
The Slapped Executive
Chapter 3
I watched the Chicago skyline from the back of my town car, the city's architecture a perfect metaphor for what I was about to do—dismantle and rebuild. Tuesday morning had arrived, and with it, the culmination of nearly a year's worth of meticulous planning.
"The Ritz-Carlton lounge is secure," David said, scrolling through his tablet beside me. "Our legal team is standing by."
I nodded, touching my cheek where the phantom sting of Miranda's slap still lingered. "And our friends at the country club?"
"Our source confirms Miranda arrived thirty minutes ago, holding court with her usual circle."
I allowed myself a thin smile. While Miranda Cross believed she was reclaiming her dignity through social validation, she was actually accelerating her husband's downfall.
"The stock is down twelve percent now," David continued, his voice tense. "Board members are panicking. Three have called me directly, trying to gauge if Hale Capital might increase our position."
"And you said?"
"That we're monitoring the situation closely." He looked up from his screen. "Conrad has called you seventeen more times."
"Let him squirm," I replied, watching raindrops begin to streak the window. "He's finally learning what it feels like to lose control."
We arrived at the Ritz-Carlton, where I'd established a temporary command center. The presidential suite had been transformed into a war room—legal documents spread across tables, financial analysts working on laptops, media monitors displaying every mention of CrossTech and yesterday's incident.
"Miranda's social circle is already turning," reported my media specialist, gesturing to a private Instagram post someone had leaked. "Cynthia Whitfield—you know, the hedge fund wife?—commented that Miranda's outburst was 'concerning' and 'perhaps a cry for help.'"
I scanned the comments. The same women who had likely applauded Miranda's "bravery" hours earlier were now distancing themselves, sensing blood in the water.
"Page Six is running with 'Unstable CEO Wife Attacks Executive,'" another analyst added. "The narrative is shifting."
"And Conrad?" I asked, accepting a coffee from David.
"That's where it gets interesting," David said, pulling up financial reports. "Our source in accounting says Conrad just discovered the extent of their cash flow problems. The CFO has been creative with the books."
I felt a surge of cold satisfaction. "So the merger documents he signed three weeks ago..."
"He thought they were standard investment agreements to inject capital," David confirmed. "He didn't realize he was signing away control rights based on certain financial triggers—triggers his CFO assured him would never happen."
"But they will happen," I said, "at exactly 1:45 PM today."
David nodded. "Fifteen minutes before the board meeting. The timing couldn't be more perfect."
I spent the next hours reviewing every detail of our strategy. By noon, reports came in that Miranda had left the country club in tears after several friends had questioned her judgment. By one o'clock, Conrad had issued a press statement expressing "full confidence in our leadership team despite personal matters."
At 1:30, I changed into my white power suit—symbolic armor for the battle ahead.
"Are you nervous?" David asked as we gathered our documents.
I thought about James Morrison, who had put his hand on my thigh and told me I wasn't executive material. About Rebecca Martinez, who was already positioning herself to take my job. About Conrad, who had built a culture where women were either decorative or disposable.
"Not nervous," I replied, checking my reflection one last time. "I've been waiting for this moment since the day Conrad told me I didn't have what it takes to lead."
At 1:43, my phone buzzed with an alert. The financial triggers had been activated. Hale Capital's controlling interest in CrossTech was now official.
"It's done," David said, looking up from his phone. "You now own fifty-one percent of CrossTech."
I took a deep breath, feeling the weight of the moment. "Then let's not keep the board waiting."
As we stepped into the elevator, I thought about Conrad sitting in that conference room, unaware that in minutes, everything he built would be mine. He still believed I was coming to defend myself, perhaps even beg for my job.
He had no idea I was coming to take his.
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