
My Husband Bought His Mistress a Mansion with Company Funds
Chapter 3
The morning sun hitting the glass façade of Starlight Tech usually looked like promise. Today, it looked like a barrier. I stepped out of my Tesla, the heavy door thudding shut with a sound that felt final. I smoothed the lapels of my white blazer—armor for the battlefield—and marched toward the revolving doors.
My phone had been silent since I hung up on Evan. No texts. No calls. Just a simmering, ominous quiet that suggested he was done panicking and had started plotting. I preferred the panic.
I reached the security turnstiles, the familiar beep of badges scanning around me creating a rhythm of industry I had helped compose. I pulled my lanyard from my purse, the plastic cool against my thumb, and pressed it to the reader.
*Buzzz.* A harsh, dissonant reject tone.
The little LED light didn't blink green. It glowed a steady, angry crimson.
I frowned, wiping the card on my sleeve and trying again. *Buzzz.*
"Ms. Watson?"
The voice was hesitant. I looked up to see Miller, the head of lobby security. He was a good man; I’d authorized the bonus that paid for his daughter’s braces last year. Now, he wouldn't meet my eyes. He was staring intently at the floor tiles, his posture rigid.
"My badge seems to be demagnetized, Miller," I said, keeping my voice level, though a cold prickle of realization was starting to spread down my spine. "Can you buzz me through? I need to get to the server room."
Miller shifted his weight, his hand resting instinctively near his belt. "I can't do that, Ma'am."
"Excuse me?"
"Orders came down from the top about an hour ago," he mumbled, finally looking up. His eyes were filled with a pitiful apology that made my stomach turn. "Direct from Mr. Scott. Your clearance has been revoked. All access points. You... you've been placed on the banned list, Ms. Watson."
The banned list. A list reserved for corporate spies, violent ex-employees, and stalkers. I had built the algorithm that secured this building. I had chosen the biometric scanners. And now, I was being locked out by the man who used to ask me how to reset his email password.
"Miller," I said, stepping closer, my voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "I am the co-founder of this company. I own forty percent of the shares. You are going to open this gate."
"I'm sorry, Rosalie," he said, using my first name for the first time in five years. It sounded like a eulogy. "He said if you try to enter, I have to call the police. Please don't make me do that."
People were watching. The morning rush had slowed to a crawl as employees pretended to check their phones, their eyes darting toward the scene. I could feel their gazes like physical touches—curiosity, pity, schadenfreude. The humiliation wasn't a wave; it was a riptide, threatening to pull me under.
I didn't scream. I didn't plead. I looked at the red light on the turnstile, burning like an unblinking eye.
"Understood," I said, the word tasting like ash. I turned on my heel, head high, and walked out of the building I had birthed, the click of my heels echoing the countdown to a war.
***
Faye’s office smelled of old paper and expensive ambition. It was a sanctuary of mahogany and leather in a city of glass and steel.
I paced the length of her Persian rug while she poured two generous glasses of a Pinot Noir that cost more than my first car. Faye Gordon didn't believe in tea and sympathy. She believed in ethanol and strategy.
"He locked me out, Faye," I said, my voice tight. "Physically. Like I'm a security threat."
"You *are* a security threat, Rose," Faye said, sliding a glass across her desk. She leaned back, her sharp bob cutting a silhouette against the window. "You just nuked his reputation on a global scale. Of course he locked the doors. The board is circling the wagons. They’re terrified of the stock dip, and Evan is spinning this as a 'mental health crisis' on your part."
I stopped pacing and grabbed the wine, downing half of it in one swallow. "Mental health crisis? I'm the only sane person left in that equation."
"Doesn't matter," Faye said, her eyes narrowing behind her glasses. "Perception is reality. Right now, he has the keys, the board's ear, and the physical building. If we play defense—if we try to sue for access or fight the divorce on standard terms—we lose. He’ll bleed you dry in legal fees and bury you in NDAs."
She stood up, walking to her whiteboard. She uncapped a red marker, the smell of chemicals sharp in the air. She wrote one word: *APEX*.
"We don't want the keys back, Rosalie," she said, turning to me with a smile that was all teeth. "We want to burn the house down. You need to stop thinking like a wife who wants justice and start thinking like a shark who smells blood."
"Apex Innovations?" I asked, the name tasting forbidden. They were our biggest rivals. The Montagues to our Capulets. "Evan would rather die than sell to them."
"Exactly," Faye said. "You have forty percent. Evan has forty. The remaining twenty is scattered among the board and public float. If you sell your block to Apex..."
"They initiate a hostile takeover," I finished, the gears in my mind finally catching. "Evan loses the majority. He loses the chair. He loses everything."
"The Apex Maneuver," Faye toasted the air. "Scorched earth."
My phone buzzed on the desk. I glanced down, expecting another lawyer's email. Instead, it was an Instagram notification. A tag.
I picked it up. The screen showed Charleigh. She was in a hotel suite in Nice, the Mediterranean blue blurring in the background. She was wearing a white robe, a glass of champagne in one hand, and looking directly into the camera with a smirk that made my fingers itch.
But it was the caption that froze my blood: *"Haters gonna hate. Real love wins. #FutureMrsScott."*
And then I saw it. Resting against her collarbone, glittering obscenely in the French sunlight. A diamond necklace. Not just any necklace. It was a geometric cascade of stones, a specific, custom design shaped like a constellation.
"That little thief," I whispered, bringing the phone closer to my face.
"What?" Faye asked, moving to look over my shoulder.
"That necklace," I said, tapping the screen. "That's the 'Cassiopeia' prototype. Starlight commissioned it for the Tech Gala last year. Evan told the insurance company it was lost in transit. He filed a claim for it."
I looked up at Faye, the rage in my chest cooling into something solid, heavy, and useful.
"He didn't lose it," I said. "He stole it. That’s company property around her neck. That’s grand larceny and insurance fraud."
Faye’s smile widened, genuine and terrifying. "Well then. It seems we don't just have a strategy. We have a weapon."
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