The Billionaire Cheated, I Took His Empire
Elena, Serena can't be left alone right now. I'm not coming home tonight.
His voice was barely above a whisper, as if he were afraid of waking the terminally ill woman lying beside him. Rain pounded against the windows as I lowered my gaze to the worn file envelope on the coffee table.
Inside were the fake medical records she'd used to fabricate her fatal illness, her bank statements, and every transfer he had personally signed.
I'd known the truth for six months.
But he had never once looked at the report lying on my bedside table.
I hung up the phone, saved a screenshot of his text message into a folder, grabbed my umbrella, and walked out of the prison that had trapped me for the past three years.
As the elevator doors slid shut, a message from my attorney appeared on my screen.
9:00 a.m. tomorrow. We begin the full liquidation process.
I turned off the screen.
This time, he would never find me again.
Elena's POV
Damian Sterling took away my exclusive private doctor for the sake of his first love, Serena Morrow.
Outside, a torrential rainstorm battered the windows. Inside the penthouse, the main lights were off, leaving the living room in deep shadow.
I sat quietly on the sofa. On the coffee table in front of me sat a single manila folder, its edges crumpled from where I had gripped it too tightly.
Inside was Serena's forged terminal illness report.
It was also the concrete evidence of my husband's betrayal, which I had spent the last six months painstakingly gathering piece by piece.
When the clock struck ten, Damian's call finally came through.
I pressed answer.
The background on his end was loud and chaotic. The clatter of ER gurneys. Underneath which came Serena's fragile, pathetic coughing.
"Elena, Serena is in really bad shape right now. She can't be left alone. I won't be coming home tonight."
Damian's voice was barely a whisper, as if he were terrified of disturbing the "fragile" woman beside him.
I stared at the folder on the table, my eyes dead, saying nothing.
Sensing my silence, Damian assumed I was about to throw another tantrum. His tone instantly turned icy, dripping with condescension and impatience.
"She's a very sick woman, Elena. She has no family in New York, and I'm the only one she trusts. Can you please just be mature for once? Stop picking fights at a time like this."
Lately, this line had slipped off his tongue with disgusting ease.
Serena had a chest pain. He ran to her. Serena had insomnia. He ran to her. Serena said she was scared of the thunder in the hospital. He abandoned his fever-ridden wife without a backward glance to hold her hand.
I pulled the phone away from my ear.
Because at that exact second, a text notification popped up on my screen.
It was from Dr. Julian Cross, the renowned specialist Damian had hired for me at an astronomical cost.
"Mrs. Vance, per Mr. Sterling's mandatory orders, I have relocated to Miss Morrow's private suite for 24-hour care. I will no longer be managing your medical records. I am deeply sorry."
I stared at the screen, my knuckles turning white.
This doctor was a gift Damian had once practically begged me to accept.
Three years ago, to save the near-bankrupt Sterling Group, I had secretly mortgaged the townhouse my mother had left me.
The sheer exhaustion of that year had wrecked my immune system, leaving me with chronic respiratory issues.
Back then, Damian had stood in the pouring rain, his eyes bloodshot as he knelt and gripped my hands. "Elena, half of Sterling Group belongs to you! I swear I will hire the best doctors in the country. I will make sure you live a long, beautiful life to enjoy it!"
But now that Sterling Group was a powerhouse, he locked me away at home like a caged canary under the guise of "protecting my privacy."
And then, he used the money I had nearly died to secure to buy a private doctor for Serena's fake illness!
I hung up the phone without another word. I took a screenshot of the text and saved it into a folder labeled Evidence.
Then, I stood up, slid the manila folder into my bag, and grabbed my umbrella.
When I shut the door behind me, I didn't look back at the cage that had held me for three years.
The lights in the underground garage were fluorescent and blinding.
Damian's sports car was idling right at the exit gate.
His window was half-down. One hand was resting impatiently on the steering wheel, while the other tapped away on his phone, likely sending some sweet, reassuring message to Serena.
When he saw me walking toward his car with an umbrella, his brows knitted into a tight, disgusted knot.
"What the hell are you doing down here in the middle of the night?"
I stood by his window, rainwater dripping off my umbrella onto the cold concrete. "Are you going to the hospital?"
"Serena could have a medical emergency at any second! She needs someone there!" Damian's tone was filled with pure irritation. "You're not well either. Go back upstairs and sleep. Stop making my life harder."
