
When My Husband Left Our Sick Son for His Mistress
Chapter 3
The CEO's office still smells like Axel's cologne. Bergamot and cedar, expensive and cloying. I've been sitting in his chair for three days now, and the scent clings to the leather like a ghost. My hands shake as I sort through the quarterly reports spread across the desk. Not from nerves. From the effort of making them shake.
The intercom buzzes. "Mr. Freeman and Mr. Jenkins are here for your meeting, Ms. Knight."
I press the button. My voice comes out thin, reedy. "Send them in."
Axel enters first, Bryson a half-step behind. They've dressed down—no ties, shirt sleeves rolled to their elbows. The casual uniform of men who think they're about to save a drowning woman. Axel's mouth is set in a line that might be concern if I didn't know better. Bryson wears sympathy like a mask.
"Camille." Axel sits without being invited. "We need to talk about the Singapore account."
I let a folder slip from my fingers. Papers scatter across the floor. "I'm sorry, I just—there's so much, and I don't—" I press my palm to my forehead. "Maybe this was a mistake."
Bryson leans forward, his voice honey-smooth. "It's a lot to take on. No one expects you to master it overnight."
"Your father was brilliant," Axel says, and I catch the past tense like a blade. "But running a corporation requires a specific skill set. Experience. Relationships."
"I thought I could do this." I let my voice crack. "But the international accounts, the currency hedges—I'm in over my head."
They exchange a glance. Quick. Satisfied.
"We can guide you," Bryson offers. "The Singapore deal, for instance. Very delicate. Requires someone who understands the nuances of offshore structuring."
I nod too eagerly. "Would you? Both of you? I need—I need help."
Axel's shoulders relax. "Of course. That's what we're here for."
They stay for an hour, explaining things I understood before they were born. I take notes in shaky handwriting, ask questions a first-year MBA student would know the answers to. When they leave, Axel squeezes my shoulder. The touch makes my skin crawl.
"You're doing fine," he says. "Just trust us."
The door closes. I count to thirty, then open my laptop. The real quarterly reports—the ones I've been analyzing since 3 AM—paint a different picture than the sanitized versions they showed the board. Money moving in strange patterns. Accounts that don't quite balance. I forward everything to Marcus with a single word: Soon.
Alyssa doesn't knock. She never does.
She explodes into my office at 2:47 PM wearing Hermès and entitlement, her engagement ring catching the light like a weapon. "We need to talk about my project."
I look up from my computer, let confusion cloud my face. "Project?"
"The film. Bryson said you'd approve the budget." She drops a folder on my desk. "Fifty million. It's a prestige piece. Awards-caliber."
The treatment inside is laughable. A vanity vehicle wrapped in pretension. I scan the numbers, and there it is—the production company registered in the Caymans, the distribution deal that's all smoke and mirrors.
"Fifty million is—that's a lot of money, Alyssa."
"It's an investment in the company's brand." Her voice sharpens. "Or are you too stupid to understand strategic positioning?"
My hands tremble as I reach for a pen. Not from fear. From the effort of not smiling. "I just—I don't want to make a mistake."
"Then don't." She leans across the desk. "Sign it, Camille. Unless you want me to tell Axel you're being difficult."
I sign with a shaking hand. She snatches the approval, her smile vicious. "Good girl. Try not to screw up anything else today."
The door slams. I count to ten, then text Elias: Package approved. Mark it.
His response is immediate: Already done.
The luncheon is at Le Bernardin, all white tablecloths and women who lunch. I wear white too—a calculated choice. Alyssa holds court at the center table, her ring flashing as she gestures. I take a seat at the periphery, quiet and small.
She sees me halfway through the first course. Her eyes light up with something predatory.
"Camille!" She waves me over, her voice carrying across the room. "Come sit with us. We were just talking about your little corporate adventure."
I move to her table. The other women watch with the anticipation of spectators at a execution.
"How's it going?" Alyssa asks. "Playing CEO?"
"It's challenging," I say carefully.
She reaches for her wine glass. Red. Cabernet, probably. Her hand moves in an arc that looks accidental but isn't. The wine cascades across my dress, crimson spreading across white silk like blood.
"Oh no!" Her hand flies to her mouth. "I'm so clumsy. But then again, white to a luncheon? That's just asking for trouble. Kind of like a housewife thinking she can run a Fortune 500 company."
Laughter ripples around the table. I stand there, dripping, and let tears well in my eyes. "I'm sorry. I should go."
"Probably for the best," Alyssa says. "Before you embarrass yourself further."
I flee. In the bathroom, I meet my own eyes in the mirror and smile. The wine will stain. The humiliation will spread across social media within the hour. By tonight, everyone will know that Camille Knight is breaking.
Perfect.
Elias calls at midnight. "I'm in."
I'm in the penthouse, Lincoln asleep down the hall, my laptop open to a dozen monitoring screens. "How long do you need?"
"Already done. Keyloggers on both terminals, audio feeds from their offices." A pause. "You sure you want to hear this?"
"Play it."
The audio crackles to life. Axel's voice, tinny through the speakers: "—can't stand her. The way she talks, that fake laugh. Makes my skin crawl."
Bryson: "But the movie money—"
"Is the only reason I'm tolerating this charade. Once the funds clear and we've moved everything offshore, I'm done. She can have the ring and the title. I'll be in Monaco."
"What about Camille?"
Axel laughs. It's ugly. "What about her? She's falling apart. Give it two weeks, and she'll resign. Probably check herself into some wellness retreat. Then we execute the buyback clause, and everything returns to normal."
"And if she doesn't resign?"
"Then we make her." His voice drops. "Victoria's already laying the groundwork. Unstable. Unfit mother. It's almost too easy."
I close the laptop. Elias is quiet on the other end of the line.
"You okay?" he finally asks.
"I'm perfect," I say. And I mean it. Because now I have everything I need.
The trap is set. All that's left is to spring it.
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