
After He Brought His Mistress Home, I Became a CEO's Protégée
Chapter 3
My phone buzzed for the twentieth time that morning. Alexander again. I watched his name flash across my screen before silencing it without a second glance. Three days since I'd walked out, and my husband had cycled through every manipulation tactic in his arsenal—from cold fury to wounded innocence to patronizing concern.
"Sarah, this childish tantrum needs to end. Come home where you belong." His latest voicemail dripped with condescension. "You're embarrassing yourself and, more importantly, embarrassing me."
I deleted the message and continued unpacking my meager belongings in my hotel room. I'd left our penthouse with just one suitcase—clothes, toiletries, and my laptop. Everything else felt contaminated by memories I was desperate to escape.
My phone buzzed again. A text this time.
"Isabella thinks you're being ridiculous too. We both agree you should come home and discuss this like adults."
Something cold and hard crystallized in my chest. He was texting me about Isabella's opinions? About my marriage? I blocked his number with trembling fingers.
---
The Hamptons glowed golden in the late afternoon sun as I stepped onto the manicured lawn of Vanessa's family estate. White tents billowed gently in the ocean breeze, champagne flutes clinked, and for the first time in days, I felt like I could breathe.
"There she is!" Vanessa rushed toward me, radiant in her pre-wedding glow. She squeezed my hands. "You came! How are you holding up?"
"I'm surviving," I said, forcing a smile. "Congratulations, by the way. I'm so happy for you and James."
"Don't change the subject," she whispered, linking her arm through mine. "Eleanor called me. Creative Director! I'm so proud of you."
I felt a genuine smile spread across my face. "First day is Monday. I'm terrified."
"You're brilliant," she corrected, steering me toward the champagne. "And speaking of brilliant—" She nodded toward a tall figure by the seafood station. "Marcus Chen is here. Remember him? He was a senior when we were sophomores. Tech genius, now running some AI startup worth billions."
I vaguely recalled a quiet, intense student who'd always been surrounded by admirers in the campus coffee shop. Before I could respond, Vanessa was waving him over.
"Marcus! Come meet my best friend!"
He approached with an easy grace, tall and lean in a perfectly tailored navy suit. His smile was warm, reaching all the way to his dark eyes.
"Sarah Mitchell," he said, his voice deeper than I expected. "I remember you from Professor Harlow's Advanced Design class. Your typography project was incredible."
I blinked in surprise. "You remember that?"
"Hard to forget work that good." He handed me a glass of champagne. "Vanessa mentioned you're joining Madison Avenue Agency as Creative Director. Impressive."
For the next hour, conversation flowed effortlessly between us. We discussed everything from design philosophy to favorite Manhattan hole-in-the-wall restaurants. When he made a dry observation about the tech industry's obsession with unnecessary apps, I laughed—really laughed—for the first time in months.
The sound surprised me so much I nearly spilled my drink.
"What?" Marcus asked, his eyes crinkling at the corners.
"Nothing," I said, still smiling. "I just... I can't remember the last time I laughed like that."
Something in his expression shifted, a gentle understanding that made me feel suddenly vulnerable. Before he could respond, my phone buzzed with a text from Eleanor about Monday's onboarding. I excused myself, promising to return.
As I walked toward the house to find a quiet spot, I caught Marcus watching me, his gaze thoughtful and warm.
---
"This is perfect," I whispered, standing in the center of the sun-drenched Tribeca loft. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the cobblestone street below, and the open floor plan hummed with possibilities.
The real estate agent beamed. "It just came on the market yesterday. Previous tenant was an artist—hence the great light."
I ran my hand along the exposed brick wall, already imagining it adorned with the vibrant abstract paintings Alexander had always dismissed as "chaotic" and "amateur." The kitchen was small but efficient, with open shelving perfect for displaying the colorful ceramic dishes I'd coveted in that SoHo boutique Alexander had pulled me away from.
"I'll take it," I said, surprising myself with my decisiveness.
Two hours later, lease signed and first month's rent paid from my new Madison Avenue Agency salary, I stood in a home décor store, selecting throw pillows in shades of teal, coral, and sunshine yellow—colors Alexander had vetoed from our neutral, beige penthouse.
As I placed my items on the checkout counter, my phone lit up with a text from an unknown number.
"Enjoyed our conversation today. Would love to continue it over dinner sometime. - Marcus"
A flutter of something—anticipation? fear?—stirred in my chest as I stared at his message. The sales clerk cleared her throat gently, waiting for my credit card.
"Sorry," I murmured, handing it over while still looking at my phone.
My finger hovered over the screen, uncertain. It was too soon, wasn't it? I was still legally married, still raw from betrayal, still finding my footing in this new life I was building.
But as I carried my colorful purchases toward my new home—my own home—I couldn't help wondering what it might be like to sit across from someone who remembered my college design project, who made me laugh, who looked at me like I was worth seeing.
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