Allie Patterson POV:
I stared at the simple silver band on her finger. The words echoed in my skull, bouncing off the walls of my mind. *Pretty, isn't it?* That silver band was Grayson's grandmother's heirloom. Three years ago, he came home devastated, claiming he had lost it in the locker room at his gym. I had held him while he cried. I had comforted him all night.
A memory ripped through my brain. Three years ago, standing in the freezing rain, digging through public trash cans outside his gym for six hours, my hands covered in filth, desperately searching for that ring because I couldn't bear to see him sad.
The crushing humiliation and the burning rage collided in my chest. They hit critical mass. And then, instantly, the fire burned out, leaving behind a core of absolute, freezing, mechanical rationality.
I didn't scream. I didn't lunge forward to slap the smug smile off her face. I slowly lifted my chin. I looked her dead in the eyes, my expression as blank and calm as a mortician looking at a fresh corpse.
Kacey blinked. She was clearly expecting a hysterical, sobbing wife. My dead silence caught her off guard, and her victorious smile faltered for a fraction of a second.
I didn't say a single word. I reached into the pocket of my faded jeans and pulled out my phone.
I swiped up on the lock screen, opened the camera app, and quickly tapped the screen to disable the flash. I raised the phone, pointing the dual lenses directly at Kacey.
She stiffened, her eyes widening in shock. She instinctively raised her hand to shield her face. "What are you doing?!" she snapped.
I pressed the shutter button. Three rapid clicks fired in succession. I captured everything: her face, the burgundy silk pajamas, the massive pink diamond, the stolen silver heirloom, and the sweeping interior of the four-million-dollar mansion behind her.
I lowered the phone and slid it back into my pocket. My movements were crisp, efficient, and completely devoid of hesitation.
"The property deed for this house was mailed to my apartment," I said. My voice was entirely flat, stripped of any pitch or emotion.
Kacey's face drained of color. The arrogant flush in her cheeks vanished, replaced by a stark, terrified white. Panic flared in her eyes.
I didn't give her a single second to argue, explain, or beg. I turned my back on her and started walking down the stone steps.
"He doesn't love you!" Kacey yelled furiously from the doorway, her voice shrill and desperate as she lost control of the situation. "You're just a free coder!"
My worn sneaker paused on the bottom step for a microsecond. I didn't turn around. I didn't look back. I resumed my pace and walked straight to my beat-up Honda.
I grabbed the door handle, yanked it open, and threw myself into the suffocatingly hot, stuffy cabin. I slammed the heavy metal door shut behind me, sealing myself inside.
The second the latch clicked, my frozen facade shattered. I collapsed forward, burying my face against the steering wheel. My shoulders shook violently, my body racked by brutal, tearing tremors.
I gasped for air, my throat tight and burning. The tears finally broke free. They poured down my cheeks and dripped onto the cracked leather of the steering wheel, leaving dark, wet stains.
But I looked at the digital clock on the dashboard. I gave myself exactly one minute. Sixty seconds to mourn a fifteen-year lie. When the minute ticked over, I lifted my head. The tears stopped. My eyes were completely dry, filled with nothing but cold, calculated murder.
I reached into the center console, yanked out a rough paper napkin, and viciously scrubbed the moisture from my face. I adjusted the rearview mirror, making sure my expression was locked tight.
I unlocked my phone, opened the secure, encrypted album app, and immediately uploaded the three photos of Kacey to my cloud backup.
Then, I opened my text messages and tapped on Grayson's name.
The last message he sent me sat at the bottom of the screen, delivered two hours ago: *Baby, in a meeting. Call you later. Love you.*
I stared at the words *Love you*. A harsh, mocking sneer twisted my lips.
My thumbs flew across the digital keyboard, typing out a response with rapid precision.
*Come home early tonight. I have a surprise for you.*
I didn't press the send button. I held down the arrow, opened the scheduling tool, and set the text to automatically deliver at 8:00 PM tonight.
I tossed the phone onto the passenger seat and reached for the ignition. I twisted the key.
The Honda's engine roared to life, the exhaust sputtering loudly in the quiet, wealthy neighborhood. I threw the gearshift into reverse, slammed my foot down, and backed out of the driveway with a violent jerk, spinning the steering wheel to turn the car around.
I slammed my foot onto the gas pedal. The tires screeched against the asphalt. The car shot forward like a bullet, leaving Atherton behind, speeding directly toward downtown San Francisco.
"Come home early tonight. I have a surprise for you."
