
Revenge Against Betrayal
Chapter 3
The apartment felt different after I made those calls. Smaller somehow, like the walls knew I'd outgrown this version of myself—the one who hid and endured and called it love.
Sophie arrived first, carrying her laptop and a determination I remembered from college debate competitions. She set up on my coffee table without asking, her fingers already flying across the keyboard.
"The studio's booked for tomorrow evening," she said. "Prime time. I've already leaked it to a few entertainment bloggers—they'll be watching."
I should have felt grateful. Instead, I felt numb, watching her work with the efficiency of someone who'd never doubted themselves into invisibility.
"You tried to warn me," I said quietly. "About Logan. I pushed you away."
Sophie's hands stilled. "You loved him. People do stupid things for love." She looked at me then, really looked. "But you're done being stupid now, right?"
"I'm done being silent."
The knock came an hour later. I knew who it was before I opened the door—my father's people had a particular way of announcing themselves, polite but immovable.
Richard Hayes stood in my doorway holding a banker's box like it contained something precious. In a way, it did. It contained proof.
"Ms. Thompson." He inclined his head with the same respect he'd show my father. "May I come in?"
I stepped aside. Sophie watched from the couch, her journalist instincts probably cataloging every detail.
Richard set the box on my kitchen table with careful precision. "Your father thought you might need these. He's been keeping records."
My hands shook as I lifted the lid. Inside were folders organized by year, each one labeled in handwriting I didn't recognize. Someone—Richard, probably, or maybe Mrs. Chen—had been documenting everything. Every bank transfer. Every receipt. Every piece of my sacrifice translated into cold, irrefutable numbers.
"The legal fees," Richard said, pulling out the first folder. "Fifty thousand dollars when Mr. Hicks faced disbarment in year three. Your father wanted to pay it directly, but you insisted on earning it yourself."
I remembered those months. The double shifts. The way my feet bled inside my shoes. Logan's face when I'd handed him the cashier's check, how he'd cried and promised he'd never forget what I'd done.
Apparently, he'd kept half that promise.
"Continuing legal education courses," Richard continued, methodical as a surgeon. "Office rent. Professional wardrobe for court appearances. The list is extensive."
"And Amber?" My voice cracked on her name.
Richard's expression didn't change, but something flickered in his eyes. "Educational expenses for a Miss Amber Willis. Four years undergraduate, two years graduate school. Monthly stipend. Medical bills for her mother. Also extensively documented."
Sophie whistled low. "Holy shit, Katherine."
"Your father asked me to tell you something." Richard closed the box carefully. "He said you were right to believe in love. You were just wrong about which love was worth believing in."
I couldn't speak. Couldn't process that my father—who I'd fought with, who I'd left, who I'd been so sure would never understand—had been watching over me all along. Keeping records like he knew, somehow, that I'd need proof of my own generosity someday.
"Thank you," I managed.
Richard nodded once and left, quiet as he'd come.
Sophie and I worked through the night, organizing everything. She taught me how to project documents on screen, how to frame shots for maximum impact, how to tell a story that couldn't be refuted or rewritten.
"Don't be emotional," she advised around midnight, her third coffee going cold beside her. "Be factual. Let the numbers speak for themselves. People trust numbers."
The next evening, I stood in a small studio Sophie had rented, professional lighting turning my skin pale. Behind me, screens were ready to display everything. My hands were steady now. I'd moved past shaking into something colder, harder.
I went live at eight PM sharp.
The viewers flooded in immediately—thousands in the first minute, drawn by the drama, the scandal, the promise of more revelations. I could see the comment stream scrolling past, but I didn't read it. Didn't need to.
"Good evening," I said, my voice clear and calm. "Last time, I mixed drinks and told stories. Tonight, I'm going to show you receipts."
The first document appeared on the screen behind me. A bank transfer for fifty thousand dollars, dated seven years ago.
"This is the money I paid for Logan Hicks' legal fees when he faced disbarment." I kept my tone neutral, factual, letting Sophie's advice guide me. "He'd accepted a case without disclosing a conflict of interest. The ethics board was going to end his career before it began."
I walked through each document methodically. The tuition payments. The office rent. The professional wardrobe receipts from a men's clothing store, sizes that matched Logan exactly. Bank statements showing years of transfers, my accounts draining while his filled.
"I worked at The Azure Lounge," I continued, "specifically to raise this money. I wasn't a bartender because I lacked ambition. I was a bartender because I believed in someone who turned out not to believe in me."
Then I showed Amber's documentation—carefully, without naming her directly, but the dates matched too perfectly for anyone to miss. "I also supported a promising young woman's education for ten years. Undergraduate. Graduate school. Living expenses. Her mother's medical bills." I paused, meeting the camera directly. "I did this because I believed in helping people who needed it. I was wrong about many things, but I wasn't wrong about the value of generosity itself."
The comment stream exploded. I could see it in my peripheral vision—the tide turning, the narrative shifting, truth doing what truth does when it finally gets oxygen.
My phone, sitting on the table beside me, lit up with notifications I couldn't read. But I knew what they meant. Logan was watching. Amber was watching. The whole world was watching me stand in my truth, armed with evidence they'd never imagined existed.
"That's all I have to say tonight," I finished quietly. "Thank you for listening."
I ended the stream and immediately turned to Sophie, who was monitoring social media on her laptop.
"It's working," she breathed. "Katherine, it's working. Look."
The headlines were already updating. The comment sections filled with apologies, with people admitting they'd been wrong about me. Logan's law firm's stock ticker showed red, the price dropping in real-time as investors processed what my revelations meant.
My phone rang. I recognized the number—David Park, Logan's law partner and former friend.
I didn't answer. Let them panic. Let them scramble. Let them feel, for one moment, what it was like to watch your world collapse while strangers cheered.
I was done being the villain in their story.
Now they'd have to face being the villains in mine.
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