
My Husband Poisoned Me to Have a Child with His Mistress
Chapter 3
Marcus Chen didn't look like a man who destroyed empires. He was quiet, slightly rumpled, with wire-rimmed glasses and ink stains on his right index finger. But he spread those documents across Conrad's conference table at eleven-fifteen on a Wednesday night, and I watched Conrad's eyes move across every page with the focused stillness of a surgeon.
I stood by the window. Forty stories below, Manhattan glittered indifferently.
'Shell company number one, registered in Delaware,' Marcus said, tapping a page. 'Routes to a Cayman holding entity. That routes to a third LLC registered in Nevada. Final beneficiary.' He slid a document to the top. 'Daisy Wood Properties, LLC. One Tribeca penthouse. Purchased fourteen months ago. Eight-point-three million dollars.'
Eight-point-three million.
Money I negotiated vendor contracts to save. Money I stayed up until four in the morning to protect. Money that had my fingerprints all over it, even if my name wasn't on the wire transfer.
'The board approval signatures,' Conrad said. His voice was flat. Calm. 'Forged?'
'All three.' Marcus flipped to a flagged page. 'I cross-referenced against authenticated signatures from actual board filings. The variance is consistent across documents. Same forger, multiple dates.' He paused. 'Fabricated vendor contracts for the cover. A ghost consulting firm that billed the company for services never rendered. Mr. Jackson signed off personally on every invoice.'
Conrad set the page down. He looked at Marcus. 'Federal grand jury standard.'
'Not yet,' Marcus said. 'Close. I need two more weeks.'
'You have one.' Conrad closed the folder. 'Build it tight enough that no defense attorney on the planet can shake it.'
Marcus nodded and started gathering his papers.
I didn't move from the window. My reflection stared back at me in the glass. My jaw was set. My eyes were dry.
Eight-point-three million dollars. And a two-year-old with Liam's eyes.
I let myself feel it for exactly three seconds. Then I put it away.
'I need to talk to you about the short position,' I said.
Conrad looked up.
I turned from the window and pulled out my laptop. I set it on the conference table and walked him through it. I'd spent the last ten days quietly seeding the right conversations. A cautious comment to an analyst I'd mentored three years ago. A carefully worded assessment in a private investor forum. Nothing that could be traced back to me as market manipulation. Everything that was simply a well-connected CFO expressing measured concern about her company's next earnings cycle.
'The stock will slide,' I said. 'Liam has leveraged his holdings. He used them as collateral for personal credit lines he took out eighteen months ago.' I pulled up the numbers. 'When the price drops far enough, he'll face a margin call he cannot meet. He'll have to sell.' I looked at Conrad. 'And I need to be the one positioned to buy.'
I told him the number I needed liquid.
Conrad didn't blink. Didn't hesitate. Didn't ask what was in it for him.
'My family's offshore trusts will act as your proxy,' he said. He pulled his legal briefs back toward him. 'I'll have the structure documented by Friday.'
I stared at him. He had already moved on, uncapping his pen, eyes on the page in front of him. Like he'd just offered me a ride to the airport.
Hundreds of millions of dollars. And he said it the same way he'd say *pass the coffee.*
'Conrad.'
He looked up.
'Why?' I asked.
He held my gaze for a moment. 'Because you built that company.' He looked back down at his briefs. 'Get some sleep, Samantha.'
I didn't get much sleep.
But I noticed other things. Small things. Sharp things.
His Maybach still had the dent. Three weeks later, still there. Every time I thought about calling him, I told myself it was about the damage. It was about the damage.
Then Karina mentioned she'd run into Conrad in our building lobby. She said it casually, like it was nothing. But Karina didn't do casual.
'He bought the unit next door,' she told me, stirring her coffee. 'Some real estate investment that became available.' She looked at me over the rim of her mug. 'Convenient timing.'
I said nothing.
And then there was Cooper.
Every morning I took Cooper out at seven. Every morning for the past week, Conrad had materialized on the same block. Walking. No briefcase. No phone in hand. Just him, and somehow, every single time, his jacket pocket produced exactly the duck-and-sweet-potato treats that Cooper lost his mind over.
Cooper adored him immediately and completely. He pressed his entire golden body against Conrad's leg like they were old friends.
Conrad crouched down and scratched behind his ears without being asked.
I stood there watching a ruthless billionaire attorney let my dog lick his face, and I told myself it meant absolutely nothing.
I was very convincing.
You may also like





