
Not His Muse Anymore
Chapter 1
I'll never forget that night when I pushed open my boss's office door and saw my fiancé Mark with his hands tangled in Rachel's auburn hair, her red lipstick marking his neck like a brand of ownership.
"A year," Rachel said with satisfaction, watching my world crumble. "Though I'm surprised it took you this long to figure it out. Mark has been quite... thorough in sharing your innovative design concepts with me."
My designs. My work. My future—all stolen.
"A mediocre little architect like you could never deserve a man of Mark's caliber," she whispered, circling me like a predator. "Security will escort you out tomorrow. I own half the firms in this city—no one will touch you when I'm done."
From rising star to nothing overnight.
When I met legendary architect Nicholas Rossi in Rome, his dark eyes assessed me like I was merchandise he might purchase.
"Do you believe you can teach seasoned architects about the human spirit?" he challenged, stepping dangerously close, compelling and untouchable.
But I didn't know the real reason he brought me to Rome. Or what price I'd ultimately pay for the chance to work with architectural royalty...
Some opportunities come with chains attached. The question is: are you willing to wear them?
...
The portfolio fell from my trembling fingers, blueprints scattering across Rachel Thorne's mahogany desk like the fragments of my shattered world.
There he was—Mark, my fiancé of four years, the man whose ring still gleamed on my finger—with his hands tangled in my boss's auburn hair, her red lipstick smeared across his neck like a brand of ownership.
"Sophia!" Mark jerked away from Rachel, his face draining of color as our eyes met.
But Rachel—God, Rachel didn't even flinch. She leaned back against her desk with predatory grace, straightening her silk blouse with deliberate slowness while that familiar smirk played at her crimson lips.
"Well," she purred, her voice dripping with false sympathy, "this saves us both the trouble of a difficult conversation."
My throat constricted as if invisible hands were choking me. The annual company gala's music drifted through the walls—champagne glasses clinking, colleagues laughing—a cruel soundtrack to my destruction.
"How long?" The words scraped out of me like broken glass.
Mark stared at his shoes, suddenly fascinated by his Italian leather loafers. The same ones I'd helped him pick out for our engagement photos.
"A year," Rachel answered for him, examining her manicured nails with clinical detachment. "Though honestly, darling, I'm surprised you hadn't figured it out sooner. Mark has been quite... thorough in sharing your innovative design concepts with me."
The implication hit me like a physical blow. My designs. My work. My future.
"You've been stealing my work?" I turned to Mark, searching desperately for denial, for any sign that this nightmare had limits.
He finally looked up, but there was no remorse in his familiar brown eyes—only cold calculation. "Sophia, you need to understand how this industry really works. Opportunities like this—"
"Save the speech," Rachel interrupted, circling me like a shark sensing blood. She stopped inches from my face, her expensive perfume suffocating. "Let's be brutally honest, shall we? A mediocre little architect like you could never deserve a man of Mark's caliber. You lack vision. Ambition. Your designs are... adequate for someone of your background."
Someone of my background. The words sliced through me. The scholarship kid. The girl who worked three jobs through architecture school while Rachel inherited her father's firm.
"Mark simply helped your work find a more... suitable advocate," she continued, her voice silk over steel. "Someone with the connections and influence to actually make them matter."
Hot tears burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not here. Not in front of them.
"Those are my designs," I whispered, my voice steadier than I felt. "I have proof—"
Rachel's laughter was like shattering crystal. "Do you? Check your files, sweetheart. Check your emails. It's remarkable how quickly digital footprints can... disappear."
Ice flooded my veins as understanding crashed over me. The late nights Mark insisted on staying at the office. His sudden interest in "organizing" our shared cloud storage. The mysterious computer crashes that prompted him to "help" by backing up my work.
"Why?" The word came out broken, barely audible.
Mark straightened his tie—the silk one I'd given him for Christmas—and transformed before my eyes into a stranger wearing my lover's face.
"It's just business, Sophia. Nothing personal."
But it was personal. It was everything.
Rachel stepped closer, her voice dropping to a whisper only I could hear. "Pack your things, darling. Security will escort you out in the morning. And don't even think about fighting this—I own half the firms in this city. No one will touch you after I'm done."
I turned and walked toward the door on unsteady legs, leaving my scattered blueprints behind—the physical evidence of my professional murder.
"Oh, and Sophia?" Rachel's voice followed me like poison. "Mark and I are announcing our engagement next week. I do hope you'll send your congratulations."
The door closed behind me with a soft click that echoed like a gunshot through my chest.
Standing in the empty hallway, with the sounds of celebration drifting from the main hall, I pressed my back against the wall and finally let the tears fall.
I didn't know then that this was only the beginning—that Rachel's revenge would strip away everything I'd ever worked for, leaving me with nothing but a choice: surrender completely, or fight back with everything I had left.
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