
My Husband Bought His Mistress a Mansion with Company Funds
Chapter 2
The glass doors of Starlight Tech usually parted for me like the Red Sea, a silent acknowledgment of the woman who wrote the code that unlocked them. Today, they felt heavy, sluggish. I walked into the lobby, the heels of my Louboutins clicking a sharp, lonely rhythm against the polished concrete floors. The air conditioning was set to a frigid sixty-eight degrees, but the heat of humiliation prickled at the back of my neck.
Heads turned. Conversations died mid-sentence. It was the specific kind of silence reserved for funeral processions and fired executives. They knew. In Silicon Valley, secrets have a shorter shelf life than a startup’s runway. I kept my chin high, my spine a rod of steel, even as my stomach churned with acid.
I wasn't here to work. I was here to witness the crime scene.
I bypassed the executive elevator and walked straight to the open-plan bullpen, specifically toward the row of desks near the window—prime real estate usually reserved for senior developers. But there, nestled between a lead engineer and a UX designer, was a junior analyst’s desk.
Charleigh Mills.
Her workspace was a shrine to excess. A Hermès Avalon blanket, unmistakable in its beige and white weave, was draped casually over her ergonomic chair—a fifteen-hundred-dollar throw in an office where interns survived on free snacks. On the desk, a Diptyque candle sat next to a limited-edition mechanical keyboard. And there, tucked behind a monitor, was a framed photo. Not of family, not of friends. Just her, laughing on a balcony that looked suspiciously like the terrace of our Napa valley vacation home.
My breath caught, sharp and ragged. This wasn't just infidelity. This was embezzlement disguised as romance. Evan hadn't just given her his heart; he was giving her *my* company’s capital. The heat in my chest flared, turning from the dull ache of heartbreak into the white-hot clarity of rage. He called me clinical? Fine. I would show him exactly how clinical a dissection could be.
I didn't touch anything. I didn't need to. I turned on my heel and walked out, the pity in my employees' eyes fueling the engine of my revenge.
Back at the penthouse, the silence was no longer oppressive; it was focused. I poured a glass of the ’82 Bordeaux Evan had been saving for a special occasion—this felt special enough—and sat at my command center. Three monitors hummed to life.
My fingers hovered over the keyboard. Evan, in his arrogance, had assumed that because he was the face of the company, he held the keys. But I built the house. I knew where the skeletons were buried because I had dug the foundation.
Login: *admin_rosalie*.
Password: *Starlight_Genesis_001*.
Access Granted.
He hadn't revoked my Super Admin privileges. Why would he? To him, I was just the nagging wife now, not the co-founder who wrote the original kernel. A bitter smile touched my lips as I navigated to the backend of the Starlight Tech official site. Tomorrow was the launch of our new cloud integration platform. The traffic would be immense. Investors, tech journalists, competitors—everyone would be watching.
I found the banner image slot. Currently, it held a sleek graphic of a nebula. Boring.
I opened the folder I’d pulled from his synced cloud earlier. There was one photo that captured the essence of their betrayal perfectly. It was high-resolution, taken on a yacht in the Mediterranean. Evan was shirtless, holding a champagne bottle, while Charleigh, in a bikini that cost more than my first car, kissed his cheek. The timestamp was from a week when he claimed he was at a shareholder summit in Tokyo.
*Upload complete.*
My fingers flew across the keys, overlaying the text in our signature sans-serif font, bold and bright white:
**"Starlight Tech wishes CEO Evan Scott and Intern Charleigh Mills a Happy 4th Anniversary."**
I hit *Publish*.
The screen refreshed. There they were, beaming their illicit joy to the world, hosted on the very server infrastructure I had optimized for maximum uptime. I took a slow sip of wine, the rich tannins coating my tongue. The counter on the bottom of the screen began to tick upward. One thousand views. Ten thousand.
Twitter would be melting down in three… two…
My phone buzzed. Then it vibrated again. And again. A continuous, angry spasm on the marble countertop.
*Evan calling.*
I let it ring three times. Let him sweat. Let him feel the lack of control he so despised. On the fourth ring, I swiped answer and put it on speaker, leaning back in my chair.
"Rosalie!" His voice was a distorted shriek, cracking with panic. I could hear wind in the background—the Riviera breeze he was so excited about. "What the hell have you done? take it down! Take it down right now!"
"Hello, Evan," I said, my voice smooth, unbothered. "How is France? The weather sounds delightful."
"Are you insane?" he roared. "The stock is going to tank! The board is calling me! My phone hasn't stopped ringing for ten minutes! You are destroying the company!"
"I'm just celebrating your love, darling," I swirled the wine in my glass, watching the crimson liquid coat the sides. "You wanted to go public, didn't you? You said you didn't want to hide anymore. I just helped you expedite the process."
"This is defamation!" The desperation in his voice was music, a symphony of consequences finally arriving. "I will sue you for everything you have! I will bury you in litigation so deep you’ll never see the sun!"
I looked at the screen. The view count had hit a million. The server load was spiking into the red, but my code held firm. It would stay up. The world would see.
"Truth is an absolute defense against defamation, Evan," I said, my tone dropping an octave, losing its mock sweetness. "You wanted a fragile, feminine wife? You should have married one. Instead, you tried to break a partner. Now, you’re going to see what happens when the partner breaks you back."
I tapped the red icon. The line went dead. The silence returned to the penthouse, but this time, it felt like victory.
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