
After His Heartless Betrayal
Chapter 1
The studio felt like a tomb at this hour, all chrome and glass surfaces reflecting the dim security lighting back at me in fractured pieces. My heels clicked against the polished floors as I made my way through the maze of corridors, past darkened offices and silent editing bays. Tomorrow would be the season finale—the culmination of months of work, sleepless nights, and careful orchestration. But tonight, I just needed to retrieve the contracts I'd forgotten in my rush to leave earlier.
The security guard had nodded at me with familiar recognition when I'd badged in. "Working late again, Ms. Ryan?" he'd asked, and I'd managed a tired smile. If only he knew how many nights I'd spent in this building, crafting something extraordinary while the rest of the world slept.
My office was on the executive floor, but as I approached the elevator bank, I noticed light spilling from beneath Tyler's dressing room door. My steps slowed involuntarily. He'd mentioned having an early morning interview, but what was he doing here so late? A flutter of concern mixed with curiosity made me pause.
Then I heard his laugh—that rich, warm sound that had first drawn me to him months ago. But tonight, something in its tone made my skin prickle with unease.
"God, Murphy is so pathetically naive," Tyler's voice carried through the door, clear as a bell. "She actually thinks I love her."
The words hit me like ice water. My hand froze halfway to the door handle, my breath catching in my throat.
"You're terrible," came another voice—female, sultry, amused. Poppy Rodriguez. My mind struggled to process why she would be in Tyler's dressing room at this hour. "But you're right. She's been so easy to manipulate."
"The woman has been bankrolling my entire lifestyle," Tyler continued, his voice dripping with contempt. "The penthouse, the car, those ridiculous watches she keeps buying me. All while thinking she's being subtle about it. As if I don't know exactly how much everything costs."
My legs felt unsteady. The contracts in my hand crumpled as my grip tightened involuntarily. This couldn't be happening. Not Tyler. Not the man who'd held me after my nightmares about my mother, who'd promised me we were building something real together.
"Well, after tomorrow, you won't need her money anymore," Poppy's voice turned calculating. "Once the network executives see how perfectly we work together, how much chemistry we have on screen, they'll have no choice but to make you executive producer. And me as the show's permanent star."
"Exactly. Murphy's been useful, but she's served her purpose." Tyler's tone was so casual, so dismissive, as if he were discussing the weather. "She's too soft anyway. Always worried about the 'integrity' of the show, about giving everyone a fair chance. This business isn't about fairness—it's about ratings and power."
A rustling sound came from within the room, followed by Poppy's delighted giggle. "You know what the best part is? That precious manuscript of her mother's that she keeps locked in her desk drawer? I may have accidentally spilled coffee all over it last week when I was in her office."
"You didn't." Tyler sounded impressed rather than horrified.
"Oh, I did. Every single page. The ink ran like tears." Poppy's voice was pure venom now, stripped of all pretense. "She hasn't found it yet, but when she does... well, let's just say she'll be too devastated to focus on stopping us."
The world tilted sideways. My mother's manuscript—her final gift to me, the only piece of her writing that survived her illness—destroyed out of pure malice. My free hand instinctively went to my throat, where my mother's ring hung on a delicate chain beneath my blouse.
"You're brilliant," Tyler murmured, and I heard the unmistakable sound of a kiss. "By this time tomorrow, Murphy Ryan will be nothing but a footnote in our success story."
Somehow, my feet carried me away from that door, away from the sound of their laughter and planning. I moved like a ghost through the corridors, muscle memory guiding me to my office while my mind reeled with the magnitude of their betrayal.
I sank into my leather chair, not bothering to turn on the lights. The city sparkled beyond my floor-to-ceiling windows, oblivious to the devastation unfolding in this darkened room. My hands trembled as I reached for the desk drawer where I kept my mother's manuscript, already knowing what I would find.
The pages were ruined, just as Poppy had promised. Coffee stains had turned my mother's elegant handwriting into brown smudges, her final words to me obliterated by calculated cruelty.
I sat in the darkness, holding the destroyed pages, feeling something cold and sharp crystallizing in my chest. The naive woman who had walked into this building tonight was gone, dissolved like ink in coffee. In her place sat someone harder, someone who understood that mercy was a luxury she could no longer afford.
My fingers found my mother's ring through the fabric of my blouse, and for the first time since entering this building, I smiled. Tyler and Poppy thought they knew who they were dealing with. They had no idea what storm they'd just unleashed.
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