
My Fiancé Slept With My Best Friend
Chapter 3
The air in the office suite was stale, smelling of industrial carpet cleaner and yesterday’s coffee. It was barely 5:30 AM. The fluorescent lights hummed with a low, irritating buzz that grated against my nerves.
I slid the spare key into the lock of Julian’s mahogany desk. It turned with a satisfying, metallic *snick*.
"Looking for the money, Julian," I whispered to the empty room. "Let’s see how much you’ve been skimming for your little 'meetings.'"
I pulled out the bottom drawer. It was stuffed with folders, mostly labeled with the names of high-profile clients. I began rifling through them, my fingers moving with a frantic energy. I needed bank statements, wire transfers—anything to give me leverage in the divorce.
Then, my hand hit a heavy, gloss-finished binder. It didn't have a client name. It just said: *Project Zenith: The Future of Vance Marketing.*
I flipped it open. The title page boasted Julian’s name in bold, embossed gold letters. Beneath it, the words *Lead Strategist and Visionary* sat like a slap in the face.
I turned to the second page. My eyes scanned the executive summary, and the blood drained from my face so fast I felt dizzy.
"No," I breathed, clutching the edge of the desk. "He wouldn't."
*“The intersection of consumer vulnerability and aspirational luxury is not a data point; it is a heartbeat,”* I read aloud.
The words were mine. Every single one of them.
This wasn't just a similar idea. This was the draft I had spent three months perfecting on my personal laptop at the kitchen table while he watched football. It was the proposal I had scrapped because I didn't think it was 'aggressive' enough for the firm.
"You thief," I hissed.
I flipped through the pages. He hadn't even bothered to change the font. He’d taken my 'waste' and turned it into his masterpiece for the A-round funding. He was going to use my brain to secure the legacy his father demanded.
I looked at the signature line on the final page. Julian had signed it with a flourish.
The betrayal I’d felt in the kitchen last night was a dull ache compared to this. This was an execution. He wasn't just replacing me in his bed; he was erasing me from my own career.
"You want a mannequin, Julian?" I gripped the binder. "Then stop stealing my voice."
I stood up and moved toward the high-speed scanner in the corner of the office. The machine groaned to life, casting a harsh blue light across my face.
*Zip. Zip. Zip.*
The pages flew through the feeder.
"Private Cloud," I muttered, tapping the touchscreen. "Folder name: The Execution."
The progress bar crawled toward 100%. My heart was a frantic bird in my chest, hammering against my ribs. If he walked in now, I’d have no excuse.
The machine beeped. *Upload Complete.*
I snatched the original binder and hurried back to the desk. I slid it exactly where I’d found it, aligning the folders so they looked undisturbed. I locked the drawer and tucked the key into my bra.
The office door’s sensor chimed.
I froze. My shadow was pinned against the frosted glass of the blinds. I didn't have time to make it to the guest chair. I stood behind Julian’s desk, my hands resting on the leather surface.
The door swung open.
It wasn't Julian.
Chloe Thorne stood in the doorway. She was dressed in a sharp, emerald-green power suit that screamed for attention. She didn't look like she’d just come from a hotel room at the Grand. She looked ready for war.
She stopped when she saw me. Her eyes cut to mine, sharp and predatory.
"Clara," she said, her voice a smooth, dangerous purr. "You're in early. I didn't realize the 'Ice Queen' did her own grunt work."
"I could say the same for you, Chloe," I replied, my voice coming out colder than I expected. "Though I’m surprised you can stand. Didn't you have a late night?"
Chloe’s expression didn't flicker. She walked into the room, her movements fluid and arrogant. She didn't stop until she reached the desk.
"Work never sleeps," she said.
She reached into her designer handbag and pulled out a small, navy velvet box. With a flick of her wrist, she tossed it onto the desk. It skittered across the leather and hit my hand.
"What is this?" I asked, staring at the box.
"Julian left those in my sheets last night," Chloe said. Her smile was a jagged thing, meant to draw blood. "He was in such a rush to get home to his 'monthly chore' that he forgot his platinum cufflinks. Make sure he puts them on before the board meeting. He needs to look the part of the successful CEO, don't you think?"
I looked down at the box. The velvet was soft under my fingertips.
"The sheets," I repeated. I didn't cry. I didn't scream. I just felt a strange, terrifying sense of clarity.
"The black silk ones," Chloe added, leaning over the desk until I could smell her perfume—the same sandalwood and vanilla that Maya wore. "He says you like everything white and sterile. He says sleeping with you is like being in a hospital ward. Boring. Necessary. Cold."
I picked up the box and opened it. The platinum links caught the morning sun, mocking me with their brilliance.
"He's right about one thing," I said, looking up at her.
Chloe arched a perfectly groomed eyebrow. "Oh? And what’s that?"
"I am cold," I said. I snapped the box shut with a sharp *crack*. "But you’re mistaken about the hospital, Chloe. This isn't a ward. It’s a morgue. And you’re just the first thing I’m going to bury."
Chloe’s smile faltered for a fraction of a second. She took a half-step back, her eyes narrowing as she scanned my face for the usual signs of weakness. She found nothing but a void.
"You're delusional," Chloe snapped, recovering her poise. "Julian is the one in control here. He has the firm, he has the proposal, and he has... well, he has everything he wants. You're just the legal paperwork he hasn't filed yet."
"Is that what he told you?" I asked. I walked around the desk, moving toward her. "That he has the proposal?"
Chloe’s gaze flickered. "He's presenting it at seven. The board is going to hand him the keys to the kingdom."
"Then he better hope those cufflinks bring him luck," I said, stepping past her. "Because he’s going to need it when the board realizes his 'vision' is nothing but a stolen ghost."
I reached the door and turned back.
"By the way, Chloe? You should check your phone. I think Julian’s father just sent out a company-wide memo regarding 'unprofessional conduct' in the workplace."
Chloe’s hand flew to her bag, her face turning a sickly shade of grey.
"What did you do?" she hissed.
"I didn't do anything," I said, gripping the door handle. "I just turned the lights on. It’s not my fault you’re both so ugly in the dark."
I stepped out into the hallway, leaving her standing in the center of the stolen office.
My phone vibrated in my pocket. A text from an unknown number.
*“He’s in the lobby. Five minutes until showtime. Are you ready to burn it down, Clara?”*
I looked toward the elevators. The doors opened, and Julian stepped out, looking every bit the conquering hero.
He hadn't seen me yet.
I gripped the velvet box in my pocket, the metal edges digging into my skin.
The A-round funding meeting was in ten minutes.
And I was the only one who knew the password to the presentation.
***
Julian smoothed his tie as he approached, a smug grin plastered on his face. "Clara! Glad you're here. I need you to run the slides. This is the big one."
I smiled back, a sharp, jagged thing. "Oh, Julian. You have no idea how big this is going to be."
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