
After He Brought His Mistress Home, I Became a CEO's Protégée
Chapter 2
I didn't remember the cab ride to The Plaza Hotel. The world had blurred through my tears as I fled our penthouse, leaving behind the shattered watch, the uneaten anniversary dinner, and five years of a marriage that had slowly poisoned me from within.
Now, in the elegant solitude of a hotel suite I couldn't really afford, I sat motionless on the edge of the king-sized bed. My fingers trembled as they clutched my phone, the screen displaying a dozen missed calls from Alexander. Not to apologize—I knew better than that—but to berate me for my "dramatic display."
The digital clock on the nightstand flipped to 3:17 AM. Sleep remained elusive as my mind replayed the evening in an endless, torturous loop: Isabella's stiletto crushing my gift, Alexander's cold laughter, the marriage certificate curling in flames. The finality of my actions both terrified and liberated me.
"What have I done?" I whispered to the empty room, then immediately corrected myself. "What has *he* done?"
When dawn finally broke, painting the Manhattan skyline in hues of pink and gold, I was still awake. My eyes burned, but a strange calm had settled over me. I reached for my phone and called the one person I knew would answer, regardless of the hour.
"Sarah?" Vanessa's voice was thick with sleep. "What's wrong?"
"Everything," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my voice. "And nothing. I left him, Vanessa."
A beat of silence, then: "Thank God. I'll be there in thirty minutes. Where are you?"
Vanessa arrived at The Plaza in twenty-seven minutes, her hair hastily pulled into a messy bun, determination etched across her features. She hugged me fiercely before pulling back to examine my face.
"You look like hell," she said, then smiled. "But there's something different about you. Something... stronger."
Over room service coffee that neither of us touched, I recounted the previous night's events. Vanessa's expressions shifted from shock to rage to grim satisfaction.
"We're finding you an apartment today," she declared, already scrolling through real estate listings on her phone. "Tribeca. Far enough from his Upper East Side kingdom that you won't accidentally run into him, but still convenient for work."
"I don't have work," I reminded her. I'd abandoned my promising career in advertising when Alexander had suggested—with that persuasive charm that I now recognized as manipulation—that his wife shouldn't need to work.
Vanessa looked up, her eyes glinting with determination. "You will. Eleanor Vance is looking for a new Creative Director at Madison Avenue Agency. I'll set up an interview."
"Eleanor Vance?" My heart skipped. Eleanor was a legend in the industry—brilliant, demanding, and notoriously selective about her team. "She wouldn't see me. I've been out of the game too long."
"You've been creating spec campaigns in secret for two years," Vanessa countered. "I've seen them, Sarah. They're brilliant."
I blinked in surprise. I'd never shown those to anyone—my private rebellion against Alexander's dismissal of my career, hidden in password-protected files on my laptop.
Three hours later, I stood in the reception area of Madison Avenue Agency, clutching my hastily assembled portfolio, wearing a borrowed suit from Vanessa that was slightly too large. My hands trembled as I waited, exhaustion and anxiety battling within me.
When Eleanor Vance emerged from her office, she wasn't what I expected. Shorter than her reputation suggested, with silver-streaked hair and piercing blue eyes that seemed to evaluate every detail of my appearance in seconds.
"Mrs. Hayes," she began.
"Mitchell," I corrected firmly, surprising myself. "Sarah Mitchell."
Something flickered in Eleanor's expression—approval, perhaps. "Ms. Mitchell, then. Show me why I should hire someone who hasn't worked in five years."
I opened my portfolio, revealing campaigns I'd created in stolen moments of loneliness. Campaigns born from the creative spirit Alexander had tried to extinguish. As Eleanor examined each page, her expression remained impassive, but her eyes grew increasingly interested.
"This campaign for the women's shelter," she said, tapping a concept I'd developed for a pro bono project that never materialized. "It's exceptional. Raw. Authentic."
She closed the portfolio and studied me with new intensity. "When can you start?"
My breath caught. "You're offering me the position?"
"Creative Director. Full autonomy over your team and projects." Her lips curved into a slight smile. "I recognize talent when I see it, Ms. Mitchell. And I recognize a woman ready to reclaim her power."
As I accepted her handshake, my phone buzzed with Alexander's name on the screen. For the first time since I'd met him, I let his call go to voicemail without a second thought.
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