"So, that's your excuse for forcing my private doctor to cater to her?" I looked at him.
Damian's expression shifted slightly, but he quickly raised his voice defensively. "Serena's condition is critical! She's dying, Elena! Do you understand that?"
"And my health doesn't matter?"
Damian's face darkened completely, his eyes cutting like knives. "Elena, I don't have time for your pathetic jealousy right now. If anything happens to Serena, can you take responsibility for her life? Move!"
I didn't budge.
Expressionless, I pulled the manila folder from my bag and slammed it onto his windshield with a sharp thwack.
The thick stack of documents slid right in front of his face.
Damian froze, staring at the folder. "What is this?"
"Serena's terminal illness records," I said, staring at him. "They're fake."
Damian's eyes flared with sudden fury.
I pressed my hand against the folder through the glass, my voice quiet but deadly. "Every single lab result in there was forged by a doctor she bribed. She isn't sick."
Damian's grip tightened on the steering wheel so hard the veins on his hand bulged. "You went behind my back to investigate me?!"
"I investigated her."
"She is a dying, helpless girl! You won't even let a dying person have peace? Elena, when did you become so malicious?"
Damian roared, his eyes filled with absolute disappointment and hatred.
Watching him defend that woman with such blind rage, I found it almost comical.
In truth, those forged medical records were full of holes.
How could a brilliant businessman like Damian not see through them?
He wasn't stupid. He just wanted an excuse to care for his first love without feeling guilty. He chose to be blind.
I slowly let go of the folder, pulled another stamped document from my bag, and tossed it through his window. It landed lightly in his lap.
"Since you love taking care of her so much, let's talk about something else."
I looked down at him. "Damian, who do you think was the actual investor behind that VC debt agreement you signed last month?"
Damian looked down. The moment he registered the name on the document, his pupils dilated in shock.
"What is this?"
"Did you really think those bloodsucking investment firms suddenly grew a conscience and stopped hounding you for payments over the last six months?"
I looked at him coldly. "It's because I bought out your debt through a proxy agency. Which means, Damian, I am now the majority creditor of Sterling Group."
The motion-sensor lights in the garage flickered on, casting a harsh white glow over Damian's face.
The color completely drained from his confident, handsome face. His lips trembled, but he couldn't form a single word.
For three years, this was the first time I had ever seen true terror in his eyes.
It wasn't for my health.
It wasn't for the years of neglect I had suffered.
It was solely for his precious Sterling Group.
"Are you insane?!" Damian threw his car door open and scrambled out, blocking my path, his eyes wild with fear. "That is Sterling! That company is my life!"
"And it was built on my mother's townhouse!"
"What do you want?!"
I gripped my umbrella, looking at him as if he were already dead. "I'm calling in the debt. I'm going to ruin you."
"You wouldn't dare!" Panic completely took over. He lunged forward to grab my wrist.
I took a sharp step back, my eyes filled with disgust.
His hand froze in mid-air.
Damian stared at his empty hand, stunned.
In the past, I never shrank away from him. When he yelled, I took it silently. When he lied, I believed him. Even when he came home in the middle of the night smelling of Serena's perfume, I always left the porch light on for him.
But tonight, there were no lights left for him. Only ice.
I picked up the folder of evidence from his windshield and threw it at his chest.
"Everything is in there. Serena's fake illness, the bank statements of you buying her designer bags and renting her luxury condo with my money, and every single illegal asset transfer you signed."
Damian clutched the folder, his throat bobbing as cold sweat broke out on his forehead. "You... you've been planning this?"
"For six months."
His face was ghostly pale, his voice shaking. "So for the last six months... you playing the submissive wife, your coughing fits... it was all an act?!"
I didn't even bother to answer.
I turned and walked resolutely toward the elevator.
"Elena! Get back here!" Damian screamed behind me, his voice cracking.
I didn't stop.
"If you walk out of this garage tonight, we are over!" he yelled, throwing out his final card, still believing our marriage was something he could threaten me with.
The elevator doors chimed and slid open, casting a cold bar of light at my feet.
I stepped inside without hesitation.
Damian ran toward me like a madman, slamming his hands against the closing doors, his face twisted in panic. "What else are you hiding from me?!"
