly as I'd found them. Evidence. Insurance. Ammunition. Words I'd never associated with my marriage before, but now seemed perfectly fitting.
Thursday evening, I stayed late at the office, waiting until the last footsteps echoed down the hallway and the security lights dimmed to their nighttime setting. With trembling fingers, I logged into the agency's encrypted messenger system—the one Ethan had insisted we use for "sensitive client communications only."
I hesitated for only a moment before typing in his password. Six years of marriage had its advantages; I'd seen him enter it countless times. "Genius2016"—the year we founded the company. The year he began calling himself a genius.
The system opened like a vault of secrets, and I navigated to his private messages with Ashley. Two years' worth of exchanges filled my screen, dating back to when she first joined the company as his assistant. My stomach clenched as I scrolled through their conversations.
"Olivia's in another client dinner. Free tonight?" he'd written.
"Always free for you," she'd replied, adding a winking emoji.
Another exchange from six months ago: "She's obsessed with work again. Three hours on the phone with Westfield. I need a real woman's attention."
"I'll wear that thing you like," Ashley had responded.
I kept scrolling, my heart hardening with each message. The most recent ones were from yesterday, after my demotion.
"She took it better than expected. Almost disappointed."
"You handled it perfectly. Celebration dinner tonight?"
"My place. 8PM. Bring champagne."
I logged out, carefully erasing my digital footprints. The office felt suddenly airless, the walls closing in. I gathered my things and left, driving aimlessly through Chicago's glittering downtown before finding myself parked outside our—Ethan's—favorite steakhouse. Through the window, I could see them: Ethan feeding Ashley a bite of dessert across a candlelit table, her diamond necklace catching the light as she laughed.
Friday afternoon, I scheduled a meeting with David Miller, our financial advisor. David had always been kind to me, one of the few people at the company who seemed to recognize my contributions without Ethan's prompting.
"What can I do for you, Olivia?" he asked, closing his office door behind me.
"I need to understand something about our commission structure," I said carefully. "Specifically, how my earnings from the Westfield deal are being allocated."
David's expression shifted subtly. "I was wondering when you might ask about that."
He pulled several documents from his drawer, sliding them across the desk. Bank statements, commission reports, internal memos—all bearing Ethan's signature.
"Your commission from Westfield—and several other accounts—has been partially rerouted," David explained quietly. "Officially, it's listed as 'performance incentives' for other team members."
"Other team members," I repeated. "Or one specific team member?"
David's finger traced down to a highlighted name that appeared repeatedly: Ashley Bennett.
"This has been happening for how long?" I asked, my voice surprisingly steady.
"Eighteen months," he replied. "I've documented everything. I... I thought you should know."
I studied the papers, memorizing the numbers, the dates, the systematic theft of my earned income. "Thank you, David. I appreciate your discretion."
The weekend brought the company's annual Lake Michigan retreat—a tradition I'd once loved but now dreaded. Employees and their families gathered at a lakeside resort, ostensibly for team building but really for Ethan to play magnanimous leader.
Saturday's barbecue was in full swing when I arrived with my contribution: my mother's potato salad recipe, the one thing I still cooked from scratch despite our busy lives.
"Ah, Olivia's famous potato salad," Ethan announced as I set it down on the buffet table. He made a show of taking a bite, his face twisting into exaggerated disappointment. "A bit bland this year, isn't it? Maybe more salt next time?"
I smiled tightly as colleagues awkwardly avoided my gaze. Twenty minutes later, I watched from across the lawn as Ethan hovered over the grill, carefully turning a thick steak.
"Medium-rare, extra pepper, just how you like it," he said to Ashley, who stood unnecessarily close to him. He seasoned her meat with elaborate care, adding a pat of herb butter as he transferred it to her plate.
"Perfect, as always," she purred, taking a deliberate bite and closing her eyes in theatrical pleasure.
I turned away, my phone buzzing in my pocket. An email from Chloe Davis, my former college roommate now working at a rival firm in New York. "Call me," it read. "Urgent opportunity."
As I looked back at Ethan and Ashley, their heads bent together in intimate conversation, I felt something shift inside me. The final piece of my escape plan was falling into place.
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