
Taking Down King's Empire
Taking Down King's Empire Chapter 1
I balanced the lunch bag in one hand while checking my watch with the other. Victor had been working so hard lately, barely coming home before midnight. I thought a surprise lunch might cheer him up—something small but thoughtful, the kind of gesture that used to make him smile when we first got married.
The King Corporation tower gleamed in the midday sun, its glass exterior reflecting the bustling city street below. I'd always loved this building—the way it stood tall and confident among the others, just like Victor himself.
"Mrs. King," the security guard nodded as I walked through the lobby. "Going up to see Mr. King?"
"He's been working so hard," I said, lifting the lunch bag slightly. "Thought I'd bring him something special."
The guard smiled sympathetically. "He's been here since six this morning. Conference calls all day."
I headed toward the elevator, but something caught my eye through the lobby's floor-to-ceiling windows. A sleek black car had pulled up to the curb, and Victor was walking toward it—but he wasn't alone.
My heart stuttered as I watched him open the passenger door for a young woman. She stepped out with the kind of effortless grace that only youth could provide, her long legs accentuated by stiletto heels. But it was her dress that made my breath catch painfully in my throat.
Red. A deep, vibrant crimson that seemed to pulse with life.
"Red triggers my anxiety," Victor had told me countless times. "It's too aggressive, too stimulating. Please don't wear it around me."
I'd given away every red item in my wardrobe without question, believing I was supporting my husband's mental health.
Yet here he was, his hand resting on the small of her back as she emerged from the car in a dress that screamed everything I'd been forbidden to be.
They moved toward the building's side entrance, their bodies close together. Through the glass, I watched as Victor pulled her into an embrace that was intimate and familiar—the kind of embrace that spoke of repeated encounters, not a momentary lapse.
"Mrs. King?" The guard's voice seemed to come from far away. "Is everything alright?"
I couldn't answer. My eyes were fixed on the way Victor's fingers tangled in her dark hair, the way his lips pressed against her temple with such tender precision.
"I need to go," I managed to whisper, abandoning the lunch bag on a nearby table.
I followed them at a distance, my heart hammering against my ribs. They walked to Le Ciel, an intimate restaurant tucked away on a side street—Victor's favorite place for business lunches.
I slipped into a seat at the outdoor café across the street, hidden behind a large menu board. From there, I had a perfect view of their table through the restaurant's windows.
The woman—she couldn't have been more than twenty-two or twenty-three—laughed at something Victor said, tossing her head back with abandon. I watched as Victor reached across the table, his fingers brushing against her wrist with deliberate intent.
When her dessert arrived, Victor took a spoonful and fed it to her across the table, his eyes never leaving hers. The tenderness of the gesture made me physically ill.
Then I saw him reach out and adjust the thin strap of her red dress, his fingers lingering on her shoulder longer than necessary. The intimacy of the gesture confirmed what I already knew but couldn't bear to acknowledge.
This wasn't a business lunch. This wasn't a mistake or a moment of weakness.
This was a relationship.
---
That evening, I waited in our living room, sitting rigidly on the edge of the sofa. Victor arrived home just after nine, loosening his tie as he walked through the door.
"You're home early," he remarked casually, hanging his jacket by the door.
I didn't respond immediately, watching him move through our home with the confidence of a man who believed himself untouchable.
"We need to talk," I finally said, my voice steadier than I expected.
He turned to face me, his expression shifting subtly. "About what?"
"About the woman in the red dress."
Something flickered across his face—surprise, perhaps, or calculation. Then his features settled into a mask of cool indifference.
"Trinity," he said simply, as if naming her should somehow make this easier for me to accept.
"Is she your student?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
Victor sighed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "She's pregnant, Emma."
The room seemed to tilt beneath me. "Pregnant?"
"Yes." His voice was clinical, detached. "And I need you to accept this situation."
"Accept it?" I repeated, disbelief coloring my words.
"I've never been able to tolerate red because of my anxiety," he continued, moving closer to me. "But that wasn't entirely truthful. I just... prefer it on her."
The casual cruelty of his admission struck me like a physical blow.
"You want me to stay married to you while your mistress—your pregnant mistress—wears the color you forbade me from ever touching?"
Victor's eyes met mine, cold and unapologetic. "Yes. That's exactly what I expect."
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