Through the narrowing gap of the doors, I gave him my final words:
"Enough to ensure you lose everything."
The doors shut.
My phone buzzed in my bag.
A message from my financial proxy: "Mrs. Vance, all takeover documents have been delivered to the board of Sterling Group. Liquidation proceedings will officially begin tomorrow morning at 9:00 AM."
Damian's POV
I didn't sleep a wink.
When dawn broke, I looked around the empty penthouse, only to realize with a jolt of terror that I had no idea where Elena would go.
With trembling hands, I dialed her mother's number.
Margaret Vance picked up. After hearing my voice, she only had one cold question: "Did she finally dump you, you ungrateful parasite?"
I gripped the phone, my face burning. "Margaret, please. Where is Elena?"
"Don't address me by my name as if we are family. It makes me sick," Margaret's voice was devoid of warmth. "My daughter doesn't need to report her whereabouts to a cheating bastard."
Click.
The line went dead.
I stared at the black screen. For the first time, this multi-million dollar penthouse felt terrifyingly hollow.
In the walk-in closet, Elena's old coat still hung.
On the vanity, her hand cream was half-used.
In the fridge, there were ingredients she had bought just two days ago to make my favorite dinner.
Her presence was everywhere, but she was gone.
I didn't have time to process the ache in my chest. I raced down to my car and sped toward the Sterling Group headquarters.
But the moment I walked through the lobby, my CFO met me with a ghost-white face.
"M-Mr. Sterling... we have a massive problem. The investment firm just sent over a foreclosure and restructuring mandate!"
"Let me see that!"
I snatched the document, my eyes tearing through the text.
There, stamped clearly at the bottom, was the seal of the proxy firm.
"All creditor rights transferred."
"Board veto power reassigned."
"Forensic audit initiated immediately."
Every single clause was a scalpel, slicing directly into Sterling Group's jugular.
I slammed the papers onto my desk, my eyes bloodshot. "Who authorized them to enter my building?!"
The CFO trembled. "It... it started six months ago. They used a highly confidential offshore proxy channel. The funds were so clean we couldn't trace them. We had no idea the actual client behind the proxy was Mrs. Sterling..."
Six months ago.
Again, six months ago!
My mind flashed back to the garage last night, to Elena's utterly detached face.
She wasn't bluffing. Step by step, she had personally woven the noose around my neck.
I grabbed the desk phone and dialed the managing partner of the investment firm.
He picked up quickly, but his tone lacked any of his usual warmth. "Mr. Sterling, the contract is clear. We are simply following standard legal procedures."
"You went behind my back and conspired with Elena?!"
"Let's not use such ugly words, Mr. Sterling. The debt transfer was entirely legal. When you signed that VC debt agreement, it was your own greed that drove you. No one forced your hand."
"But she's my wife!!" I screamed, on the verge of a breakdown.
The man let out a dry chuckle. "Then you should probably know better than anyone just how many of your dirty secrets your brilliant wife is holding."
The line went dead.
I collapsed into my chair, paralyzed.
Outside my glass office, I could hear the hushed whispers of my employees.
I looked up. The staff who used to bow and scrape to me were now scattering like I was a leper. Some were even looking at me with blatant amusement.
I had been stripped of my power.
In the very company I took pride in, I had become a useless joke waiting to be kicked out.
I grabbed my keys and ran out of the building like a headless chicken.
I went to the florist Elena always visited. The clerk said she hadn't been there in three months.
I went to her favorite cafe. The waiter checked the system and said her card hadn't been swiped there in half a year.
I even drove down to the Columbia Business School campus, to the little diner where we used to share a single bowl of cheap ramen when we first started the company. But the staff had changed, and nobody recognized me.
New York was massive, and I realized with a wave of despair that I had no idea where she actually spent her time.
I knew nothing about her soul.
By evening, I dragged myself back to the penthouse.
The foyer was pitch black.
My hand hovered over the light switch, freezing for a long time.
In the past, no matter how late I got home, Elena would always leave a lamp on and keep a warm bowl of soup waiting on the table.
Back then, I found her annoying. I thought of her as a boring housewife whose questions only ruined my mood.
But now, the living room was as dark as a tomb.
I flipped the switch. The blinding light flooded the room, making my eyes sting.
Like a madman, I began to tear the place apart.
