
My Husband Gave Our Family Fortune to His Mistress
Chapter 2
The storm that had been brewing over Manhattan finally broke by the time I stepped out of the private elevator and into our Tribeca penthouse. Rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows, distorting the city lights into angry, bleeding streaks. I dropped my Birkin onto the entryway console. The leather felt unusually heavy.
Connor was at the wet bar. He didn't turn around. The sharp clink of ice against crystal cut through the low hum of the climate control.
"I assume you've seen it," I said, my voice steady, though a faint tremor vibrated in my fingertips.
He turned, taking a slow sip of his scotch. He wore his custom Brioni trousers, his tie already discarded. His handsome face, usually quick to assemble into a charming smile, was pulled tight with genuine irritation.
"My phone hasn't stopped ringing for three hours, Viviana." He set the glass down with a sharp *thud*. "I had to sit through a luncheon with the board while half the room watched my wife throw a tantrum over a croissant on their phones."
I stepped into the sunken living room. The plush carpet absorbed the sound of my heels, but the distance between us felt cavernous. "A tantrum? The woman demanded twelve thousand dollars and locked me in."
Connor sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. He pulled out his phone, the screen illuminating his rigid jawline. "You look unhinged, Viv. Look at you. Standing there, glaring at a small business owner like she's dirt beneath your shoe. Do you have any idea how this makes *me* look? How it makes the Chapman Group look?"
My knuckles whitened at my sides. He wasn't looking at me; he was looking at his reflection in the dark window pane.
"She framed me, Connor."
"So pay her," he snapped, his hand dropping to his wrist, his fingers nervously twisting his silver cufflink. "Pay the twelve grand. Call it a donation to local commerce. Issue a public apology and make this goddamn nightmare go away before it tanks my promotion."
I stared at him. The air in the room suddenly felt dangerously thin. My husband, the man whose career I had nurtured, whose insecurities I had spent years quietly buffering with my own wealth, was asking me to bow to an extortionist. To protect *him*.
"I am not paying a dime," I said, my tone dropping to an absolute zero. "And I am not apologizing."
Connor scoffed, turning his back on me to pour another drink. "Suit yourself. But don't expect me to clean up your mess."
At 2:00 AM, the penthouse was a tomb. Beside me, Connor’s breathing was a slow, rhythmic rasp.
I sat in the adjoining study, bathed in the harsh, blue glow of my iPad. My mind, trained to dissect corporate mergers and hostile takeovers, gnawed at the glaring inconsistency of my husband's reaction. Connor was fiercely protective of our money—specifically, his access to it. For him to eagerly suggest throwing away twelve thousand dollars defied every instinct he possessed. Unless the money wasn't actually being thrown away.
I opened a burner account and scrolled through Megan Nichols's TikTok page. Past the viral ambush, past the tearful updates. I dug into her older posts.
A video from eight weeks ago caught my eye. *Setting up the new display case! #GirlBoss #GildedCrumb.*
The camera panned across the marble counter—the same counter where she had ambushed me. As the lens swept past the polished glass of the pastry case, a reflection caught the light.
I paused the video. Zoomed in.
A man stood just out of frame, holding a coffee cup. The resolution was grainy, but the custom-tailored shoulder of the suit, the distinct silver Patek Philippe watch on his wrist—the watch I had bought him for our third anniversary—were unmistakable.
I checked the timestamp. October 14th.
Connor had been in Chicago on a "crucial scouting trip" for the Chapman Group on October 14th.
A cold, metallic taste flooded my mouth. The knot in my chest didn't break; it calcified. I didn't shed a tear. Instead, I opened a new encrypted file on my desktop. I named it *Gilded*.
The Chapman Group headquarters was practically empty at 6:30 AM. I bypassed my own suite and walked straight into my brother’s office.
Anthony looked up from his dual monitors, a half-eaten bagel suspended halfway to his mouth. He blinked, taking in my immaculate navy power suit and the lethal calm radiating from my posture.
"Viv," he said, setting the bagel down. "PR is already drafting a cease-and-desist for the video. We’re going to bury that bakery owner—"
"I don't care about the video, Ant," I interrupted, closing his heavy oak door until it clicked shut. "I need the vendor file for Gilded Crumb. Now."
Anthony frowned, his thick brows drawing together. He was fiercely protective, but he knew better than to question that specific tone in my voice. He tapped his keyboard, pulling up the master directory.
"It's a standard retail lease for the lobby space," he said, scrolling. He stopped. The silence in the room stretched, taut as a wire.
"Read it," I commanded softly.
Anthony leaned closer to the screen, the color draining from his face. "This... this isn't right. Their monthly rent is listed at zero dollars. It's classified as a corporate amenity." He looked up at me, his eyes wide. "Viviana, there's a pending catering contract attached to this file. Exclusive rights to all corporate events for the next five years. Valued at two million annually."
"And whose digital signature is pending on the approval line?"
Anthony swallowed hard. "Connor's. He’s been hounding me to rubber-stamp this for weeks, saying it was a pet project of yours."
I walked over to the floor-to-ceiling window, looking out over the city that my grandfather had helped build. The storm had passed, leaving the morning sky a bruised, brilliant blue.
My husband wasn't just sleeping with the woman who had publicly humiliated me. He was using my family's legacy to fund her.
"Print it," I said, my voice barely above a whisper, yet echoing with the force of a gavel. "Print every single page."
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