
My Husband Gave Our Family Fortune to His Mistress
My Husband Gave Our Family Fortune to His Mistress Chapter 1
The scent of spun sugar and dark-roast espresso usually offered a momentary reprieve from the sterile air of the Chapman Group executive suites. Gilded Crumb, the new boutique bakery occupying the prime retail space in my family’s lobby, had been open for a month. I had ten minutes before my morning strategy meeting.
I stood at the sleek, white marble counter, finishing the last bite of a perfectly ordinary almond croissant and swallowing the dregs of my black coffee. I slipped a crisp twenty-dollar bill under my porcelain saucer—more than enough for a seven-dollar breakfast—and turned toward the revolving glass doors.
A woman materialized in my path, blocking the exit.
She wore a flour-dusted apron over a designer silk blouse, her waist cinched by a Gucci belt featuring a logo just a fraction too large to be authentic. Her eyes, heavily lined and sharp as shattered glass, locked onto mine.
"Are you lost, or just accustomed to walking out on your tabs?" she asked. Her voice was too loud for the intimate space, designed to bounce off the subway-tile walls.
I stopped, smoothing the lapel of my bespoke Tom Ford suit. "Excuse me?"
She slammed a black leather billfold against the counter. The sharp *crack* made two nearby patrons flinch. "The bill. For the Exclusive Gold-Leaf Truffle Pastry. You think because you dress up in a nice little suit, you can just waltz in and steal from a small business?"
I glanced at the receipt. The printed total read *$12,000.00*.
My pulse remained steady, though a cold knot tightened in my chest. "I had a plain almond croissant and a drip coffee. I left twenty dollars on the saucer. I suggest you check your inventory, Ms...?"
"Nichols. Megan Nichols. I own this place," she sneered, stepping closer. The cloying scent of artificial vanilla wafted off her. "And I saw what you ate. That item is strictly reserved for VIP members who spend a minimum of ten grand a month. You owe the membership fee, plus the pastry. Card or wire?"
I stared at her, analyzing the micro-expressions twitching at the corners of her mouth. There was a desperate, hungry thrill in her eyes. This wasn't a misunderstanding; it was an ambush.
"I am not paying twelve thousand dollars for a pastry I did not consume," I said, my voice dropping an octave, glacial and precise. "Step aside, Ms. Nichols."
Instead of moving, Megan whipped a smartphone from her apron pocket, the camera lens immediately aimed at my face. The red recording light blinked like a warning beacon.
"Listen to this broke scammer!" Megan shouted, her voice suddenly vibrating with theatrical hysteria. "You walk into my shop, eat my premium inventory, and refuse to pay? What a fake heiress. You're nothing but a cheap fraud trying to act rich!"
The bakery fell dead silent. Every eye turned toward us. The heat of public scrutiny prickled the back of my neck, but I refused to give her the reaction she was baiting. I didn't raise my hands to shield my face. I didn't shout back.
"Security!" Megan shrieked, waving her free hand toward the lobby doors.
A guard stepped inside. I didn't recognize him—a new hire, likely an outsourced contractor. He looked between Megan, who was giving him a pleading, doe-eyed look, and me.
"Escort this thief out of my store!" Megan commanded, holding the phone inches from my face.
The guard took a hesitant step toward me, reaching for my elbow.
I didn't move, but my gaze snapped to his hand. "Touch me," I said softly, the words meant only for him, "and you will be unemployable in the state of New York before your lunch break."
He froze, his hand dropping to his side.
Maintaining my posture, I stepped around Megan, my heels clicking rhythmically against the marble floor. I didn't look back as I pushed through the glass doors, though Megan’s shrill voice chased me into the lobby.
"Yeah, run away, you entitled Karen! See you on the internet!"
The private elevator ride to the penthouse executive suite was suffocatingly quiet. I stood perfectly still, watching the floor numbers climb, my reflection in the polished steel doors looking composed, untouched. But beneath my ribs, a dark, unfamiliar fury began to simmer.
The moment the elevator doors parted on the sixtieth floor, the chaos hit me.
Telephones were ringing incessantly. My executive assistant, Sarah, stood by my mahogany desk, her face entirely drained of color, clutching a tablet to her chest.
"Viviana," Sarah breathed, her voice trembling. "Have you checked your phone?"
I pulled my phone from my bag. The screen was a waterfall of notifications. Missed calls from the board. Frantic texts from our PR director.
I unlocked it and opened the link Sarah had just sent me.
It was a TikTok video, already sitting at half a million views. Megan had edited it ruthlessly. My polite refusal was gone. The insane twelve-thousand-dollar demand was cut. It only showed me leaving a twenty-dollar bill on the counter while Megan wept off-camera, begging a "wealthy corporate elite" not to steal from her small business. The text overlay flashed in neon pink: *Fake Heiress Tries to Destroy Small Business. #KarenChapman.*
I walked over to the floor-to-ceiling window overlooking the sprawling Manhattan skyline. The sky outside was a bruised, heavy gray, threatening a torrential downpour.
I didn't feel panic. I didn't feel the urge to cry. As I watched the likes on the video tick upward by the thousands, the simmering heat in my chest crystallized into pure, unadulterated ice. Megan Nichols had just declared war in my own building. And she was about to learn exactly why the Chapman name commanded the city.
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