
After My Husband Controlled My Career, I Fought Back
Chapter 1
The kitchen light buzzed like a dying fly.
I sat at Gideon's table with a pen in my hand and a sheet of cheap notebook paper in front of me. The studio apartment smelled the way it always smelled in East LA. Old coffee. Damp drywall. The faint metal of the radiator he could never get fixed.
In the next room, he was sleeping. I could hear him breathing through the thin door. Slow. Steady. Trusting.
Tomorrow we were supposed to drive to the courthouse.
I flexed my fingers. They were cold. I had been cold for years, only I hadn't realized it until I died.
I started writing.
*Gideon. By the time you read this, I'll be gone.*
The pen scratched. My handwriting came out neater than it had any right to be. I wrote about the rent. About the spare key under the planter. I did not write about the rest of it. I did not write, *I already lived this with you, and it ended with me alone on the bathroom floor while you were on a red carpet across the country.* I did not write, *I loved you so much I forgot where I ended.*
I just wrote: *Don't come find me. Please.*
I folded the paper twice. I set it next to his keys. The keys had a little brass charm on them, a tiny film clapboard. I had bought it for him last Christmas. The first time around. I touched it once with my fingertip and pulled my hand back like it burned.
In the bedroom doorway, I let myself look at him.
He was on his side. One arm under the pillow. His face had that quiet he only ever showed when he was asleep, the lines in his forehead gone smooth. He looked younger than the man I'd watched walk away from me a thousand mornings.
I almost said his name.
Instead I picked up my bag, slid out the door, and pulled it shut behind me without a click.
The stairwell smelled like piss and rain. My heels made too much noise. On the sidewalk, the dark felt huge. A cab rolled past with its light off, and for one second I thought, *if it stops, I'll go back.*
It didn't stop.
I walked.
---
Three years.
That's how long it takes to become someone else if you do it on purpose.
I took every audition I could get to. I played a barista with two lines. A corpse on a procedural. A bridesmaid whose name nobody bothered to print on the call sheet. I started showing up fifteen minutes early to every set, sitting in the makeup chair with a paper cup of black coffee, watching the day get built around me before anyone clocked I was already there.
Thursdays at four, I sat in Dr. Voss's office.
"Tell me about the nightmare," she said, every week, in that calm, unhurried voice.
"Same one," I said. "I'm in an apartment. I can't get the door open."
"Are you trying to get out, or trying to let someone in?"
I looked at the carpet for a long time.
"I don't know yet," I said.
She wrote something down. She never pushed. That was the thing I paid her for.
I also learned to swim. I went to a pool in Glendale at six in the morning before anyone was there and I taught my body to stop fighting the water. The first time I floated on my back without panicking, I cried so hard I had to fake a coughing fit for the lifeguard.
I didn't watch his movies. I knew when they came out anyway. The whole world told me.
---
The New York premiere was Finley Sanders' idea, except Finley Sanders didn't know it was about me yet.
I went as my agent's plus-one. Borrowed dress, borrowed earrings, an updo that pulled at my scalp. The theater on the Upper West Side was lit up gold, and the carpet outside was so loud with flashbulbs it made the air taste electric. I kept my head down and my smile small. I was nobody. That was still the plan.
Inside, the seats were velvet and too warm. The host on stage was making jokes I wasn't listening to. I was thinking about my call time tomorrow.
Then a spotlight hit my face.
"Row F, seat twelve, come on up."
My agent shoved me before I could process it. People around me clapped. I stood. My heels felt wrong. I walked toward the stage with the lights so bright I couldn't see past the first row.
At the microphone, a man was waiting.
Dark suit. No tie. Hands in his pockets like he had all the time in the world. The kind of stillness that makes a room reorganize itself around a person.
Gideon Price.
The audience made a sound like one long inhale.
He didn't smile when he saw me. He didn't do anything that would have read on camera. But his eyes did something I had only ever seen them do once, in a kitchen, three years ago, when he asked me if I wanted Chinese food.
They softened.
"Hi," he said into the mic. Easy. Warm. For the audience. "What's your name?"
"Sunny."
"Sunny." He let it sit there. Tasted it. "That's a good name."
The crowd laughed, charmed.
He turned, just slightly, so his shoulder cut me out of the wider shot. So that what came next was almost only for me.
"Sunny," he said again, lower. "I've been waiting a long time to say this in public. I think you're the most interesting person in any room you walk into. I'd like the chance to prove I noticed."
My hand straightened the mic stand without my permission.
The theater was so quiet I could hear the projector cooling.
I leaned in.
"Mr. Price," I said, and my own voice came back to me through the speakers, calm, almost amused. "I think you've confused noticing with being noticed. They're not the same job."
A beat.
"And I'm not auditioning."
The gasp came first. Then the laugh. Then the kind of clapping that means *holy shit.*
Gideon's mouth moved. Not a smile. Something sharper. Like a man who had just been handed exactly what he came for.
I walked off the stage.
---
By the time the cab dropped me at the hotel, my phone had eighteen percent battery and four thousand new followers.
By morning it was four hundred thousand.
The clip was everywhere. *SUNNY WHO?* one headline screamed. *Mystery Woman Demolishes Gideon Price On Live Television.* My agent called me crying. Then laughing. Then crying again.
The comments came in waves. Half of them wanted me dead for embarrassing him. Half of them were buying me drinks I would never receive.
I sat on the hotel bed in yesterday's mascara and read them all.
Someone wrote, *who does this nobody think she is?*
I typed back, without thinking, *Working on it. Stay tuned.*
It got two hundred thousand likes before I'd finished my coffee.
My phone buzzed again. Unknown number. No message. Just a single missed call that lasted exactly one ring.
I knew who it was.
I set the phone face down on the nightstand and looked at the ceiling for a long time.
This time, I told myself, I keep walking.
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