Conniving Business Partner Tries Stealing My Art Sale Cash and I Publicly Fire Her To Get Justice

Viral | Written by Amelia Rose | Updated on 28 August 2025

With a triumphant smile, my best friend snatched the eight hundred dollars in cash from the counter and declared my hard work was the perfect down payment for the designer bag she deserved.

She was supposed to be my fifty-fifty partner, the “face” of our brand.

I was just the ghost in the workshop, the one covered in sawdust who designed, built, and shipped every single product while she took all the credit. My savings account had become her personal playground, funding a life of boozy lunches and spa weekends disguised as business expenses.

She never imagined the ghost in the workshop was also the one who held every password, and I was about to use them to dismantle her whole life’s work—which was, of course, entirely my own.

The Paper-Thin Partnership: A Receipt for Resentment

The hum of the laser cutter was the only company I kept most nights. It smelled like progress and burnt sugar, a scent I’d come to associate with the thin line between passion and exhaustion. Tonight, it was etching a delicate lace pattern onto a set of walnut coasters, the final piece of a fifty-item order due tomorrow. My order. My design. My machine.

My phone buzzed on the workbench, rattling against a stray piece of sandpaper. It was a Venmo notification. *Chloe requested $125.48. For: 🥂 Business lunch + inspo!*

I stared at the screen, the blue light harsh in the dim workshop. The accompanying photo on her Instagram story, which I’d already seen, featured two artisanal cocktails and a plate of oysters. Her lunch companion was not me, but some influencer I vaguely recognized. I was eating a cold slice of leftover pizza over the sink.

“Inspo,” I muttered to the laser cutter. The machine didn’t answer, just kept methodically carving away the wood I’d paid for.

This was the looming issue, the one that sat like a stone in my gut. Aura & Elm, our boutique, was technically a fifty-fifty partnership. But the numbers didn’t feel like fifty-fifty. The hours didn’t feel like fifty-fifty. And a boozy lunch with a socialite certainly didn’t feel like a business expense, not when I was still trying to recoup the cost of the industrial-grade sander I’d bought last month.

I sighed, rubbing the sawdust from my forehead, and tapped ‘Pay.’ The money vanished from our shared account with a cheerful little *whoosh*. It was easier than arguing. It was always easier than arguing.

The Face of the Brand

The next morning, my phone buzzed again. This time it was an Instagram notification. Chloe had posted.

The photo was gorgeous, I had to admit. It was a flat-lay, artfully arranged on a distressed white-wood background she’d bought for her apartment. It featured the very walnut coasters I’d finished at 2 a.m. The lighting was perfect, catching the intricate, laser-etched details. My details.

The caption read: “Woke up feeling so inspired and just had to bring this new vision to life! ✨ So in love with how our new lace collection is turning out. Every piece tells a story. #AuraAndElm #HandmadeWithLove #CreatorLife”

My fingers tightened around my coffee mug. *Our* new collection. *Woke up feeling inspired.* I had a vision, all right. It was of me, bleary-eyed and covered in a fine layer of wood dust, coaxing the design file to cooperate with the machine’s quirks.

The comments were already rolling in. “OMG Chloe, you are so talented!” “Your vision is everything!” “I can’t believe you make these, they’re stunning!”

Chloe, of course, was replying to each one with breezy charm. “Thank you, darling! It just poured out of me! 😘”

I scrolled until my thumb ached. Not a single mention of my name, the workshop, the laser, the late nights. There was only Chloe, bathed in the warm, flattering glow of stolen credit. I was the ghost in the workshop, and she was the face of my work. The brand’s face.

A Loan Is Not a Loan

“Hey, babe, got a sec?” Chloe’s voice on the phone was a syrupy mix of urgency and casualness, a tone she reserved for when she wanted something.

I was in the middle of packaging the big coaster order, nestled in crinkle-cut paper and tied with twine. “Barely. What’s up?”

“Okay, so, don’t freak out,” she began, the universal preamble to a freak-out-worthy statement. “But my radiator kind of… exploded? It’s a whole thing. The landlord is being a troll, and I need to get it fixed like, yesterday. The thing is, I’m a little short until my parents’ trust thing kicks in next month.”

I paused, a roll of packing tape in my hand. I knew about the “trust thing.” It was a mythical unicorn Chloe invoked whenever real-world finances became inconvenient. “I’m sorry to hear that, Chloe. That sucks.”

“Totally! Anyway, I was thinking, I could just borrow a little from the Aura & Elm account to cover it. Like, maybe a thousand? I’ll pay it back as soon as the trust clears, I swear.”