Allie Patterson POV:
I parked my rusted, squeaking Honda directly in front of a towering glass skyscraper in the heart of the San Francisco Financial District. It sat wedged between a sleek black Porsche and a silver Tesla, looking like a piece of garbage washed up on a pristine beach. Years ago, I had job offers to work in gleaming towers exactly like this one. I turned them down to write code in a damp garage, all to build Grayson's dream.
I walked past the security desk, stepped into the express elevator, and hit the button for the top floor. When the doors slid open, I pushed through the heavy, frosted glass doors bearing the name: STERLING & PARTNERS.
The receptionist behind the marble desk took one look at my coffee-stained t-shirt and baggy jeans and immediately stood up, raising a hand to stop me. I didn't slow down. I looked right through her and stated my demand. "I need to see Jamie Stevens."
Two minutes later, rapid footsteps echoed down the hallway. Jamie appeared, wearing a perfectly tailored Armani suit, her sharp Louboutin heels clicking against the hardwood floor.
Jamie saw my pale, bloodless face. The professional, razor-sharp smile she wore for clients vanished instantly. She grabbed my arm, her grip tight, and pulled me down the hall and into her private, soundproof corner conference room.
She hit a button on the wall. The motorized blinds slid down, sealing us off from the rest of the firm. She walked straight to a crystal decanter, poured a heavy measure of amber whiskey into a glass, and shoved it into my hand. "What happened? You look like you just murdered someone."
I didn't take a sip. I set the glass down on the polished mahogany table. I reached into my pocket, pulled out the crumpled, water-stained grant deed, and slapped it flat onto the wood.
Then, I pulled out my phone. I opened the cloud backup, pulled up the photo of Kacey standing in the doorway—wearing the silk pajamas, the pink diamond, and Grayson's grandmother's silver ring—and slid the device across the table.
Jamie picked up the phone in one hand and the deed in the other. Her eyes darted between the two pieces of evidence. Her pupils shook. The muscles in her jaw jumped. She slammed the deed back onto the table with a loud smack.
"That son of a bitch!" Jamie hissed through gritted teeth. She lunged forward and grabbed the receiver of the landline sitting on the conference table. "I'm drafting the divorce papers and a total asset freeze order right now!"
I reached out. My hand clamped down over hers, pinning the phone to the base. I looked at her, my eyes terrifyingly cold, devoid of a single shred of mercy.
"No," I said, my voice hoarse but completely steady. "I don't want half. I want him to have nothing."
Jamie froze. She slowly released the phone and stared at me. She had known me for fifteen years, but right now, she was looking at a complete stranger.
She took a breath, sat down in her leather chair, and crossed her hands on the table, instantly shifting back into the ruthless, top-tier M&A lawyer she was. "State your demands."
I dragged my finger across the paper, tapping the purchase price. "Four million, two hundred thousand dollars. Paid in full. The company books show we are bleeding cash. Grayson says we have nothing. Where did he get this cash?"
Jamie narrowed her eyes, her legal mind spinning. "He's embezzling. Or he's laundering money through shell accounts before the IPO."
"I want the company back. That is my code. That is my blood and sweat." I enunciated every single word.
Jamie frowned. She pulled her MacBook closer, typed in her password, and pulled up our company's capitalization table.
"It's hard, Allie," Jamie said, pointing a manicured finger at the pie chart on the screen. "To avoid tax liabilities and to present a unified front to the venture capitalists, you signed over ninety percent of the voting rights to his name."
I closed my eyes. A violent shiver of disgust ripped through my spine as I remembered Grayson holding my hands, looking deeply into my eyes, feeding me sweet, manipulative lies about how it was just a formality to protect us.
"There has to be a way, Jamie," I said, opening my eyes and staring her down. "You are the most vicious lawyer in the Bay Area. Find it."
Jamie's fingers flew across the trackpad. She bypassed the standard files and dug deep into the firm's encrypted archives, hunting for the original incorporation articles we filed ten years ago.
The blue loading bar crept slowly across the screen. The soundproof room was dead quiet. The only noise was the sharp intake of our breathing.
The PDF opened. Hundreds of pages of dense, suffocating legal jargon began scrolling rapidly up the screen.
Jamie grabbed a pair of blue-light glasses from her desk, slid them onto her face, and scanned the text at a terrifying speed.
Suddenly, her finger stopped on the trackpad. She pushed her glasses up the bridge of her nose and leaned her face inches from the glowing monitor.
Her eyes locked onto a paragraph on page fourteen. A slow, highly dangerous smirk began to form on her lips.
She turned her head and looked at me. The predatory excitement gleaming in her eyes was blinding.
