
After His Emmy Speech Thanked Her, I Took Everything
Chapter 2
My phone buzzed incessantly in my clutch as I made my way backstage, each vibration like a tiny knife twisting in my chest. I didn't need to look at the screen to know what the messages said. The sympathetic glances from crew members told me everything. My humiliation was complete and public.
I maintained my posture—shoulders back, chin slightly raised—as I navigated the labyrinth of corridors. The Wellington in me wouldn't allow for anything less, even as my world collapsed around me.
"Did you see what just happened?" A production assistant whispered to her colleague, not realizing I was within earshot. "Five years together and he didn't even mention her."
"And that thing with Madison Parker? Ice cold," her friend replied, voice dripping with the delicious scandal of someone else's tragedy.
I slipped into a quiet corner and finally checked my phone. The screen was flooded with messages:
*Oh my god, Sophia, are you okay?*
*That was brutal. Call me if you need anything.*
*I always thought he was an asshole. Now everyone knows.*
The industry's vultures were circling, eager to pick at the carcass of my relationship and career. I took a deep breath and twisted my mother's silver ring, centering myself. I would not break. Not here. Not where they could see.
Three hours later, I stood at the edge of the Beverly Hills Hotel ballroom, watching Ryan hold court at the center of the after-party. Madison clung to his arm like she'd been there forever, her red dress a splash of blood against the cream-colored decor. Every laugh, every touch between them was a calculated performance—one they'd clearly rehearsed.
I approached them with measured steps, my face a carefully composed mask. The crowd parted slightly, sensing the impending drama with predatory anticipation.
"Ryan," I said, my voice steady despite the hurricane raging inside me. "Could I speak with you for a moment?"
He turned, his Emmy clutched in one hand, Madison's waist in the other. Something flickered across his face—not guilt, but annoyance at the interruption.
"Sophia," he said, his tone patronizing. "Enjoying the party?"
"Why wasn't I mentioned in your speech?" I asked quietly, refusing to create the scene everyone was expecting.
Madison's laugh cut through the air before Ryan could answer. "Oh honey," she said, her voice dripping with false sympathy, "did you really expect to be? I mean, what exactly did you contribute besides riding his coattails?"
Ryan didn't defend me. Instead, he guided us toward the marble bar, away from the most obvious eavesdroppers. Once there, he reached into his jacket and pulled out a folded document, sliding it across the polished surface.
"I was going to do this tomorrow," he said coldly, "but since you're here..."
I didn't need to unfold the papers to know what they were. Termination of our management contract.
"Brand misalignment," Ryan continued, as if discussing a minor business adjustment rather than ending five years of professional and personal partnership. "Victoria thinks—we think—it's time for a change in direction."
"Victoria," I repeated, the name suddenly illuminating a series of disconnected memories: Ryan's phone buzzing at odd hours. His sudden insistence on attending industry events alone. The mysterious meetings he claimed were "just networking."
"Victoria Blackwood," Madison clarified with a smirk, "only the most powerful woman in entertainment. She saw Ryan's potential. She saw how you were holding him back."
As they spoke, fragments of the past few months rearranged themselves in my mind. The late-night calls Ryan claimed were with his co-star about script changes. The sudden interest in changing his public image. The meetings with "investors" that always seemed to run late.
It hadn't been spontaneous at all. This betrayal had been orchestrated weeks, maybe months in advance. They had planned every detail—including my public humiliation.
I looked at Ryan—really looked at him—and for the first time, I saw him clearly. The man I loved, the man I had built from nothing, had become a stranger wearing a familiar face.
"You won't get away with this," I said softly, not as a threat but as a simple statement of fact.
Ryan laughed, the sound hollow and cruel. "I already have."
As he turned away, arm around Madison, I felt something shift inside me. The part of me that had been playing at normalcy for five years receded, and in its place, something older and colder emerged.
They had no idea who they were dealing with. But they would learn. Soon.
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