A thousand dollars. That was our entire budget for materials for the holiday collection. That was the profit from the last three weeks of my sleepless nights. “Chloe, we can’t. That’s our operating capital. We need that for the new leather shipment.”

“Oh, come on, Sarah,” she sighed, the sweetness evaporating. “It’s a loan! It’s our money, isn’t it? Fifty-fifty. You can just, you know, be creative with the budget for a bit. You’re so good at that stuff. Think of it as an investment in keeping your business partner from freezing to death.”

The guilt hit me, right on cue. She knew exactly which buttons to push. I was the practical one, the responsible one. She was the free-spirited artist who couldn’t be bogged down with such trivialities as rent or, apparently, car radiators.

“Fine,” I said, the word tasting like ash. “But you have to pay it back. I’m serious.”

“You’re a lifesaver! I knew you’d understand,” she chirped, her crisis miraculously averted. “Talk soon!” She hung up before I could say another word. An hour later, a thousand dollars disappeared from our account. The “memo” line on the transfer simply said: “Biz expense.”

The Shadow of Doubt

Mark found me staring at the business banking app that night, long after our son, Leo, was asleep. The numbers on the screen seemed to mock me.

“You look like you’re trying to solve cold fusion on your phone,” he said, handing me a glass of wine. He sat beside me on the couch, his presence a warm, solid counterpoint to the anxiety churning in my stomach.

“Worse,” I said. “I’m trying to understand my business partner.”

I explained about the lunch, the Instagram post, the thousand-dollar “loan.” I tried to keep my voice even, clinical, but the frustration bled through.

Mark listened patiently, his expression unreadable until I finished. Then he swirled the wine in his glass. “So, let me get this straight. You put in the seed money from your savings. You do ninety-nine percent of the physical labor. You design all the products. You manage the inventory and shipping.”

“Yes.”

“And Chloe… takes your joint funds for personal expenses, claims your work as her own on social media, and what else? What’s her official contribution?”

“She’s the face,” I said, the words sounding even more ridiculous out loud. “She handles the marketing, the brand identity. She’s the one with the eye, the connections.”

“Her ‘eye’ seems to be firmly fixed on your wallet,” he said, not unkindly. “Sarah, honey. This isn’t a partnership. It’s a parasite.”

His words hung in the air, sharp and true. I wanted to defend her, to bring up the years of friendship, the late-night talks in our dorm room where we first dreamed this all up. But the defense felt hollow. The dream we’d had back then didn’t involve me funding her lifestyle while I ran myself into the ground.

“She’s my best friend,” I whispered.

“Is she?” Mark asked gently, and that was the question I couldn’t answer. It followed me to bed and haunted my dreams, a quiet, persistent shadow of doubt.

The Cracks Begin to Show: An Order of Magnitude

The email landed in my inbox like a golden ticket. It was from a boutique hotel chain, the kind with minimalist decor and thousand-dollar-a-night suites. They’d seen our work—or rather, *Chloe’s* Instagram feed of my work—and wanted to place a custom order.

They wanted two hundred bespoke leather valet trays, debossed with their logo, for their new flagship location. And they needed them in three weeks.

My heart hammered against my ribs. This was it. This was the kind of order that could take Aura & Elm from a side-hustle to a real, sustainable business. It was validation. It was a massive amount of work. It was exactly what I had been hoping for.

I immediately called Chloe, my voice buzzing with an excitement I hadn’t felt in months. “You are not going to believe this,” I said, reading her the email.

“Oh my god, babe! That’s amazing!” she squealed. “I knew my networking was going to pay off. I think I met their marketing director at that gallery opening last month. I totally manifested this!”

I bit back the comment that manifestation doesn’t cut, dye, and stitch two hundred pieces of leather. “It’s a tight deadline,” I said, steering the conversation back to reality. “I’ll need your help. We’ll have to set up an assembly line in the workshop. I can do the cutting and stamping, but I’ll need you for the dyeing and finishing.”

“Totally, totally,” she said, her voice a little distant. “I’m there for you. Just let me clear my schedule. This is huge for us!”

For the first time in a long time, a flicker of hope ignited in me. Maybe this was the turning point. Maybe this huge opportunity would remind her what a real partnership looked like. Maybe we could finally be a team again.

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About the Author

Amelia Rose

Amelia is a world-renowned author who crafts short stories where justice prevails, inspired by true events. All names and locations have been altered to ensure the privacy of the individuals involved.