
After My Husband Controlled My Career, I Fought Back
Chapter 2
The call came on a Tuesday.
My agent, Dana, left me a voicemail at seven in the morning, and I could hear her trying not to sound too excited, which meant she was very excited. I called her back from the parking lot of my gym, still in my workout clothes, coffee going cold in my hand.
"Crimson Tide," she said. "Indie thriller. They want you for the supporting lead. Starts shooting in three weeks."
"Who's the director?"
"Joel Marsh. He's good, Sunny. Like, actually good."
"Who's the lead?"
A pause. The kind that means she already knew I wasn't going to love the answer.
"Tiffany Rose."
I looked at the gym parking lot. A pigeon was eating something off the asphalt. The morning was gray and flat.
"Send me the script," I said.
It was a good script. That was the problem. The kind of script you don't say no to when you're still building something from nothing. My character had three scenes that could actually do something. I read it twice, made notes in the margins, and signed the contract by Thursday.
I told myself Tiffany Rose was a professional. I told myself I was being paranoid.
I was not being paranoid.
---
She was waiting for me on the first day.
Not literally — she was across the soundstage, talking to Joel, her hand on his arm in that easy way that meant she had already established the geometry of this set and where everyone fit inside it. But the moment I walked through the door, she looked up. And she smiled.
It was a good smile. Warm. Practiced.
She crossed the floor to me with her arms slightly open, like we were old friends.
"Sunny." She said my name like she was tasting something pleasant. "I watched that clip about forty times. You were so sharp. I told Joel, I said, whoever she is, she's got something real."
"Thanks," I said.
"I mean it." Her eyes did a quick pass over my face. Cataloguing. "It's going to be so fun working together."
"Looking forward to it."
She squeezed my arm once and drifted back toward Joel.
I set my bag down at my station and straightened the script on the table in front of me. My fingers were steady. I had learned, in three years of sitting in rooms where I wasn't supposed to matter, how to keep my face from doing anything useful.
I gave it forty minutes.
That's how long it took before I watched her lean close to Joel near the monitor bank, her voice low, her expression carefully concerned. Joel glanced at me once. Just once. Then he nodded at something she said.
I looked back at my script.
I started keeping a list in my phone that night. Not for anyone else. Just so I could see it clearly, the shape of it, instead of letting it blur into something I could talk myself out of.
*Day 1. Director glance after Tiffany conversation. Duration: approx. 4 minutes of conversation.*
---
By the end of the first week, the list had eleven entries.
A blind item ran in a column I recognized — the kind of column that never named sources and always somehow knew things. *Which newly viral nobody landed a plum indie role after a certain A-list director's assistant made a very personal phone call?* The implication was clear enough. Dana called me furious. I told her to let it go.
"Sunny —"
"Let it go," I said again. "Not yet."
The crew had been friendly on day one. By day five, the PA who'd brought me coffee without being asked had stopped making eye contact. The hair stylist who'd laughed at my joke about the call sheet was suddenly very busy whenever I sat in her chair. It was subtle. It was surgical. It was the kind of thing you couldn't prove and couldn't fight directly without looking insane.
I ate lunch alone and read my sides and added to the list.
I had learned something in my past life, in all those years of waiting in an apartment for a man who never came home: silence is not the same as surrender. Sometimes silence is just you, watching, until you understand exactly what you're dealing with.
I understood Tiffany Rose by day nine.
---
The underwater sequence was scheduled for the end of week two.
The shot required me to be submerged in a tank while Tiffany's character held me down from above — a struggle scene, choreographed, with a safety diver positioned off-camera and a clear signal system. Three taps on the tank wall meant stop. Every department head had been briefed. We'd done a dry run that morning.
I was not afraid of the water. I had made sure of that.
I went under.
The first thirty seconds were fine. The choreography was clean. Through the distortion of the water I could see the camera, the lights, the blurred shape of the safety diver holding position.
Then Tiffany's hands pressed down harder.
I tapped the signal.
The hands didn't move.
I tapped again. Three times. The agreed signal. Clear. Unmistakable.
The hands pressed harder.
My lungs started to burn. Not the mild discomfort of a long hold — the real thing, the deep animal thing, the thing that doesn't negotiate. The water above me was white with bubbles and I could see Tiffany's face through it, blurred and calm, and I thought, with a clarity that surprised me: *she knows exactly what she's doing.*
The safety diver moved. I felt the hands release. I came up.
I didn't cough. I didn't gasp. I gripped the edge of the tank and I breathed, once, twice, and I listened to the set erupt around me — someone shouting, someone else on a radio, Joel's voice cutting through from somewhere behind the monitors.
Tiffany was already climbing down from her platform. Her expression was arranged into something that looked like concern.
"Oh my God, Sunny, are you okay? I don't know what happened, I thought I heard the signal but —"
I pulled myself out of the tank.
Water ran off me in sheets. My feet hit the concrete floor. I walked toward her, and I watched her read something in my face that made her take one small step back.
I hit her hard enough that she went sideways into the platform railing.
The set went completely silent.
Tiffany's hand came up to her mouth. When she pulled it away, there was blood on her lip. She stared at me. For the first time since I'd met her, her expression was not arranged into anything at all.
I looked at her for a moment.
"Signal was clear," I said.
I walked back to my station, picked up my towel, and sat down.
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