
My Boyfriend Helped His Mistress Destroy My Startup
My Boyfriend Helped His Mistress Destroy My Startup Chapter 1
The glow of my dual monitors painted the loft office in shades of blue and white. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the Brooklyn Bridge stretched across the East River like a string of diamonds, but I barely noticed. My fingers flew across the keyboard, tweaking the final parameters of Lumina's compression algorithm—the code that would revolutionize cloud storage efficiency.
Three years of work. Three years of ramen dinners, rejected pitches, and sleepless nights in this converted DUMBO warehouse. All of it was about to pay off.
My phone buzzed. The notification banner made my heart skip: Summit Capital—Term Sheet Interest—$15M Valuation.
I read it twice. Then three times. The words didn't change.
"Holy shit," I whispered to the empty office.
My hands shook as I grabbed my phone and called Scott. He picked up on the fourth ring, his voice thick and slightly breathless.
"Hey, babe. What's up?"
"Summit Capital just sent a term sheet interest. Fifteen million, Scott. Series A. They want to lead the round."
A pause. Too long. Then: "That's amazing! I knew you'd do it. We should celebrate—let me take you somewhere special tomorrow night. You deserve it."
Something in his tone felt off, like he was reading from a script, but I pushed the thought away. I was being paranoid. Scott had been my rock through all of this.
"You sure? I know you've been swamped with work."
"For this? Absolutely. I'll make a reservation at Le Bernardin. Eight o'clock. Wear that black dress I love."
After we hung up, I stared at the term sheet email until the screen blurred. This was it. Everything I'd sacrificed, every choice I'd made to prove I could build something real without my father's name opening doors—it was finally happening.
I didn't let myself think about the other choice I'd made: hiding who I really was. Not just from investors, but from everyone. Even Scott didn't know that my father was John Reed, that I could have funded Lumina ten times over with a single phone call.
But that would have made me just another trust fund kid playing entrepreneur. I needed this to be mine.
The next evening, I stood in front of my bathroom mirror, smoothing down the black sheath dress. My reflection looked confident, successful. I'd learned to wear that mask well.
Le Bernardin was everything I expected—hushed elegance, tables spaced for privacy, the kind of place where deals worth millions were sealed over Dover sole. Scott was already seated when I arrived, and he wasn't alone.
The woman across from him was striking in that calculated way that screamed old money and new Botox. Blonde hair in a perfect chignon, a cream silk blouse that probably cost more than my monthly office rent, and a smile that didn't reach her eyes.
Scott stood, kissing my cheek. "Reya, this is Elliott Gray. Elliott, my girlfriend, Reya Reed."
Elliott's handshake was firm, her palm cool and dry. "Scott's told me so much about you and your little startup. Lumina, right? Cloud compression?"
Little startup. The words landed like a paper cut—small, sharp, deliberate.
"That's right," I said, sliding into my chair. "How do you two know each other?"
"Old friends," Scott said quickly. "Elliott's a heavy hitter in the VC world. I thought she could give you some advice."
Elliott waved a manicured hand. "I wouldn't say heavy hitter. I consult with several firms, help them vet opportunities. Speaking of which—" She leaned forward, her eyes sharp despite the smile. "Tell me about your backend security architecture. I've heard some interesting things about your approach."
The question felt like a probe, searching for weakness. "Our security protocols exceed industry standards. We use end-to-end encryption with—"
"Yes, yes, but who's actually implementing it? You're a solo founder, correct? No CTO, no financial co-founder?" Elliott's tone was light, almost sympathetic. "It's very brave, what you're doing. Very scrappy. But investors at Summit's level usually want to see a more... professional team structure."
My jaw tightened. Scott touched my hand under the table. "Elliott's just trying to help, babe. Don't get defensive."
Defensive. The word stung because I wasn't being defensive—I was being questioned, undermined, in a restaurant I couldn't afford by a woman I'd just met.
Dessert arrived—some architectural marvel of chocolate and gold leaf. Elliott dabbed her lips with her napkin.
"I should mention," she said casually, "I have considerable sway with the senior partners at Summit. In fact, I heard through the grapevine that they're getting cold feet about your lack of a financial co-founder. The tech is impressive, but they're worried about your business acumen."
My stomach dropped. "They didn't mention any concerns in their email."
"They wouldn't. Not yet." Elliott's smile was all sympathy now. "But I could sit in on your pitch meeting. Vouch for you. Smooth things over with the partners I know. Consider it a favor—for Scott."
I looked at Scott. He was nodding eagerly, his hand squeezing mine.
"That would be amazing, Elliott. Right, Reya? You'd be crazy to turn down that kind of help."
The word crazy echoed in my head. The restaurant suddenly felt too warm, too close. Every instinct screamed that something was wrong, that Elliott's offer was a trap.
But Scott was looking at me with those puppy-dog eyes, and I'd spent three years learning to doubt my instincts, to be rational, to not let emotion cloud my judgment.
"Sure," I heard myself say. "That would be great. Thank you."
Elliott's smile widened, and for just a moment, I saw something cold and hungry flash behind her eyes.
"Wonderful," she purred. "This is going to be very interesting."
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