
Mistress Meets Her Match
Chapter 3
The first video arrived at 3:47 AM.
I was awake anyway, sitting in my study with Whiskers curled in my lap, reviewing quarterly reports that Kane believed he'd compiled himself. The soft chime of my personal phone cut through the silence, and I glanced at the screen to see a message from an unknown number.
The preview showed just enough to make my stomach clench—a glimpse of familiar dark hair, Kane's distinctive watch catching the light.
I set Whiskers gently on the leather chair and walked to the window, the city lights blurring as I opened the message. The video was crystal clear, shot in what I recognized as the waterfront penthouse Kane had purchased six months ago. The same penthouse I'd approved the funds for, believing his lie about it being a corporate retreat space.
Nyomi's laughter echoed from my phone's speaker, breathy and performative. "Tell me you love me more than her," she purred, and Kane's response was immediate, eager.
"There's no comparison, baby. She's nothing. You're everything."
I closed the video before it could continue, but the damage was done. My hands remained steady as I deleted the message, though something cold and sharp twisted in my chest. Not heartbreak—I'd moved past that particular pain long ago. This was something else entirely. Calculation.
The second video came during my morning coffee. Then a third while I was feeding Whiskers. By noon, I'd received seven videos and twelve photos, each one more explicit than the last. Nyomi's face was always visible, her expression triumphant, while she made sure to capture Kane's most vulnerable moments.
The photos were particularly telling—close-ups of diamond earrings I recognized from our company's recent acquisition budget, screenshots of bank transfers to "David Grant" for amounts that made my eyebrows rise. Kane had been busy with my money.
I saved everything to a secure folder, my expression never changing even when Nyomi's voice taunted me through audio recordings: "She can't satisfy you like I can. She's dried up, useless. But I'm carrying your real child, your future."
By evening, the assault had escalated to live photos—Nyomi wearing a necklace I'd seen in Kane's credit card statements, standing in front of a luxury car dealership with keys dangling from her manicured fingers. The accompanying message was simple: "Guess what daddy bought me today?"
I poured myself a glass of wine and settled into my chair, Whiskers immediately claiming his spot on my lap. His purring was a soothing counterpoint to the storm building in my mind.
The next morning, I dressed carefully in a navy blazer and cream silk blouse—professional but understated. The kind of outfit that commanded respect without drawing attention. I chose a small café downtown, the type of place where business conversations blended into the ambient noise of grinding coffee and clinking cups.
Assistant Chen was already waiting when I arrived, seated at a corner table with his back to the wall. His nervous energy was palpable, fingers drumming against his coffee cup as he scanned the entrance. When he saw me, relief flooded his features.
"Mrs. Tucker," he said quietly as I slid into the seat across from him. "I have the information you requested."
I stirred sugar into my coffee, the spoon clicking softly against the ceramic. "And?"
"All department heads remain loyal to you. They remember who really built this company, who made their success possible." Chen's voice was barely above a whisper, but his conviction was clear. "When the time comes, they'll stand with you."
"Good." I took a sip of my coffee, savoring the bitter warmth. "What about the financial irregularities?"
Chen's expression darkened as he slid a manila envelope across the table. "It's worse than we thought. The penthouse, the car, cash transfers to Nyomi's family—it's all documented. Over two million in company funds diverted for personal use."
I opened the envelope discreetly, scanning the bank statements and purchase orders Chen had compiled. Every transaction was meticulously documented, a paper trail that would make any prosecutor's job embarrassingly easy.
"The jewelry purchases alone total three hundred thousand," Chen continued. "And there are monthly payments to something called 'DG Enterprises'—that's David Grant, Nyomi's brother. Kane's been funneling money to her entire family."
I closed the envelope and met Chen's eyes. "How long before Kane realizes what's happening?"
"He's completely oblivious. Thinks he's untouchable." Chen's smile was grim. "He actually bragged to the board yesterday about his 'business acumen' and how he's positioned the company for unprecedented growth."
"Unprecedented indeed," I murmured, thinking of the videos still arriving on my phone, each one another nail in Kane's coffin. "Thank you, Chen. Your loyalty won't be forgotten."
As I walked back to my car, my phone chimed again. Another video, another attempt to break me. But Nyomi had miscalculated. Every cruel message, every taunting image was simply more evidence for the reckoning that was coming.
I smiled as I deleted the latest video, my fingers already moving to dial the number I'd memorized weeks ago.
It was time to call the shareholders' meeting.
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