
My Boyfriend’s Mistress Tried to Pay Me Off
My Boyfriend’s Mistress Tried to Pay Me Off Chapter 1
The cake was small, a simple vanilla sponge from the bakery on the corner of 5th and 9th. I carried it like a fragile secret, the cardboard box cool against my palms. It was my twenty-fourth birthday, and for five years, I’d played the part of the struggling girlfriend in this cramped Brooklyn walkup. I’d clipped coupons, worn thrift-store sweaters, and let Scott believe our biggest luxury was a shared order of takeout Thai. I did it because I wanted to know—truly know—that I was loved for the girl who walked Biscuit in the rain, not for the girl whose last name opened doors at the Plaza.
The stairs creaked under my boots. I reached our door, fumbling for my key, a smile already tugging at my lips. I imagined the lights would be off, Scott waiting with a cheap bottle of wine and that crooked grin that used to make my heart skip.
The apartment was dark, but not silent.
A blue glow bled out from the bedroom, casting long, sickly shadows across the scuffed hardwood of the living room. Then, I heard it. A laugh. Not the tired, stressed-out laugh Scott gave me after a day of failed pitches for his startup. This was low, intimate, and sharp with a kind of jagged excitement.
I set the cake on the kitchen counter. My hand didn't shake, but my skin felt suddenly too tight for my bones. I walked toward the bedroom door. It was cracked open just an inch.
Through the gap, I saw Scott. He was hunched over his laptop, his face illuminated by the screen. On the monitor, Monica Ortiz was lounging against a headboard, her dark hair spilled over silk pillows. She was wearing a lace negligee that probably cost more than our monthly rent.
“I’m telling you, Scott,” Monica purred, her voice tinny through the speakers but unmistakable. “My father is already looking at the term sheet. Once we’re official, the funding is yours. You don’t need to play house in that dump anymore.”
Scott leaned closer to the camera, his voice a rough whisper. “I know. God, Monica, you have no idea how hard it’s been. Living like this… it’s exhausting. Hadlee’s great, but she doesn’t understand the pressure. She’s content with nothing. I need more.”
“You need me,” Monica countered, tracing the line of her collarbone.
“I need you,” Scott echoed.
I stood there in the hall, my back against the cold plaster. I didn’t burst in. I didn’t scream. I just watched the timer on the microwave in the kitchen. One second. Two. I counted to eleven as they traded promises of a future built on my absence. Eleven seconds of my life dying in a dark hallway.
I pulled the door shut. The click was so soft they didn’t even pause.
I moved with a clinical, icy precision. I didn't need much. I had moved in here with a single suitcase, and I would leave with one. I dragged it from under the bed in the guest closet, tossing in my jeans, my few sweaters, and the designer heels I’d kept hidden in a shoebox at the very back—the only pair I’d ever let myself keep from my former life.
Biscuit, my scruffy terrier mix, watched me from his rug, his head tilted. He didn't bark. He knew the vibration of the room had changed. I clipped his leash to his collar and felt the weight of my keys in my pocket.
I walked back to the kitchen. The cake sat there, pathetic in its box. I took my key off the ring and placed it right on top of the cardboard. A birthday gift.
“Come on, Biscuit,” I whispered. We walked out. I didn't look back at the blue light. I didn't look back at the five years I’d spent pretending to be small for a man who was actually microscopic.
The Brooklyn night was cold, the air smelling of exhaust and rain. I felt lighter than I had in half a decade.
***
The calls started the next morning. Then the texts.
*Hadlee, where are you?*
*The cake? What is this?*
*Talk to me. Don’t be dramatic.*
I blocked his number by noon. By the second day, he was using a burner app.
*I know you’re hurt, but we’re a team. You need me, Hadlee. You can’t survive in the city on your own. Come home and let’s fix this.*
It was the arrogance that finally got to me. The belief that I was a stray he’d taken in, rather than the woman who had been subsidizing his ego with her own silence.
When he messaged through Nora, my old roommate, begging for a meeting in SoHo to “talk things through,” I felt a flicker of something. Not love. Not even anger. Just a cold, sharp desire for a finality he couldn't ignore.
I chose a café on Prince Street. High ceilings, expensive lattes, and enough witnesses to ensure he wouldn't make a scene. I arrived at 2:00 PM sharp.
Scott was already there, but he wasn't alone. Monica Ortiz sat beside him, her hand draped over his forearm like a trophy. She looked like she’d stepped out of a catalog—all camel hair and gold hardware. Scott looked uncomfortable, but there was a new shimmer of greed in his eyes that made my stomach turn.
“Hadlee,” Scott said, starting to rise. Monica pulled him back down.
“Sit, Scott,” she said, her voice bright and brittle. She looked at me, her eyes scanning my simple black coat and boots. She saw a girl who lost. “Let’s keep this brief. We’re all adults here.”
I sat across from them, my hands folded on the table. I didn't order anything. “You wanted to talk, Scott. Talk.”
Scott cleared his throat, looking at the table. “Look, Hadlee. Things... they changed. Monica can help my company. She’s from a world that understands what I’m trying to build. You’re a sweet girl, but we’re just on different levels now.”
“Different levels,” I repeated. My voice was a flat line.
Monica smiled, a flash of white teeth. She reached into her leather clutch and slid a slip of paper across the wood. A check.
“Five hundred dollars,” Monica said. “Consider it a parting gift. Buy yourself something nice, move into a better place, and move on, sweetie. No hard feelings, right?”
Scott didn't look up. He didn't stop her. He just sat there, letting this woman pay off his guilt with the equivalent of a dinner for four.
I looked at the check. Then I looked at Scott.
“You really think this is what I’m worth?” I asked softly.
“It’s more than you have in your savings account, Hadlee,” Scott snapped, his defensiveness finally breaking through. “Just take it and go. You don't belong in this conversation anymore.”
I felt the weight of my purse. Slowly, I reached inside and pulled out a slim, matte-black piece of metal. It didn't have a raised number. It didn't have a bank logo anyone in this café would recognize unless they were invited to the private lounges at JFK.
I set the Centurion card on the table. The sound of metal hitting wood was like a gunshot.
Scott’s eyes drifted to the card. He frowned, then his face went pale. He knew what a Black Card looked like. Everyone in the startup world dreamed of one.
“There’s a three-million-dollar limit on this card, Scott,” I said, my voice carrying in the sudden silence of the corner. “I’ve had it since I was eighteen. I hid it because I didn't want you to feel small. I wanted to see if you could love a woman without a balance sheet.”
I picked up Monica’s check. I tore it once, twice, then dropped the scraps onto Scott’s lap.
“Turns out, you managed to be small all on your own,” I said.
Monica’s mouth was open, her polished facade cracking as she looked from the card to me. “This... this has to be a fake.”
“Check the name on the account, Monica. It’s Elliott. As in David Elliott. As in the man who could buy your father’s firm and turn it into a parking lot.”
Scott started to reach for my hand. “Hadlee, wait, I didn't—I didn't know—”
I stood up. Before he could finish the sentence, I swung. My palm connected with his cheek in a sharp, stinging crack that echoed off the high ceilings. It wasn't an act of passion. It was a signature on a closed contract.
“Lose my number, Scott. You can’t afford me.”
I turned and walked out, the bell above the door chiming behind me. I didn't look back to see the look on his face. I didn't need to. I was already miles away.
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