Drawers, bookshelves, nightstands... I threw everything onto the floor, desperate to find a single clue, an address, a new phone number.
Finally, in the deepest drawer of the study, I found a worn, dark-leather journal.
My hands shook as I opened the first page. The date was exactly six months ago.
"Today, I checked the accounts and found he transferred another $30,000 to Serena. He labeled it 'medical advancement.' He was careful, but I saw it instantly."
My fingers went numb.
Next page.
"He did something highly unusual tonight. He brought home my favorite red velvet cupcakes. I asked him where he was this afternoon, and he said he was in board meetings. When he lies, he can't look me in the eye. And to think, I used to believe he was just tired."
Another page.
"The bank called to remind me about the outstanding mortgage on my mother's townhouse. When I risked that house to save Sterling, he knelt in the rain and swore he'd remember it forever. Today, he used Sterling's cash to lease a luxury penthouse overlooking the Hudson for Serena."
Each page felt like a physical slap to my face.
There were no hysterical rants in her diary.
Just cold dates, exact dollar amounts, locations, and my pathetic, self-satisfied lies.
Every excuse I thought was foolproof had been recorded by her like she was watching a clown perform.
"Today, he came home with a medical report, crying that Serena was dying. I stared at the paper and suddenly remembered my own doctor reminded me last week that I needed a chest scan. Damian forgot. He forgot entirely."
"I have decided to play along. I will pretend to be sick."
My breath hitched, cold sweat soaking through my shirt.
I kept flipping, my hands trembling so violently I could barely hold the book.
"If he has even a shred of love left for me, he will notice that the medication bottles I bought don't match my alleged symptoms."
"If he asks my doctor even once, he will know my oxygen levels are dropping."
"If he just looks at the medical report on my nightstand, he will see the word: Cancer."
"But he won't. He didn't even look."
With a sharp gasp, I clutched the diary to my chest, my knuckles white as the paper crumpled under my grip.
During those six months, it wasn't like I hadn't entered our bedroom.
But every time I did, I was too busy texting Serena!
I had seen that medical report on the nightstand.
I had simply ignored it, assuming it was just another one of Elena's pathetic ploys to get my attention!
Just as the tidal wave of regret threatened to drown me, the phone in my pocket buzzed.
Serena flashed on the screen.
I stared at the name for a long time before numbly pressing answer.
"Damian~ why didn't you come see me today?" Serena's voice was sweet and whiny, dripping with her usual fragile helplessness. "The doctor said I can't have any stress. I can't be left alone. You promised me..."
Yesterday, I would have dropped everything and rushed to her.
But now, I stared at the very last line of Elena's diary.
The date was just three days ago.
"He's leaving again to be with Serena. I didn't stop him. I am giving him one last chance."
My throat felt like it was filled with sand.
On the other end, Serena kept coaxing. "Damian? Are you there? My chest feels so tight..."
"If your chest is tight, hire a nurse."
My voice was raspy, carrying a chilling coldness that startled even myself.
Serena froze. "Damian? What... what did you say?"
I didn't give her a chance to explain. I hung up and immediately blocked her number.
The penthouse fell back into dead silence.
I stared at the leather journal on the desk.
I finally saw the last chance Elena had given me.
It wasn't the debt agreement in the garage.
It wasn't her quiet nights.
She had laid my salvation right on the nightstand I passed every single day, right within my reach.
And I had chosen never to look down.
Damian's POV
When I took that diary to Margaret's house, I didn't even get to knock before a voice rang out from inside.
"Don't come in."
The voice was cold and hard.
I stood in the hallway, clutching the diary.
"Margaret, please. I need to see Elena."
"I told you, do not call me that. We are not family."
The door opened a crack. Margaret stood there, her face far calmer than I expected.
My throat tightened.
"Where is she?"
She glanced at the journal in my hands.
"She left you for a reason."
"I know I messed up. I can explain."
"Explain to whom?" She pressed her hand against the doorframe. "To the wife you abandoned over and over? Or to the woman who mortgaged her mother's home for you?"
I froze.
She didn't look at me again.
"She doesn't owe you a meeting."
The door slammed in my face.
I stood in the dim hallway for what felt like hours. I scrolled to the very bottom of my contacts, stopping at Elena's best friend, Julia Stevens.
I begged her for a meeting three times. She finally replied with a single address.
3:00 PM.
A boutique cafe in West Village.
