
My Boyfriend Helped His Mistress Destroy My Startup
Chapter 3
The security guard's hand on my elbow was gentle but firm, the kind of touch that said *don't make this harder than it needs to be*. My laptop bag hung from my other shoulder, suddenly heavy as concrete.
"This is unnecessary," I said, my voice barely recognizing itself. "I can walk out on my own."
Jadiel Guzman stood in the doorway of the conference room, his arms crossed over his chest like a judge pronouncing sentence. "Ms. Reed, Summit Capital has a zero-tolerance policy for fraudulent activity. We'll be referring this matter to our legal team and the SEC."
The SEC. Securities and Exchange Commission. The words landed like punches.
Behind him, Elliott gathered her things with the unhurried precision of someone who'd already won. Our eyes met for a fraction of a second. Her smile was small, private. Victorious.
"You should retain counsel," she said, her voice carrying just enough false concern to make my skin crawl. "Federal investigators take these things very seriously."
The elevator ride down forty-seven floors took forever and no time at all. The security guard—his name tag read *Marcus*—stared straight ahead, professional and uncomfortable. When the doors opened to the marble lobby, he released my arm.
"Have a good day, ma'am," he said, and I almost laughed at the absurdity.
The September air hit me like a wall, humid and thick with exhaust fumes. Midtown at lunch hour was a river of suits and tourists, everyone moving with purpose while I stood paralyzed on the sidewalk. My phone buzzed in my pocket. Then again. And again.
I pulled it out with shaking hands. Email notifications flooded the screen. Investors pulling out. Beta users demanding refunds. A message from my landlord about "concerning news articles."
Footsteps behind me. I turned, and there was Scott, his tie loosened, phone pressed to his ear. He saw me and ended the call.
"Scott." My voice cracked on his name. "What the hell just happened in there?"
He glanced over his shoulder toward the building entrance, then back at me. Something in his face had shifted, like a mask sliding off to reveal the skull beneath.
"Come on, Reya. You had to know this was coming."
I grabbed his arm, fingers digging into the expensive fabric of his suit. "Know what was coming? That my boyfriend would side with a stranger over me? That you'd call me a fraud in front of investors?"
He shook me off, straightening his sleeve with distaste. "Elliott's not a stranger. And she's not wrong." His eyes—the same eyes that had looked at me with what I thought was love just days ago—were flat, cold. "You're a sinking ship, babe. And I'm not going down with you."
The sidewalk tilted beneath my feet. "What are you talking about?"
"I'm talking about upgrading." He stepped back, creating distance. "Elliott's connected. She's smart. She's actually going places." His phone buzzed and he glanced at it, a smile tugging at his mouth. "And she knows how to treat someone who's useful to her."
A black Uber pulled to the curb. The back door opened and Elliott emerged, her cream coat draped over one arm. She looked between us, her expression carefully neutral.
"Ready?" she asked Scott.
He nodded, moving toward the car without a backward glance. I stood frozen, watching him slide into the seat beside her. Through the window, I saw her hand rest on his thigh. Saw him lean in close, whispering something that made her laugh.
The car pulled away, leaving me standing alone in a crowd of thousands.
My apartment felt like a crime scene when I finally made it home. Everything looked the same—the secondhand couch, the IKEA coffee table, the framed print of the Brooklyn Bridge—but it was all contaminated now. Scott's Columbia hoodie hung over the back of a chair. His toothbrush sat in the bathroom cup.
I dropped my bag and stood in the center of the living room, trying to remember how to breathe.
My phone pinged.
Unknown number. I almost deleted it without looking, but something made me open the message.
The first photo loaded slowly, pixels resolving into an image that stopped my heart.
Scott. In my bed. The sheets I'd washed last weekend, the pillows I'd fluffed that morning. But he wasn't alone.
Elliott's face was tilted back, her expression one of theatrical pleasure. Scott's hands were in her hair. The timestamp in the corner read three days ago. Tuesday afternoon. I'd been at a meeting with my patent attorney.
I scrolled. There were more. Videos. Different angles, different days. My apartment. My bed. My boyfriend and the woman who'd just destroyed my company, fucking in my home while I worked to build something real.
The final message was text only: *He was never yours. He was just waiting for a better offer.*
I made it to the bathroom before I vomited, my body rejecting everything—the betrayal, the humiliation, the three years I'd wasted on a man who'd been auditioning for a better role the entire time.
When there was nothing left to purge, I sat on the cold tile floor and let myself break.
My phone buzzed again. Not a message this time—a news alert.
*TechCrunch: The Next Theranos? Lumina Founder Accused of Embezzlement*
I clicked through with numb fingers. The article was detailed, damning, filled with quotes from "anonymous sources close to the company" and references to the forged documents Elliott had presented. Marcus Chen's byline sat at the top like a death certificate.
By the time I forced myself to check Twitter, #LuminaFraud was trending.
Three years of work. Gone in less than twenty-four hours.
I sat on my bathroom floor as the sun set outside, watching my life burn down in real-time on a phone screen, and wondered if there was anything left worth saving.
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