
The Billionaire's Revenge Contract
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows of Quinn & Vance Architectural Design, casting elongated, distorted shadows across the hardwood floors. Harper Quinn stood in the private elevator, her damp trench coat clinging to her shoulders, clutching a leather-bound portfolio to her chest. It was 11:45 PM on a Friday, a time when any normal twenty-six-year-old would be out celebrating their anniversary.
But Harper was a creator, an architect obsessed with perfection, and she had left her final blueprints for the downtown gallery project on her drafting table. Julian would understand. He always did.
"Just grab the sketches and get back to the restaurant," Harper muttered to herself, watching the digital floor indicator climb to the penthouse level.
Julian Hayes, her fiancé of two years, was supposed to be waiting for her at L’Aura with a bottle of champagne. He was charming, supportive, and the perfect counterbalance to her relentless work ethic. And Vanessa—Vanessa Vance, her business partner and best friend—had practically shoved Harper out the door earlier that evening, telling her to go be in love.
The elevator doors slid open with a soft ping. The reception area was dark, illuminated only by the neon glow of the city skyline outside. Harper stepped onto the plush carpet, her heels silent, shaking the rain from her umbrella.
As she rounded the corner toward the main studio, a sound broke the silence of the empty office.
A soft, breathless laugh.
Harper froze. Her guarded instincts, honed from years of fighting for her place in a male-dominated industry, flared to life. She crept closer to the frosted glass doors of her private design suite. The lights were off, but the door was slightly ajar.
"Julian, wait, the blueprints—" a woman’s voice gasped.
"Forget the blueprints," a male voice murmured, low and thick with desire. "They’re in the way."
Harper’s breath hitched in her throat. The leather portfolio slipped from her numb fingers, hitting the floor with a resounding, heavy smack.
The rustling inside the office stopped instantly.
"Who’s there?" Julian’s voice rang out, laced with a sudden, panicked sharp edge.
Harper pushed the glass door open. The ambient light from the streetlamps outside spilled over her custom-built oak drafting table—the very table where she had designed the firm's first major award-winning project.
But right now, it was occupied by Julian Hayes and Vanessa Vance.
Vanessa was sitting on the edge of the table, her designer silk blouse unbuttoned to her navel, her expensive stilettos tangled in the massive sheets of architectural vellum that Harper had spent three weeks drawing. Julian was standing between her legs, his tie undone, his hands hurriedly trying to fix his belt.
For a long, agonizing second, the three of them simply stared at each other. Harper’s mind went blank, a white-hot static roaring in her ears. The betrayal didn't just sting; it felt like a physical blow to her ribs.
"Harper," Julian choked out, his face draining of all color. He took a hasty step back from Vanessa, his opportunistic charm evaporating into pure, unfiltered cowardice. "Harper, sweetheart, it’s… it’s not what it looks like."
"Not what it looks like?" Harper repeated, her voice eerily calm despite the violent trembling in her hands. She stepped fully into the room, her eyes darting from the crumpled blueprints beneath Vanessa’s thighs to the guilty terror in Julian’s eyes. "You’re unbuttoned on my drafting table with my business partner, Julian. What part of this am I misinterpreting?"
Vanessa didn't scramble to cover up. Instead, she let out a long, theatrical sigh and slowly began doing up her buttons. She didn't look guilty. She looked annoyed.
"Oh, for God’s sake, Julian, stop groveling," Vanessa sneered, tossing her perfectly styled blonde hair over her shoulder. "She caught us. Just own it."
"Vanessa, shut up!" Julian hissed, taking a step toward Harper with his hands raised pleadingly. "Harper, please. Let me explain. We had too much to drink at the corporate mixer earlier, and it just… it was a mistake. A stupid, meaningless mistake."
"A mistake?" Vanessa laughed, a sharp, spiteful sound that echoed off the glass walls. She slid off the drafting table, smoothing down her skirt. "We’ve been sleeping together for six months, Julian. Don't insult my intelligence, and don't insult hers. Though, honestly, Harper, I’m surprised it took you this long to catch on. You’re usually so observant when it comes to your precious buildings."
Harper felt the floor tilt beneath her. Six months. Half a year of Julian kissing her forehead before work, half a year of Vanessa bringing her coffees and calling her 'bestie' while they reviewed quarterly earnings.
"Six months," Harper whispered, her resilient core struggling to hold back the tidal wave of humiliation. She looked at Julian, the man she had promised to marry. "You proposed to me four months ago, Julian. You looked me in the eye and gave me my grandmother’s ring while you were sleeping with her?"
Julian couldn't meet her gaze. He looked at the floor, shifting his weight. "Harper, you have to understand. You’re always working. You’re always at this damn firm. I felt neglected. Vanessa was just… she was there. She listened to me."
