
When My Husband’s Mistress Took My Job and Marriage
Chapter 4
She started on the second slide.
Not the first. She let the title frame sit for exactly four seconds — long enough for the room to absorb it — then she moved to the structural analysis overview and said, 'The load distribution model here accounts for the soil variance across the eastern quadrant. We ran it against two comparable Manhattan projects from the last five years.'
Sasha Payne cut in before I'd finished the sentence.
'Which projects?'
I named them. Dates, borough, primary structural contractor.
Sasha made a small sound — not quite dismissive, not quite accepting. The legal associate beside her wrote something down. The two facilities leads exchanged a glance I caught in my peripheral vision.
I clicked to slide three.
She let me get through half of it.
'The cost projection looks light,' she said. Her voice was completely even. Almost bored. 'You're not accounting for current rebar pricing. The market shifted in Q1.'
'I'm using the Q1 adjusted figures,' I said. I pulled up the appendix slide without pause. 'The baseline reflects the March index. The sensitivity range on the right accounts for a further twelve percent variance in either direction.'
The facilities director leaned forward slightly to look. 'That's actually thorough,' he said.
Sasha didn't look at him. She was looking at me.
Not at the slide. At me.
I clicked forward.
It went on like that. Every section, she had a question. Not genuine questions — I know what those sound like. These were surgical. Timed to land just as I was building momentum, calibrated to make the room hesitate even when my answer was airtight. She challenged the risk matrix. She questioned my methodology for the site drainage estimate. She asked me to justify a number I could justify easily and then, when I did, shifted the focus to a different number before the first answer could land.
The outside consultant had stopped taking notes. He was watching her work.
I answered every objection. Measured, precise, without heat. I had built this proposal the way I built load calculations — nothing in it that couldn't carry weight under pressure. I knew every number in every cell of every table. She couldn't find a crack because there wasn't one.
But that wasn't the point, and I was starting to understand that.
The point was the room. The point was the slow accumulation of doubt. The point was the way professional uncertainty spreads like a stress fracture — invisible at first, then everywhere at once.
I was on the procurement section when she stood up.
I registered it — the chair pushing back, the sound of her heels on the floor — but I kept my eyes on the room, on the facilities leads, finishing my sentence. Professional instinct. You don't look away from your audience.
I heard her cross the room.
I turned.
She was close. Closer than any professional context warranted. Her expression was arranged into something that wasn't quite contempt and wasn't quite pity. Just certainty. The face of someone who had already decided.
She slapped me across the face.
The sound of it hit the walls before the sensation hit me. A flat, hard crack in the climate-controlled silence of the twenty-sixth floor.
My head moved with it. My cheek went hot.
No one in that room made a sound.
'Know your place,' she said. Her voice was completely flat. Like she was reading an item off a list.
I stood absolutely still. Both hands at my sides, motionless. My cheek burned. My pulse had jumped and was already working to steady itself, the way a frame absorbs an impact load and distributes it — spike, then stillness.
I did not touch my face. I did not look away from her.
I did not say one word.
Seven seconds. Maybe eight. Long enough for the silence to fully settle. Long enough for everyone in that room to have witnessed it and to know exactly what they had witnessed.
Then I turned to the table.
'I need a moment,' I said.
I picked up my phone from the conference table. I walked to the door and I opened it and I stepped into the corridor and I let it close behind me.
---
The hallway was empty. Glass-walled, south-facing, twenty-sixth floor. The city came in flat and gray through the windows.
I walked to the far window and I stood there.
My hands were steady. That was the first thing I checked.
I breathed deliberately. Four counts in, four counts out. The way I used to breathe on high scaffolding in my first years of site work, when the wind picked up and you had to trust the structure you were standing on.
The cheek still burned. I let it burn.
I looked out at the parking structure below. Eight floors down, open-air levels, the morning gray making everything the same flat color.
A side exit opened.
Sasha Payne came out. She had her coat already on — she must have picked it up from somewhere on her way through. She walked quickly, heels clicking on the concrete, crossing toward the middle level of the structure.
I watched.
She moved toward a black SUV parked at the end of the row. Black, fully loaded. Custom rims — matte charcoal, aftermarket, slightly wider than stock.
I had been with him when he ordered those rims. He'd spent forty-five minutes on the phone with the supplier.
Daniel was in the driver's seat.
Sasha reached the passenger window. He leaned out. She leaned in.
They kissed the way two people kiss when they are very comfortable with each other. Familiar. Easy. Like this parking structure and this time of morning were just another ordinary moment in a long series of ordinary moments.
I watched for five seconds. I counted them.
Then I stepped back from the window.
I stood in the empty corridor and I was very still and I let everything I had just understood move through me and settle.
The presentation. Every interruption, every misdirected question, every moment of manufactured doubt in front of that room. The slap. *Know your place.*
This was never a pitch meeting. This was a message, delivered at full volume in a room full of witnesses, by a woman with enough institutional power to make it stick. She had wanted me to see exactly what she was willing to do. She had wanted me to feel it in my face and carry it home.
I had received the message.
I turned from the window. I walked back toward the conference room door, smoothed the front of my blazer once with both hands, and reached for the handle.
She wanted me to know my place.
I was starting to understand exactly where that was.
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