
Wife Uncovers CEO's Betrayal Scheme
Chapter 2
The morning after the celebration party, I arrived at the office with the taste of humiliation still bitter in my mouth. The $5 foot cream sat on my home vanity like a monument to my husband's disrespect, but I pushed the image away. There was work to be done.
I reached for my phone to check the morning briefing in our executive group chat—a daily ritual where department heads shared updates and coordinated priorities. My thumb scrolled through the messages, confusion growing with each swipe.
Nothing. No messages from the past three days.
I refreshed the app, thinking it was a technical glitch. Still nothing. A cold realization crept up my spine as I opened the chat details. My name was gone from the participant list.
Someone had removed me.
My hands trembled slightly as I checked the product development chat, then the strategic planning group, then the quarterly review committee. One by one, the same discovery: I'd been systematically erased from every company communication channel.
"Sarah," I called to my assistant, trying to keep my voice steady. "Can you check if there's an issue with my access to the group chats?"
Sarah's face went pale as she looked at her screen, then at me. "Mrs. Henderson, I... I think you need to see this."
She showed me her phone. In the executive chat I'd been removed from, Milani had sent a message just an hour ago: "Moving forward with the Q4 campaign strategy. Marketing team meeting at 10 AM—all department heads except Annabelle, who will be focusing on other priorities."
Other priorities. As if I were being reassigned to filing or office supplies.
"Who has access to remove people from these chats?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
Sarah's voice was barely a whisper. "Only Jensen and the chat administrators he designates."
The betrayal cut deeper than I'd expected. This wasn't just professional humiliation—it was a calculated campaign to isolate me, orchestrated by my own husband.
Two hours later, I sat in the boardroom for the monthly strategy meeting, my presentation materials perfectly prepared despite the morning's revelations. The quarterly product launch had been my initiative, developed over months of market research and consumer testing. If they thought they could sideline me from my own project, they were mistaken.
Jensen entered with the other executives, Milani trailing behind him like a shadow in her perfectly tailored suit. She took the seat that had been mine for the past three years—the one directly to Jensen's right.
"Good morning, everyone," Jensen began, not meeting my eyes. "Today we'll be reviewing the upcoming product launch strategy."
I stood, my presentation remote in hand. "I've prepared a comprehensive analysis of our target demographics and launch timeline—"
"Actually," Milani interrupted smoothly, her voice dripping with false sweetness, "I think we should explore some alternative approaches first."
She clicked her own remote, and my carefully crafted slides disappeared, replaced by her presentation. My three months of work vanished as if it had never existed.
"As you can see," Milani continued, "I've identified several concerns with the current strategy. The target demographic seems... narrow. And the timeline appears rushed."
Each word was a surgical strike against my credibility. Around the table, executives who had praised my work just weeks ago now nodded thoughtfully at Milani's critique.
"The market research Annabelle conducted," Milani said with a sympathetic smile that made my skin crawl, "while thorough, may have missed some key consumer trends. I propose we take a more conservative approach."
Conservative. The word hung in the air like an accusation. In business, conservative meant safe, unimaginative, outdated.
"I disagree," I said, my voice cutting through the room's murmurs. "The research clearly shows—"
"Perhaps," Jensen interrupted, his tone dismissive, "we should let Milani finish her presentation before discussing concerns."
The message was clear: sit down, shut up, let the adults talk.
For the next twenty minutes, I watched Milani systematically dismantle my strategy while positioning herself as the visionary alternative. She spoke in the language of innovation and market disruption, using my own research to support conclusions that contradicted everything I'd recommended.
When she finished, the room erupted in polite applause. Richard Stone, the board chairman, leaned forward with interest. "Fascinating insights, Milani. This kind of strategic thinking is exactly what we need."
I felt invisible, erased from my own meeting, my own project, my own company.
As the executives filed out, chattering about Milani's "fresh perspective," Sarah appeared at my elbow.
"Mrs. Henderson," she whispered urgently, "we need to talk. Privately."
In my office, Sarah closed the door and turned to face me, her expression grave.
"There's something you need to know," she said. "Milani's been meeting with people from your team. She's been telling them that your performance has been declining, that you're... struggling with the demands of your position."
The words hit me like physical blows.
"She's suggesting that maybe it's time for you to step back, take a less demanding role. She's positioning herself to take over your responsibilities, saying it would be better for everyone, including you."
I sank into my chair, the full scope of the conspiracy finally clear. This wasn't just an affair—it was a corporate coup, designed to push me out of my own company while making it look like my choice.
"How many people has she spoken to?" I asked.
Sarah's silence was answer enough.
The systematic erasure was complete. They'd removed me from communications, undermined my projects, and poisoned my relationships with my own team. All that remained was the final push—and I could see it coming like a storm on the horizon.
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