
My Partner Gave My Invention to His Mistress
Chapter 3
The conference room felt like a courtroom, with me as the defendant. Patrick stood at the head of the table, his posture radiating confidence that made my stomach twist.
"As you can see from the quarterly metrics," he announced, gesturing to the slides behind him, "productivity has significantly declined over the past three months."
I frowned. That wasn't possible. I'd been working eighteen-hour days to hit our milestones.
"These statistics," Patrick continued, "represent a concerning trend that we believe stems from leadership issues."
Whitney nodded solemnly beside him, her expression a perfect mask of concern. "We've noticed behavioral changes as well. Increased volatility, missed deadlines, and what appears to be burnout."
"I haven't missed a single deadline," I interjected, my voice sharper than intended. "The neural compression algorithm was delivered ahead of schedule."
Kareem Lynch cleared his throat. "Gemma, we're not questioning your technical abilities. But leadership requires more than coding prowess."
The room fell silent as Patrick tapped on his tablet. The speakers crackled to life, and my voice filled the room.
"I can't believe they expect me to document every fucking line of code for the third time..."
My blood ran cold. It was my voice, but the context was completely wrong. The recording continued, piecing together snippets of frustrated comments I'd made during late-night coding sessions.
"This is doctored," I said, rising from my chair. "You've taken my private conversations out of context."
"Are you denying you said these things?" Whitney asked, her eyebrows raised in mock surprise.
The board members exchanged glances. I could see doubt creeping into their expressions.
"Kareem," I turned to him desperately, "you know me. You know I wouldn't—"
"Gemma," he interrupted, not meeting my eyes, "we need to consider what's best for the company."
Patrick slid a folder across the polished table. "We've prepared a transition plan."
The vote happened quickly. Six hands raised in agreement. Only Marcus Chen hesitated, but under Patrick's steady gaze, he reluctantly joined the majority.
"Effective immediately," Patrick announced, "Gemma Ellis is relieved of her duties as CTO."
---
"The terms are quite generous," Whitney said, sliding a thick document across the table. "Given the circumstances."
I stared at the buyout agreement, my vision blurring with rage. The figures swam before my eyes—a fraction of what my equity was worth.
"This is robbery," I whispered.
Patrick leaned back in his chair, a smirk playing at the corners of his mouth. "It's a fair offer for someone who couldn't handle the pressure."
I flipped through the pages, each clause more insulting than the last. A five-year non-compete clause that would effectively ban me from coding in my own field. A comprehensive NDA that would gag me forever.
"You expect me to sign this?" I asked, my voice barely audible.
"Sign it today," Whitney replied sweetly, "and we'll make sure the transition is smooth. Otherwise..."
She left the threat hanging in the air.
I stood abruptly, gathering the unsigned documents. "I need time to review this."
"Of course," Patrick nodded, his smile not reaching his eyes. "Take all the time you need. Until tomorrow."
---
My apartment felt cavernous and empty as I slammed the door behind me. The buyout agreement lay scattered across my coffee table like a deflated balloon.
I stared at my phone, my father's number glowing on the screen. My thumb hovered over the call button.
"Damn it," I whispered, tossing the phone aside.
Memories flooded back—our last argument, my voice raised in defiance.
"I don't need your help!" I'd shouted. "I don't need your name or your connections. I can do this on my own!"
My father's calm response echoed in my mind: "You're too stubborn for your own good, Gemma."
I moved to the bedroom and knelt beside my closet, pulling out a dusty box I'd hidden there years ago. Inside lay my father's old law school textbooks, their spines cracked from years of use.
I ran my fingers over the embossed lettering on the cover of "Corporate Law and Strategy." Dad had offered to help me understand the business side of tech startups, but I'd refused, determined to prove I could succeed without his influence.
Now, as I opened the yellowed pages, I realized how foolish I'd been.
"I need to think like an Ellis," I murmured to myself.
The books smelled of old paper and leather bindings. As I began to read, highlighting passages about contract law and corporate governance, something shifted inside me.
For the first time since the gala, I felt a flicker of hope. Not because I would call my father—I still wasn't ready for that—but because I finally understood what he had been trying to teach me all along.
Sometimes the best way to win a tech battle is with legal strategy.
I reached for my laptop, my fingers already itching to code something new—not an algorithm this time, but a plan.
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