When I arrived, Julia was already seated by the window. A manila folder sat on the table.
She didn't invite me to sit.
"Where is Elena?"
"You really have a talent for asking the most useless questions."
She slid the folder toward me.
"Look at this first."
I opened it.
Inside were printed chat logs.
Between me and Serena.
Starting from the very day Serena returned to New York.
"Damian, I'm scared to sleep alone."
"Don't worry, I'm coming over."
"Won't Elena be mad?"
"She's understanding."
Next page.
"Can we take some money from the new project budget? The doctor says my treatment is due next week."
"I'll handle it."
"Does Elena check the accounts?"
"She doesn't touch the company books."
The veins on the back of my hands bulged.
Julia let out a harsh laugh.
"You certainly sounded confident."
"Where did you get these?"
"She gave them to me."
I looked up.
She glared at me.
"You really thought she was blind?"
The papers rustled as a draft swept through the cafe.
"When... when did she find out?"
"The very first time you wired money to Serena."
My breath caught.
"That's impossible."
"Why? Because you think you're a genius?" She slammed another paper onto the table. "Your company was facing a liquidity crisis back then. The banks were calling in loans, and investors were breathing down your neck. While she was out begging clients for you, she discovered you were using her mortgage money to feed Serena."
It was the mortgage record.
The address, the signature, the exact amount.
Everything was laid bare.
I stared at Elena's signature, my finger brushing against the ink.
"Why didn't she confront me?"
"She did."
Julia's voice was razor-sharp.
"And you told her Serena was dying and told her to stop being so petty."
My heart stopped.
I remembered. One evening, Elena had stood at my study door, asking why a transaction was marked as 'medical advancement.'
I was texting Serena at that exact moment.
I hadn't even looked up.
I had said, Elena, can you please try to be a decent human being?
The memory crawled out of the past, suffocating me.
Julia spread the chat logs across the table.
"You claimed you were just doing a good deed. Meanwhile, you bypassed project approvals. You gave Serena Elena's personal client list so Serena could use your name to secure deals. You even had your doctor monitor Elena's records to make sure she wasn't snooping around Serena."
I slammed my hands on the table, standing up.
"Stop. That's enough."
My sleeve caught my coffee cup, sending the dark liquid splashing across the wood.
She didn't flinch.
"It's not enough."
She pulled a bank statement from the very bottom of the folder.
"This wire transfer was sent to Sterling Group the day after Elena mortgaged her mother's house. Three days later, you wired a third of it to Serena."
I stared at the numbers, my lips trembling.
"I... I was just lending it to her. She needed it."
"And did she pay it back?"
I couldn't answer.
Julia looked at me, her eyes devoid of any pity.
"Elena had all of this months ago. She was waiting for you to tell her the truth."
My throat felt tight, dry.
"Why did she give these to you?"
"Because she was terrified she would be weak enough to forgive you."
She tossed a wet napkin onto the spilled coffee.
"She asked me to keep a copy. She said, 'If I ever start believing his lies again, show me this and wake me up.'"
My hands slowly lost their strength.
The papers lay scattered across the wet table.
I had always thought Elena was quiet because she was weak, because she didn't know how to fight.
But every single time she had remained silent, she had noted down a date and filed away a piece of evidence.
"Where is she?" my voice cracked. "I just want to talk to her. Just five minutes."
Julia gathered her things, leaving a copy of the mortgage document on the table.
"You don't even remember what you signed, do you?"
I looked up.
"What do you mean?"
She grabbed her bag and walked past me.
"Go back to your office, Damian. And stop looking for her."
The cafe door opened, and the cold New York wind rushed in.
I looked down at the paper.
Right next to Elena's signature was my own handwriting from years ago.
I had written:
"I hereby acknowledge and guarantee this capital injection into Sterling Group."
My name was written right next to hers.
A stolen future.
A name I had personally dragged through the mud.
Damian's POV
By the time the emergency board meeting started, my chair at the head of the table had already been removed.
The head of the conference table was empty.
I pushed the doors open. Everyone looked up, only to quickly avert their eyes.
My proxy stood by the projector screen, a stack of files in his hand.
I walked in, my face cold.
"Who authorized this meeting?"
The proxy looked up.
"Ms. Vance."
"Where is she?"
"Ms. Vance will not be attending."