"I was working to build our future!" Harper snapped, her voice finally breaking its calm facade. "I was working to pay for the mortgage on the condo you insisted we buy! I gave you everything!"
"You gave me your scraps!" Julian shot back, his cowardice twisting into defensive anger. "You come home exhausted, covered in graphite and dust, and all you talk about is load-bearing walls and zoning permits! Vanessa actually knows how to have fun. She knows how to treat a man."
"And you know how to leech off a woman," Harper said coldly, the tears in her eyes drying up as a protective, guarded wall slammed down over her heart. She turned her fierce glare to Vanessa. "Is that what this is about, Vanessa? You couldn't handle that I won the architectural bid last month, so you decided to steal my fiancé to prove you could?"
Vanessa’s lips curled into a nasty, entitled smirk. She walked over to Julian and possessively linked her arm through his. "Oh, Harper. You always think everything is about your talent. You think you’re so brilliant, so untouchable just because you can draw a pretty house. But you have no idea how the real world works."
"I know that you’re a snake," Harper said, her voice steadying. "I want you both out of my firm. Now."
Vanessa burst into a fit of genuine, mocking laughter. She leaned against Julian, who was sweating profusely. "Your firm? Oh, honey. Did you actually read the restructuring documents you signed last Tuesday?"
Harper’s blood ran cold. "What are you talking about?"
"I bought out the silent partners," Vanessa said, her eyes gleaming with malicious triumph. "And that little clause you skimmed over while you were so busy designing your gallery? It gave me a fifty-one percent controlling interest in Quinn & Vance. It’s my firm now, Harper. And my first executive decision was appointing Julian as the new Vice President of Acquisitions."
Julian finally looked up, puffing out his chest just a fraction. "Harper, be reasonable. Vanessa has the capital. The firm needed an expansion, and you were too focused on the art to see the business side of things. I only wanted the firm's assets to grow. We can still work together. You can stay on as a senior designer."
Harper stared at the man she had loved, truly seeing him for the first time. He didn't love Vanessa. He didn't love Harper. He loved the easiest path to the top. He was a spineless opportunist who had used her brilliance until Vanessa offered him a richer, easier ride.
"You used me," Harper stated, the realization dropping like a stone in her stomach. "Both of you. You used my designs to build the reputation of this firm, and then you stole it from under me."
"Don't be so dramatic," Vanessa sneered, stepping closer. "You were always so boring, Harper. Your boring loyalty, your endless late nights. Julian needed a woman, not a drafting machine. And this firm needs a visionary leader, not a stubborn workaholic. You’re out, Harper. Leave your keycard on the desk."
Harper looked at the blueprints on the table. They were ruined, crumpled and stained with Vanessa’s expensive perfume. Just like her life. Just like her future.
"You can keep the firm," Harper said, her voice dropping to a deadly, quiet register. "Because without me, it’s just an empty shell. You don't have the talent to keep it afloat, Vanessa. And Julian doesn't have the spine to lead anything. You deserve each other."
Without waiting for a response, Harper turned on her heel. She didn't run, and she didn't cry. She walked out of the glass doors with her head held high, leaving the portfolio on the floor.
"Don't forget to pack up your desk by Monday!" Vanessa called out mockingly from the office. "Security will escort you!"
Harper stepped into the elevator, smashing the button for the lobby. As the doors closed, cutting off the sight of the dark reception area, her knees finally buckled. She sank to the floor of the elevator, pressing the heels of her hands into her eyes as a strangled sob ripped from her throat.
Everything was gone. Her love, her career, her pride. She had been so naive, so trusting. She believed she was building a kingdom, only to realize she had handed the keys directly to her executioners.
The elevator pinged at the lobby. Harper forced herself to stand, smoothing down her coat. She walked out into the pouring rain, ignoring the doorman's questioning look. She just needed a drink. She needed a dark corner to hide in.
As she walked down the slick, neon-lit pavement, her phone buzzed in her pocket. Then it buzzed again. And again.
Frowning, Harper pulled it out.
It was a notification from Instagram. Vanessa had just tagged her in a post.
With trembling fingers, Harper opened the app. It was a selfie of Vanessa and Julian. They were standing in Harper’s office, Julian kissing Vanessa’s cheek while Vanessa held up a glass of champagne.
The caption read: *New firm, new man. Cheers to upgrading. Sorry not sorry, @HarperQuinn.*
Before Harper could even process the cruelty of the public humiliation, her phone erupted. Text messages from mutual friends, missed calls from clients, and a flood of comments on the post began pouring in, vibrating against her palm like a swarm of angry hornets as her entire life publicly, violently imploded.
***
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