
After His Emmy Speech Thanked Her, I Took Everything
Chapter 3
Ryan's words hung in the air between us, cold and final. I stood frozen at the bar, the termination papers untouched before me, as he walked away with Madison clinging to his arm. Five years of my life dismissed in less than five minutes.
I twisted my mother's ring, forcing myself to breathe. The Wellington in me wouldn't allow a public breakdown. Not here. Not now.
"Another champagne, miss?" A server appeared at my elbow, his expression carefully neutral. He'd witnessed enough Hollywood dramas to know when to avert his eyes.
"No, thank you," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt.
I scanned the room, noting how quickly the industry vultures had moved on to other prey. No one approached me—I was yesterday's news, a cautionary tale in the making. The woman who'd been so publicly discarded she might as well have a scarlet 'D' for 'Dumped' emblazoned on her chest.
I was contemplating a dignified exit when I spotted Madison breaking away from Ryan's side, heading toward the champagne fountain. Something in her predatory smile as she glanced my way told me she wasn't finished with me yet. Against my better judgment, I remained where I was, bracing myself.
She approached with the confidence of someone who believed they'd already won, two fresh glasses of champagne in her manicured hands. The diamonds on her wrists caught the light, throwing tiny rainbows against the cream-colored walls.
"Sophia," she purred, extending a glass toward me. "I thought you might need this."
I didn't take it. "I'm fine, thank you."
"Are you?" Her smile widened, revealing perfect teeth. "Because from where I'm standing, you look like someone whose entire world just collapsed."
Around us, conversations quieted as people sensed the brewing confrontation. Madison noticed too, playing to her audience.
"It must be so hard," she continued, her voice dripping with mock sympathy, "investing in someone else's dream only to be left behind when they outgrow you."
I remained silent, which only encouraged her.
"Your management style is so... modest." She emphasized the word like it was a disease. "Did you really think you could compete with Victoria Blackwood? With real power players?"
The crowd had grown, forming a loose circle around us. I could feel their collective breath held in anticipation of my breakdown.
"Ryan was never yours to claim," Madison added, her voice hardening. "His talent was always going to outshine your little management capabilities."
Something shifted inside me. The part I'd been suppressing for five years—the Wellington heiress trained from birth to command rooms and destroy opponents—stirred to life.
"Interesting perspective," I replied, my voice cool and measured. "Especially considering 'The Last Witness' was greenlit specifically because of my relationship with Paramount. Or that the Emmy submission package I personally compiled highlighted the very performance techniques Ryan developed under my guidance."
Madison's smile faltered slightly.
"And as for box office numbers," I continued, "Ryan's films have shown a 340% increase in return since I became his manager. Numbers Victoria Blackwood has personally called 'impressive' at last year's producer's guild."
A murmur rippled through our audience. Madison's face flushed, her composure cracking.
"You think anyone cares about your little spreadsheets and connections?" she hissed, stepping closer. "He chose me. On national television. While you sat there like a pathetic, invisible nobody."
The venom in her voice was startling. This wasn't just about Ryan or career advancement—Madison genuinely wanted to hurt me, to see me break.
"Perhaps," I said softly, "but at least I know who I am."
Something in my calm response pushed her over the edge. With a sound of pure rage, Madison hurled her champagne glass directly at my face.
Time seemed to slow. I partially turned, but not quickly enough. The crystal edge caught my cheek, slicing a thin line across my skin before shattering against the bar behind me. Champagne drenched the front of my dress, the expensive fabric immediately clinging to my skin.
A collective gasp rippled through the room. The music seemed to stop, or perhaps it was just the sudden rushing in my ears as I felt warm blood trickle down my cheek.
Madison stood before me, momentarily shocked by her own action, before her lips curved into a triumphant smile.
I touched my fingertips to my cheek, looking at the blood with a strange detachment. In that crystalline moment of perfect clarity, I knew exactly what needed to be done.
The Wellington heiress was done hiding.
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