
My Groom’s Mistress Staged Her Own Suicide to Destroy Me
Chapter 3
The email arrived at 4:12 PM. The subject line read: *Restructuring & Next Steps*.
I sat in the dim quiet of my office, the glow of the monitor casting a pale blue light across my knuckles. I read the text twice. Not out of shock, but to fully absorb the sheer, unadulterated hubris of Chase Riley.
*In light of recent events,* the email began, *I am officially reassigning the lead credits on the Apex, Vanguard, and Meridian joint ventures to Dallas.*
My pulse beat a slow, heavy rhythm against my jaw. Apex, Vanguard, Meridian. I had architected those deals from the ground up, spending months untangling supply chains while Chase played golf with the investors. Now, he was handing my labor to a woman who couldn't read a balance sheet without using her finger to trace the lines.
Paragraph two was the ultimatum. *We are willing to keep you on staff at a reduced capacity. To retain your salary and your desk, I expect a formal, public apology to Dallas by Monday. Don't let pride ruin your only lifeline, Kate.*
I leaned back in my chair, the leather creaking in the silence. He actually believed it. He believed I was a drowning woman, and he was offering me a frayed rope, expecting me to weep with gratitude.
I didn't smash the keyboard. I didn't scream. I simply forwarded the email to my assistant, Vera, with a single word attached: *File.*
***
The rhythmic *hiss-click* of the ventilator was the only constant in my mother’s hospital room. The air tasted of rubbing alcohol and the white orchids I had brought three days ago. I sat in the vinyl chair beside her bed, tracing the faint blue veins on the back of her hand. Her skin was paper-thin, cool to the touch.
My phone vibrated against the metal armrest. Then again. And again.
I picked it up. Three photos from an unknown number, but the cloying stench of Dallas Salazar’s jasmine perfume practically wafted through the screen.
Photo one: Two flutes of champagne with the Eiffel Tower glittering in the background.
Photo two: A stack of matte black Cartier boxes piled onto a velvet hotel bed.
Photo three: Dallas’s manicured hand holding a Riley Group corporate card, the embossed numbers catching the Parisian sunlight. The caption read: *Chase says a wife deserves the best. Hope you're finding your feet!*
I stared at the black plastic in her hand. The Riley Group corporate account. An account underwritten, secured, and entirely backed by a line of credit from Bell Industries. She was funding her Parisian victory lap with my money.
I locked the screen and slipped the phone back into my pocket. I didn't block the number. Let her document her own demise.
I leaned forward, my lips brushing the shell of my mother’s ear.
"They went to Paris," I whispered, the words hanging in the sterile air. "They think it’s over. The Shaws took dad. They put you in this bed. And now, this girl thinks she can take the rest."
Her chest rose and fell in its mechanical rhythm. She didn't stir, but the promise settled into my bones, heavy and absolute.
"It’s time, Mom. We’re taking it all back."
***
11:58 PM.
The Bell Industries boardroom was a glass vault suspended fifty stories above the city. The twelve men and women seated around the long mahogany table were the architects of the financial world. They didn't speak. They didn't check their watches. They waited.
I stood at the head of the table, looking out at the grid of streetlights below. I was no longer the jilted bride in a fourteen-thousand-dollar dress. I was the ghost who had rebuilt this empire from the ashes.
"Begin," I said, without turning around.
Behind me, the projector whirred to life. Vera’s voice was crisp, slicing through the quiet. "Riley Group’s current valuation relies heavily on three core joint ventures. Bell Industries supplies sixty percent of their raw materials and underwrites their primary credit facilities."
I turned to face the board.
"Chase Riley has spent the last five years assuming we were partners," I said, my voice low, carrying easily to the back of the room. "He is currently in Paris, spending Bell capital on a corporate card he believes is his own. Tomorrow morning, he will wake up to a different reality."
I placed my hands flat on the cool mahogany, meeting the eyes of my CFO, Marcus.
"I want the supplier contracts severed. Clause 4B—breach of faith. Pull the financing on the Apex and Vanguard initiatives. Terminate the Meridian co-development agreement immediately."
A ripple of electric tension moved through the room.
"That will trigger an automatic default on their end," Marcus stated, his pen pausing over his notepad. He wasn't objecting; he was confirming the kill. "Riley Group will hemorrhage thirty percent of its market cap by noon."
"Make it forty," I commanded, leaning in slightly. "Call the loans due."
Marcus nodded slowly, a predatory glint catching in his eye. "Consider it done, Ms. Bell."
I looked at Vera. She was already typing, her face illuminated by the harsh white light of her tablet. The corporate guillotine was hoisted. The rope was cut.
Let them drink champagne. Let them buy Cartier. By the time their return flight touched down in New York, Chase Riley would have absolutely nothing left to come home to.
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