"Allie, do you remember ten years ago, eating pizza in that crappy garage drafting this, you insisted on adding a prank clause?"
Allie Patterson POV:
I leaned over the mahogany table, following the tip of Jamie's red-polished fingernail to the block of text she had highlighted on the screen. Ten years ago, sitting on a greasy floor, typing code with one hand and eating cold pizza with the other, I had jokingly told Jamie to make sure there was a rule that if he ever betrayed me, I'd take everything. She had laughed and turned my joke into binding legal jargon.
The bold text on the screen read: *Section 14.3 Breach of Moral and Fiduciary Duty (The "Betrayal Clause").*
I stared at the words, my voice dropping to a soft whisper as I read aloud. "If any shareholder is proven to have committed a breach of fiduciary duty that severely damages the company's reputation, or maliciously misappropriates company assets for non-commercial personal desires..."
Jamie leaned back in her chair and finished the sentence for me, her voice ringing with lethal satisfaction. "...the non-breaching party has the right to forcibly acquire all shares held by the breaching party for the price of one dollar."
I inhaled sharply, the air burning my throat. I couldn't believe it. A stupid, paranoid joke from a decade ago was now the only weapon I had left to save my life's work.
"Is this even valid?" I asked, my technical mind searching for bugs in the logic. "Didn't he hire that fancy corporate firm to redo the bylaws three years ago?"
Jamie sneered, her fingers flying across the keyboard. "Grayson is an arrogant fool. Those cheap lawyers he hired only updated the Series B financing terms. They were too lazy, or too scared, to touch the core founder agreement."
She pulled up the latest database from the Secretary of State and pointed at the bottom of the screen. "Look. The original articles are still attached as a valid, binding exhibit."
My eyes lit up. The last shred of grief and heartbreak incinerated, replaced entirely by the roaring fire of revenge.
"So," I said, locking eyes with Jamie to confirm the parameters. "If I prove he embezzled company funds to buy Kacey a house, I can execute this clause and take his ninety percent of the shares?"
"Not just the shares," Jamie said. She picked up the crystal glass of whiskey and downed it in one swallow. "If a scandal like this blows up right before the IPO, the SEC will get involved. He will face federal felony charges for wire fraud."
I slumped back into the heavy leather chair. I exhaled a long, heavy breath. The crushing weight that had been sitting on my chest since I opened that envelope finally shifted, giving me room to breathe.
"But I need hard financial proof," I said, my brain instantly switching back into Chief Architect mode. "The property deed only proves he bought a house. It doesn't prove the cash came from the company."
Jamie nodded sharply. "Exactly. You need to hack into the company's deep financial system and pull the raw, underlying transaction logs."
"That's easy," I said, my voice dripping with absolute, cold confidence. "I'm the super admin."
Just as the words left my mouth, my phone vibrated violently against the wood table, shattering the silence in the room.
I looked down. The screen lit up with the caller ID: *Hubby*, accompanied by a bright red heart emoji.
I stared at the screen. A wave of pure, visceral nausea hit the back of my throat. I reached out, my finger hovering over the red decline button.
Jamie's hand shot out and gripped my wrist tightly. Her eyes were sharp and commanding. "Answer it. Right now, you are the perfect, clueless wife."
I took a deep breath. I closed my eyes for two seconds, forcing my facial muscles to relax, locking away the rage. I opened my eyes, swiped the green button, and hit speakerphone.
"Baby, what are you doing?" Grayson's magnetic, incredibly gentle voice filled the soundproof room.
I made eye contact with Jamie. She rolled her eyes and mimed gagging herself with her finger.
"Just finished a massive block of code. I'm a bit tired," I replied, forcing my vocal cords to produce the exact tone of exhausted, obedient devotion he expected from me.
"You work too hard, my genius," Grayson lied smoothly, without a single stutter. "I just finished my meeting with the board. I'm heading home now."
I remembered Kacey's mocking voice from two hours ago: *He's in the shower.* I dug my fingernails into my thigh, using the physical pain to stop myself from laughing out loud.
"Okay, I'll wait for you," I said, my voice as soft and light as a feather.
"What do you want for dinner?" Grayson continued, playing the role of the attentive husband flawlessly. "I'm passing by the Chinese place. I'll grab your favorite General Tso's chicken, okay?"
"Sure, anything cheap," I replied, throwing his own manipulative PUA logic right back at him. "We need to save money for the IPO."
A low, highly satisfied chuckle came through the speaker. "You're always so understanding. See you soon, love you."
I tapped the screen, cutting the connection. I stared at the black glass, my eyes turning to solid ice. I looked at Jamie.
"Let the games begin."