Rejected by Three, I Chose Revenge Chapter 14
The evidence spread across my desk like pieces of a puzzle I’d been assembling for years. Bank statements showing regular transfers to Mania Sanite! dating back two decades. Private emails between Richard and his lover, discussing everything from Vivian’s school performances to their shared fears ato
discovery Medical records I’d obtained through Caleb’s connections, proving beyond doubt that Vivian carried Richard’s DNA, not that of Eleanors late husband
My fingers traced the edge of a particularly damning photograph-Richard and Maria embracing outside a hotel in Geneva, taken just six months ago during what he’d claimed was a solo business trip. The timestamp was clear, the faces unmistakable.
“This will destroy him,” I murmured to the empty room, feeling the weight of twenty-three years of lies condensed into manila folders.
Caleb rolled his wheelchair closer, his presence steady and reassuring behind me. “Are you ready for what comes next?”
I turned to meet his gray eyes, seeing my own determination reflected there. “I’ve been ready since the day he forced me into our marriage Tomorrow, the board will see Richard Whitman for what he really is-a fraud who built his empire on lies.”
“And Vivian?”
“She’ll fall with him.” The words tasted like victory and justice combined. “She’s been playing a game she doesn’t even know the rules to.”
But even as I spoke, unease prickled at the base of my skull. Vivian had been too confident lately, too smug. There was something I was missing, some card
she hadn’t shown yet.
The answer came the following evening, delivered through the gleaming windows of the Whitman Group’s executive dining room. I watched from the building across the street as Vivian held court, surrounded by the company’s most powerful board members. Harrison Caldwell, the silver-haired patriarch who’d been Richard’s longest-standing rival. Margaret Sterling, whose investment firm controlled twelve percent of company shares. David Chen, the tech mogul whose approval could make or break any modernization initiative.
Through my binoculars, I could see Vivian’s performance in perfect detail. She wore a conservative navy dress that suggested competence while maintaining her feminine appeal. Her gestures were measured, confident. When she laughed at something Caldwell said, the entire table leaned in, drawn to her magnetic presence.
“She’s good,” Caleb observed from beside me, his own surveillance equipment trained on the dinner party. “Better than I expected.”
“She’s had years to perfect the act,” I replied, watching as Vivian pulled out what appeared to be a presentation folder. “But she’s still playing with incomplete
information.
My phone buzzed with a text from Lucas, who’d managed to plant listening devices in the dining room’s floral arrangements: “She’s presenting financial projections. Claims Richard’s judgment has been compromised by personal issues. Board members are listening.*
I gritted my teeth, watching Vivian gesture animatedly as she no doubt painted herself as the company’s salvation. The irony wasn’t lost on me-she was using the very tactics Richard had taught her, the same manipulation and strategic thinking that had kept her in power all these years
Tomorrow will be interesting, Caleb said, his voice carrying dark promise.
I nodded, but couldn’t shake the feeling that Vivian was more prepared for this battle than any of us realized.
The feeling crystallized into certainty when I returned to the Whitman mansion that night. I’d planned to gather a few personal items before tomorrow’s board meeting, but I found Vivian waiting in my old bedroom, perched on the window seat like a cat who’d caught a particularly satisfying mouse
“Hello, sister, she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. “I was hoping we’d have a chance to chat before tomorrow’s unpleasantness
I kept my expression neutral, though every instinct screamed danger. “Vivian. I didn’t expect to see you here
“Oh, I think you did.” She stood gracefully, her movements predatory despite their elegance. “After all, you’ve been so busy lately Collecting documents. building cases, playing detective. It’s almost admirable, really.”
My blood turned to ice. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Please Vivian laughed, the sound sharp as breaking glass. “Did you really think I wouldn’t notice? The private investigators, the financial audits, the sudden interest in Maria Sanchez’s medical records? You’ve been building quite the dossier on dear old Dad.
She moved closer, her eyes glittering with malicious triumph. “But here’s the thing, Hazel You’re not the only one who’s been planning You’re not the only one who knows how to play the long game”
“What are you saying?”
“I’m saying I’ve known about the baby switch for three years.” The words hit me like physical blows. “I’ve known about Richard’s affair, about Maria being my real mother, about all of it. And instead of having a breakdown like you probably expected, I decided to use it
Vivian’s smile was razor-sharp, predatory. “You see, I realized something important. It doesn’t matter whose blood runs through my veins What matters is who’s earned the right to control the Whitman legacy. And between the two of us, I think we both know who’s been the better daughter
“You’re delusional,” I said, but my voice sounded hollow ever to my own ears.
“Am I? Let’s see… who spent their childhood learning the business from Richard’s knee? Who charmed investors and board members for years? Who buy relationships and alliances while you sulked in corners, feeling sorry for yourself?”
Each word was a carefully aimed dart, designed to find the soft spots in my armor.
“I may not be a Whitman by blood,” Vivian continued, “but I’m a Whitman where it counts. In here.” She tapped her chest, right over her heart “Richard raised me to be his successor, and that’s exactly what I’m going to be.”
The board will not-”
The board will do exactly what I tell them to do.” Her confidence was absolute, terrifying. “Because unlike you, I didn’t spend the last few months burning bridges and making enemies. I spent them building the coalition that will vote Richard out and vote me in.”
She moved to the door, pausing to deliver her final blow. “Tomorrow, when you present your little evidence folder, it won’t matter. The decision will already be made. And when the dust settles, I’ll be CEO of Whitman Group, and you’ll be exactly what you’ve always been-the unwanted daughter nobody cares about.”
The door closed behind her with a soft click, leaving me alone with the devastating realization that I’d underestimated my enemy. Vivian hadn’t been playing defense all these months. She’d been playing offense, and tomorrow’s board meeting wasn’t going to be the triumph I’d planned.
It was going to be a war.
And for the first time since this began, I wasn’t certain I was going to win.

