
The Slapped Executive
Chapter 2
I watched the numbers on my phone climb as I sipped my morning coffee. Six hundred and twenty-seven missed calls. One thousand, eight hundred and forty-three text messages. And my email—I'd stopped counting after the first thousand.
The video had gone viral faster than even I had anticipated. On my tablet, I scrolled through headlines while CNN played silently on the television across my apartment.
"TECH EXECUTIVE PUBLICLY ACCUSED OF AFFAIR AT CORPORATE GALA"
"CEO'S WIFE STRIKES ALLEGED MISTRESS"
"#GalaSlap BREAKS TWITTER RECORDS"
I paused on a particularly unflattering freeze-frame of my face, mid-slap, plastered across Business Insider. The photographer had captured the perfect moment—my head turned at an angle that suggested guilt, Miranda's hand still connected with my cheek. The caption read: "Senior Executive Veronica Hale faces public accusation from Miranda Cross, wife of CrossTech CEO."
My phone buzzed again. David.
"The papers are ready," I answered, skipping any greeting.
"Are you watching the fallout?" He sounded concerned.
"I'm living it." I closed the tablet and walked to the floor-to-ceiling windows of my downtown apartment. Chicago sprawled below, the morning sun glinting off glass towers. "How's the stock price?"
"Down eight percent in pre-market. Clients are getting nervous."
I smiled faintly. "Perfect."
"Veronica..." David hesitated. "The narrative they're building—it's brutal. They're painting you as—"
"The predatory female executive who couldn't keep her hands off her married boss?" I finished for him. "I expected nothing less."
"Rebecca Martinez is already circling your position. She told three board members you've had 'inappropriate relationships' with executives before."
I felt a cold fury settle in my chest. "And James Morrison?"
"Telling anyone who'll listen that he 'always knew you'd cause trouble.' His exact words."
I remembered Morrison's hand on my knee three years ago, sliding higher as he explained why I wouldn't be getting the promotion I'd earned. How he'd framed it as a 'mutual opportunity.' How Conrad had backed his decision when I complained, suggesting I needed to be more of a 'team player.'
"Conference room at 2 PM," I said, my voice steady. "Make sure all the paperwork is in order."
"It is. But Veronica—are you sure about this? Once we do this, there's no going back."
I touched my cheek, the ghost of Miranda's slap still lingering. "I've been planning this for eleven months, three weeks, and four days, David. One public humiliation doesn't change anything—it just makes victory sweeter."
After hanging up, I opened my laptop and reviewed the final acquisition documents. Hale Capital's silent purchase of CrossTech shares through shell companies and third-party investors had been meticulous, untraceable until we revealed ourselves. The merger agreement Conrad had signed three weeks ago—believing he was securing a capital infusion from an anonymous investment group—had been the final piece.
My phone rang again. Conrad's name flashed on the screen for the twelfth time that morning. I declined the call and watched as a text immediately followed:
*Veronica, we need to talk. The board is meeting at 2. Your position is secure if we handle this together.*
I laughed softly at his presumption, at the desperation barely concealed beneath his professional tone. He had no idea what was coming.
I closed my eyes, picturing the conference room where I'd been passed over, belittled, and underestimated for years. The same room where, in just a few hours, I would reveal that I now controlled 51% of CrossTech's shares.
I picked up my phone and typed a single response to Conrad:
*I'll be there.*
Then I opened my closet and selected a pristine white suit—the opposite of Miranda's blood-red dress from the night before. Today wasn't about passion or emotion. It was about power.
And Conrad Cross was about to learn exactly how much of it I had.
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