I glared at him. "Tell her to get down here and face me."
The proxy opened a folder. "The meeting has officially begun. You are welcome to observe, Mr. Sterling, but you no longer hold voting rights."
The room was dead silent.
I let out a harsh laugh. "I founded this company."
"You are currently still listed as a registered partner," the proxy replied in a calm, robotic voice. "However, Ms. Vance is now the majority shareholder and primary creditor."
The screen lit up.
Shareholder restructuring records.
Debt transfer files.
Foreclosure triggers.
Page after page, the black ink nailed me to the wall.
I stepped forward, slamming my hands onto the table. "She did all of this behind my back! It's illegal!"
The proxy looked at the board members. "All documents were processed through legal proxy channels. The funding sources are fully verified, and the signatures are authentic."
"I never signed off on this!"
"Actually, you did."
The moment those words left his mouth, several board members lowered their heads.
I snapped my gaze toward the Director of Operations. His face was pale, and he refused to make eye contact.
The proxy continued reading.
"First item on the agenda: the immediate removal of Damian Sterling from all executive and managerial positions within Sterling Group."
My eyes flared. "You wouldn't dare."
"Second item: the freezing of all corporate assets under Damian Sterling's name."
"Say that again!"
"Third item: the initiation of a forensic audit to investigate all suspicious fund transfers over the last three years."
I snatched the documents from the table and tore them in half, throwing them into the air.
The white papers fluttered down like snow.
"I built this place!" I roared.
No one spoke.
I looked at their silent faces, my chest heaving.
These were the people who used to line up outside my office for a signature.
Who waited for my nod of approval.
Who called me Mr. Sterling with practiced reverence.
Today, they sat in their expensive chairs, watching a stranger kick me out of my own kingdom.
The proxy bent down and picked up the torn resolution.
"Mr. Sterling, the flow of capital is very clear."
My temple throbbed.
The proxy placed the paper back on the table. "Every agreement you signed carried Ms. Vance's financial backing."
"Shut up!"
"Including the initial round of funding, the bridge loans, the mortgage documents, and the VC debt agreement."
I lunged forward, grabbing the proxy by his collar.
The security guards stationed at the door immediately rushed in, pinning my arms behind my back.
Gasps echoed through the room.
I wrenched myself free from one guard and pointed a finger at the board. "If you sign this today, I will make sure every single one of you is fired tomorrow!"
Finally, one elderly director spoke up.
"Damian... the forensic audit team is already in the building."
The use of my first name felt like a physical blow.
I stared at him, and he slowly looked away.
"We have to protect ourselves."
The blood drained from my face.
Protect themselves.
I understood now.
Elena didn't need to show up.
She didn't need to yell.
She had simply fed the evidence into the corporate machine and let these greedy bastards tear me apart to save their own skins.
The proxy handed the final resolution to the secretary.
"All in favor?"
One hand went up.
Then another.
Then the entire table.
I stared at their raised hands, my fists clenching so hard they shook.
Years ago, when I took Elena to meet our very first investor, she had sat beside me and gently filled in every blank I left in the presentation.
The investor had said, Your wife is sharper than you, Damian.
I had laughed it off. She doesn't know anything about business. She's just here for moral support.
Elena had simply sorted her papers, saying nothing to defend herself.
Now, she didn't have to.
The entire boardroom was voting on her behalf.
"The resolution passes," the proxy announced, shutting the folder. "Mr. Sterling, please hand over your access badge and company seals."
I ripped the badge from my chest and slammed it onto the table.
"Tell Elena to come get them herself."
The proxy didn't move.
The guard took a step forward. "Mr. Sterling, please leave the premises."
I glared at him. "You're kicking me out?"
The guard's face remained entirely blank. "It's company policy."
Another guard grabbed my shoulder.
As they dragged me out, not a single person in that room stood up to stop them.
I struggled. "Let go of me!"
The employees in the hallway scrambled out of the way.
They dragged me past the executive suite.
The nameplate on my door hadn't even been changed yet.
I caught my reflection in the glass door. My suit was rumpled, my collar crooked, and my face looked like that of a defeated dog.
The elevator doors opened.
The guard ushered me inside. "Mr. Sterling, your personal belongings will be packed and sent to your registered address."
"Who gave you permission to touch my things?!"
The doors slid shut.
No one answered.
