
The CEO Who Pretended to Be Poor
The CEO Who Pretended to Be Poor Chapter 1
The sound of Derek's laughter echoing from our bedroom hit me like a physical blow. I stood frozen in the doorway of our shared apartment, my laptop bag sliding from my shoulder to crash against the hardwood floor.
I had come home early from the client meeting, excited to share the news that Morrison & Associates had finally approved my design proposal. The partnership track was within reach, and I couldn't wait to celebrate with Derek. Instead, I found my world crumbling.
"Oh God, Derek, yes!" The feminine voice wasn't mine.
My hand trembled as I pushed open the bedroom door. There they were—Derek, my boyfriend of three years, tangled in our sheets with a woman whose platinum blonde hair spilled across my pillow like liquid gold. Her manicured nails, adorned with diamonds that probably cost more than my monthly salary, dug into his back.
The woman turned first, her ice-blue eyes meeting mine with a mixture of surprise and smug satisfaction. Recognition hit me like a sledgehammer. Tiffany Reed. The oil heiress whose face graced society pages and whose family owned half the commercial real estate in the city.
"Derek." My voice came out as a whisper, barely audible over the sound of my heart shattering.
He jerked away from her, his face cycling through shock, guilt, and then—worst of all—relief. As if he'd been waiting for this moment.
"Isabella." He didn't even have the decency to look ashamed as he reached for his discarded shirt. "You're home early."
"Clearly." I gripped the doorframe to keep myself upright. "What is this?"
Tiffany stretched languidly, making no effort to cover herself. "Oh, don't be so dramatic, darling. These things happen." Her voice carried the lazy confidence of someone who had never been denied anything in her life.
"These things happen?" I repeated, my voice rising. "Derek, we've been together for three years. We talked about marriage, about—"
"About what?" Derek stood, pulling on his pants with infuriating casualness. "About your little apartment? Your student loans? Your dreams of making partner at some mid-tier firm?"
Each word was a knife twisting deeper. "What are you saying?"
He ran a hand through his disheveled hair, suddenly looking older than his thirty years. "I'm saying I'm upgrading, Isabella. Tiffany and I... we make sense. Her family's connections, her social standing—"
"Her money," I finished, the pieces clicking into place with sickening clarity.
Tiffany laughed, a tinkling sound like breaking crystal. "At least he's honest about it. Most men pretend it's about love."
"Derek." I stepped into the room, my legs unsteady. "Tell me this is some kind of mistake. Tell me you're not throwing away everything we built for—"
"For what? A better life?" His brown eyes, the ones I used to think were warm and loving, now looked cold and calculating. "Isabella, be realistic. You're talented, I'll give you that, but talent only gets you so far. Tiffany can open doors I could never reach with you."
The casual cruelty of his words stole my breath. Three years of shared dreams, of late nights when I'd supported him through his own career struggles, of believing we were building something real together—all reduced to a cost-benefit analysis.
"Get out." The words came from somewhere deep inside me, a place I didn't recognize.
"Isabella—"
"Get out!" I screamed, my voice cracking. "Both of you, get out of my apartment!"
Tiffany sighed dramatically as she began collecting her designer clothes from the floor. "Really, Derek, you could have handled this more elegantly."
I watched them dress in my bedroom, in the space where Derek had whispered promises about our future just last week. The betrayal felt like acid in my veins, burning away everything I thought I knew about love, about trust, about my own worth.
Derek paused at the bedroom door, his expression almost pitying. "For what it's worth, Isabella, you'll find someone more... suitable. Someone in your league."
The door slammed behind them, leaving me alone in the wreckage of my life.
I don't know how long I stood there, staring at the rumpled sheets that still carried the scent of her expensive perfume. My reflection in the dresser mirror showed a woman I barely recognized—hollow-eyed, pale, broken.
My phone buzzed with a text from my assistant: "Congratulations on the Morrison approval! Drinks to celebrate?"
The irony was suffocating. The biggest professional triumph of my career, and I had no one to share it with. The man I'd loved, the man I'd planned to build a future with, had just discarded me like an outdated business plan.
I grabbed my purse and keys, fleeing the apartment that no longer felt like home. The elevator ride down felt eternal, each floor marking another step away from the life I thought I had.
The October air bit at my skin as I walked aimlessly through downtown, my heels clicking against the sidewalk in a rhythm that matched my racing heartbeat. Couples passed me, laughing and holding hands, their happiness a stark contrast to the emptiness expanding in my chest.
I found myself standing in front of The Velvet Room, an upscale bar I'd never been brave enough to enter before. The warm golden light spilling from its windows promised anonymity, a place to disappear and forget.
The heavy door opened to reveal a sophisticated interior—dark wood, soft jazz, and the kind of atmosphere that whispered of secrets and second chances. I slid onto a barstool, my hands shaking as I ordered the first of what would be many drinks.
"Whiskey," I told the bartender, a man whose face I couldn't quite focus on through my tears. "Make it a double."
The amber liquid burned my throat, but it was nothing compared to the fire in my chest. I stared at my reflection in the mirror behind the bar, seeing a woman who had believed in fairy tales and happy endings.
"All men are liars," I muttered, loud enough for nearby patrons to hear. "Every single one of them."
The bartender placed another drink in front of me without being asked. His presence was oddly comforting, though I couldn't bring myself to look at him directly.
"Cheaters," I continued, my voice growing louder with each sip. "Users. They'll tell you anything you want to hear until someone better comes along."
The bar had grown quieter, other customers glancing my way with a mixture of sympathy and discomfort. I didn't care. Let them stare. Let them see what happened when you believed in love.
Tears streamed down my face as I raised my glass in a mock toast. "Here's to being somebody's stepping stone. Here's to being not quite good enough."
The bartender leaned closer, his voice gentle. "Rough night?"
I laughed bitterly, the sound harsh even to my own ears. "Rough life. But don't worry—I'm sure you're different, right? You're one of the good ones?"
He was quiet for a moment, and something in his silence made me finally look up at him. Even through my alcohol-blurred vision, I could see he was handsome—dark hair, intense eyes, the kind of face that belonged in magazines rather than behind a bar.
"Maybe," he said softly, offering me a tissue. "Maybe not. But I'm here, and you look like you could use someone to listen."
I stared at him, this stranger who was showing me more kindness than the man I'd loved for three years. The unfairness of it all crashed over me again, and I felt myself breaking apart.
"You want to know the truth?" I wiped my eyes with the tissue, leaving black streaks of mascara on the white paper. "There are no good men. You're all the same when it comes down to it. Given the right incentive, the right opportunity, you'll all choose something better."
His expression didn't change, but something flickered in his eyes. "That's a pretty cynical view."
"It's a realistic view." I drained my glass and gestured for another. "Prove me wrong. I dare you."
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