
My Boyfriend’s Mistress Tried to Pay Me Off
Chapter 5
Thursday lunch at Pinnacle Group was a ritual with the weight of a religious ceremony. My mother, Edith, didn’t do casual. We sat in her private dining room on the top floor, the city spread out beneath us like a map she’d already conquered. The silver was heavy, the water was sparkling, and the silence was purposeful.
Edith watched me over the rim of her glass. She hadn’t reached her position by being oblivious. She had spent thirty years reading the micro-shifts in boardrooms and the subtext of legal filings. She knew I was vibrating at a different frequency this week.
“The procurement review is taking a lot of your time,” she said. It wasn’t a question. It was an observation of my schedule.
“It’s a large contract, Mom. I want the due diligence to be perfect,” I replied, focusing on my salad. I didn’t mention Scott’s name. I didn’t mention the way his voice had hitched during the pitch, or the way Dallas Brooks had started sending me terrible puns via my dog’s collar.
Edith set her glass down with a soft *clink*. “You know, Hadlee, when I left your father, I thought I was done with desire. I thought if I just built enough walls and earned enough billions, I’d be safe from ever needing anything again.” She looked out the window, her gaze tracking a hawk circling a skyscraper. “The hardest part of starting over wasn't the money. It was letting myself want something again. To want a future that wasn't just a reaction to the past.”
The words landed in my chest like a lead weight. She was telling me that my silence wasn't protection; it was a cage. I felt the sudden urge to tell her everything—about the $500 check, the black card, and the way Dallas’s coffee felt warmer than it should have.
Instead, I cleared my throat. “The logistics model for the new warehouse is ahead of schedule,” I said, pivoting with a practiced grace I’d learned from her. “We should be able to transition by the end of the quarter.”
Edith’s expression didn’t change, but her eyes softened by a fraction of a millimeter. “Good. Just remember, Hadlee: you don’t have to live in the wreckage of a house just because you helped build it.”
I thought about that for the rest of the day. I thought about it as I walked past the empty conference room where Scott had sweated through his charcoal suit. I thought about it as I sat in my office, staring at the blue folder that held his future in my hands.
***
Across the city, the air in the Ortiz household was thick with a different kind of tension. Scott was a wreck. He was pacing Eduardo Ortiz’s study, his phone a permanent fixture in his palm.
“It’s been a week, Monica,” Scott snapped, his composure fraying at the edges. “They said they’d be in touch. If we don’t get this contract, the Q3 projections I showed them are a fantasy. The investors will walk.”
Monica sat in a leather armchair, her gold bracelet spinning rapidly around her wrist. “Calm down, Scott. My father is calling his contact now. Pinnacle is a bureaucracy. These things take time.”
Eduardo moved into the room, his face uncharacteristically grim. He held his phone like it was a piece of evidence. He had just finished a call with a senior VP at Pinnacle, a man who owed him several favors and usually kept no secrets.
“Eduardo?” Monica asked, her voice tight. “What did he say? Who is the executive overseeing the logistics overhaul?”
Eduardo didn’t look at Scott. He looked at his daughter. “He said the evaluation is strictly internal. He said the final decision rests with the lead procurement executive.”
“And?” Monica pressed. “The name, Dad. Give us a name we can work with.”
Eduardo hesitated. He had moved in the same circles as David Elliott for years. He knew the rumors. He knew the history. “The name on the file,” he said slowly, “is Hadlee Elliott.”
The silence that followed was absolute. Scott stopped pacing. The blood drained from his face so fast he looked like he might faint. Monica’s hand froze on her bracelet. The name hung in the air like a ghost—a person they thought they had buried, now standing at the gates of the only thing that mattered to them.
“Hadlee?” Scott whispered, the word sounding foreign in his own mouth. “No. That’s… it’s a mistake. She’s a clerk. She’s broke. She was living in Brooklyn with me.”
Monica didn’t speak. She was remembering the black card. She was remembering the way I had looked in the café—not like a girl who had lost a boyfriend, but like a queen who had just finished an annoying chore. She realized, with a sickening jolt of clarity, that she hadn't stolen a man from a rival. She had stolen a liability from an empress.
***
Monica didn't break. She didn't have that luxury. Instead, she retreated into the only weapon she understood: the performance.
That evening, the NYU alumni group chat buzzed again. It was a photo of Monica and Scott at a high-end charity gala from the previous winter. They were bathed in golden light, holding champagne flutes, looking like the poster children for Manhattan success.
*So grateful for the people who show up when it matters,* the caption read. *Success is nothing without loyalty.*
She tagged half a dozen people—investors, socialites, former classmates. It was a barricade of social proof, a desperate attempt to assert her status before the floor dropped out from under her.
I sat on my sofa with Biscuit, the blue light of the phone illuminating the dark living room. I watched the likes roll in. I watched the comments—*Power couple!* *So goals!*—and I felt nothing. The performance was loud, but the reality was silent, and I was the one holding the remote.
I closed the app. I didn't feel the need to comment. I didn't need a surgical strike from Dallas this time.
I opened my laptop and pulled up my work email. I found the thread for the Wheeler Logistics application. Raymond Holt had sent over the final scoring rubric. Scott’s company was trailing the lead candidate by fifteen points.
I typed a one-line reply to Raymond, my fingers steady on the keys.
*Please finalize the procurement evaluation timeline for the Wheeler application. Standard criteria, no exceptions.*
I hit send.
In the world of Pinnacle Group, "no exceptions" was the polite way of saying "no mercy."
I shut the laptop and leaned back, scratching Biscuit behind the ears. I thought about my mother’s words. I was starting over. I was letting myself want something. And right now, what I wanted was the sound of the other shoe dropping.
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