The wind outside the building was freezing.
I stood on the pavement, my phone buzzing incessantly in my pocket.
The screen lit up.
A text from Serena: "Damian, why hasn't my therapist's fee been paid yet? They said they'll cancel my appointment if we don't pay today."
I stared at it.
Another text popped up: "Are you still mad about Elena? She's just trying to control you. Don't let her get to you."
My thumb hovered over the screen.
After a long time, I locked the phone.
The corporate logo of Sterling Group loomed high above, cold and imposing.
For the first time in my life, I was standing on the outside.
Damian's POV
The first place I went after being kicked out of Sterling Group was the investment firm.
I was still wearing yesterday's suit. My sleeve was torn from where the guard had grabbed me, and my tie was askew.
The receptionist made me wait in the lobby from morning until late afternoon. Finally, a junior project manager came out to meet me.
He didn't even invite me into a conference room. He just sat opposite me in the open reception area.
"Mr. Sterling, we are aware of your situation."
I glared at him. "I want to see your managing partner."
"He is unavailable."
"That wasn't his attitude when he wanted me to sign that debt agreement."
The manager placed a document on the glass table. "The foreclosure has been initiated. We will not be releasing any further capital."
I let out a bitter laugh. "How much did Elena Vance pay you?"
"Ms. Vance did not contact us directly," the manager replied smoothly. "She utilized Cypress Capital as her financial advisor."
My heart did a violent flip. "Cypress Capital?"
"Yes. Their equity transfer has already been registered. Mr. Sterling, nobody in New York is going to cross Cypress Capital for you."
The words were spoken softly, but they crushed me.
I sat frozen on the sofa, my nails biting into my palms.
I knew Cypress Capital. They were one of the most ruthless private equity firms in Manhattan. I had no idea Elena even knew they existed, let alone had them in her pocket.
The manager stood up.
"If you wish to dispute this, please have your legal counsel contact our compliance department."
"I just need a short-term bridge loan. Just a couple of million."
"Mr. Sterling," the manager said, picking up the folder. "All your personal and corporate assets have been frozen."
By the time I was escorted out of the building, the sun had set.
I stood on the sidewalk, dialing Serena's number.
The first call went straight to voicemail.
The second was declined.
On the third, a cold, automated voice told me the number was no longer in service.
I caught a cab to the luxury condo I had rented for her.
The building was a high-rise in Chelsea, quiet and exclusive.
Serena had complained about the street noise, so I had paid extra to have double-pane acoustic glass installed. She had told me she was terrified of being locked out, so I had kept a spare key hidden behind the fire extinguisher in the hallway.
The space behind the extinguisher was empty now.
And the lock on the door had been changed.
I buzzed the intercom repeatedly, but there was no answer.
The building manager walked up the corridor, looking at me with a look of pity and discomfort. "Mr. Sterling, Miss Morrow moved out."
"When?"
"The afternoon your company's restructuring made the news."
My hand remained glued to the smart lock. "Who helped her move?"
"Two guys from a moving company. Miss Morrow said she wouldn't be returning and explicitly told us not to let any 'unauthorized individuals' up to the floor."
Unauthorized.
The word echoed in my head.
The manager added, "She left in such a hurry she didn't even ask for her security deposit back."
The hallway lights flickered off.
I stood in the darkness, my phone screen glowing. There was still no reply from Serena.
I suddenly remembered the look Elena had given me in the garage.
She hadn't cried. She hadn't screamed.
She had known Serena would run the second the money dried up.
Only I was stupid enough to keep paying medical bills for someone who already had her bags packed.
Late that night, I dragged my suitcase to the dingy studio apartment I had lived in before I started Sterling Group.
The wallpaper in the hallway was peeling, and a water bill warning was taped to the door.
The key jammed twice in the rusty lock. I forced it open, and the smell of damp air rushed to greet me.
The cheap bed was still there.
The scratched wooden desk was still there.
Even the broken chair by the window was still there.
I had brought Elena here once.
Back when Sterling was just an idea and I couldn't even afford a co-working space.
Elena had sat at that scratched desk, rewriting my pitch deck until the sun came up.
The next day, she had walked me into my first pitch.
I had walked out with my first check.
But later, when I told the story to reporters, I always said, I built this empire with my own bare hands.
I pushed my suitcase against the wall and sat on the edge of the mattress.
The springs creaked under my weight.
My phone buzzed.
Someone had forwarded me Elena's social media post.
It was a photo of her standing on a beach in the Hamptons. Her red dress billowed in the wind against a backdrop of endless blue water.
The caption was simple:
"A beautiful day."
I stared at the picture.
She hadn't looked back.
She didn't mention me.
She didn't mention Sterling Group.
I realized with a crushing weight that Elena didn't even care enough to show me her pain.
The screen went dark.
I was entirely alone in the damp studio apartment with an unpacked suitcase and my own regrets.
Elena's POV
Three months later, I took over a boutique consulting firm in Soho.
It was a small operation, housed in a charming but weathered pre-war building.
The reception desk was just a simple oak table, the conference room doors had scratches, and the accounting software was hopelessly outdated.
I spent the first two weeks auditing the books.
By the third week, I rewrote our standard contract templates and began reaching out to clients.
Within a month, my desk was piled high with new project files.
All the crisis management, negotiations, financing, and auditing skills I had used to build Damian's dream were finally being used for my own name.
When my assistant brought in my new business cards, I stared at them for a long time.
Elena Vance.
Managing Partner, Vance Consulting.
No Sterling Group.
No "Wife of Damian Sterling."
I slid the cards into a sleek silver case and snapped it shut.
Our launch celebration was merged with a networking gala hosted by one of our major partners.
I arrived a bit late. As I walked in, a group of old acquaintances was gathered near the bar.
When they saw me, their faces turned slightly awkward.
"Elena... long time no see."
The way they addressed me had changed.
I raised my glass of sparkling water and nodded. "Good to see you."
Midway through the evening, the host walked over with a tall man in a tailored suit.
"Elena, this is Ethan Black from Cypress Capital. His team will be overseeing the M&A pipeline we're partnering on."
Ethan Black wore a charcoal-grey suit. He held a neat business card in his hand.
When he saw me, he paused.
"Elena Vance?"
I looked up. "Do we know each other?"
He smiled warmly. "Columbia Business School, the annual debate championship. You were the third speaker. You locked the opposing team into a corner so tight they couldn't speak for ten seconds."
I hadn't expected anyone to remember that.
My grip on my glass relaxed slightly. "That was a lifetime ago."
"Not that long," he said, handing me his card. "I was in the audience. My professor told me to study your pacing."
The host chimed in, "What a small world! You two are alumni."
I looked at the card.
Ethan Black.
Managing Director, Cypress Capital.
The name was printed in clean, minimalist font.
He looked at me. "I haven't seen you around the Manhattan circuit these past few years."
His question was gentle.
There was no prying.
No pity.
I stared at the condensation on my glass. "I was busy building a runway for someone who didn't deserve it."
He didn't push for details.
"Well, you're back now. That's all that matters."
The warm lights of the venue caught his sharp profile. He stood tall, projecting a quiet, steady confidence.
I had heard too many empty promises from men in my life.
Damian had promised to remember my sacrifice forever.
Damian had promised half of everything.
Damian had promised I would never have to worry.
His words had been grand and empty.
Ethan Black simply offered a card.
"Let me know if your team needs anything for the upcoming integration," he said. "We will follow your protocols. I won't go over your head."
I looked up into his eyes.
Those words made me quiet for a moment.
He didn't say he would help me.
He said he would respect my protocols.
Treating me as an equal partner was far more reassuring than any empty sweet talk.
"Thank you," I said, sliding his card into my silver case. "I look forward to working with you."
He nodded. "Likewise."
Two weeks later, I signed my first independent contract under Vance Consulting.
On the day of the signing, my assistant laid the contract before me and uncapped a Montblanc pen, placing it by my right hand.
The client line did not read Sterling Group.
The consultant line did not carry anyone else's name.
I signed my name.
As I finished the last stroke, there was a knock on the door.
My assistant walked in, unable to hide the excitement in her voice. "Elena, Cypress Capital just confirmed. Mr. Black said they are ready to initiate the kickoff next Monday."
I closed the folder.
The silver card case on my desk caught the light, Ethan's card peeking out slightly.
This time, I didn't push it back in.
"Notify the team. Kickoff meeting tomorrow at 9:00 AM."
My assistant nodded and left.
I picked up the signed contract.
This time, the victory belonged entirely to me.
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