
After My Husband Left Me for His Paris Mistress
Chapter 4
The sketchbook was nearly full. I flipped through the pages in Marcus's office, my fingertips black with charcoal dust. Each drawing showed the same obsession: garments torn apart and rebuilt, seams exposed like surgical scars, luxury fabrics held together with industrial rivets and raw chain.
"It's called 'The Unraveling,'" I said, sliding the book across his desk.
Marcus didn't touch it immediately. He was eating cold sesame noodles straight from the container, his reading glasses perched on his head. When he finally opened the sketchbook, his chopsticks froze halfway to his mouth.
He turned one page. Then another. The noodles went back in the container.
"This is violent," he said quietly.
"Yes."
"It's angry."
"Yes."
He looked up at me, his dark eyes unreadable. "It's also fucking brilliant." He stood, pacing to the window overlooking the SoHo streets. "The Fashion Week slot is in six weeks. We were going to play it safe—clean lines, neutral palette, appeal to the Bergdorf's buyers." He turned back to me. "But this? This is a war cry. This will either make us or destroy us."
My throat was dry. "So?"
"So we're gambling everything on you, Isabella." He tossed the sketchbook back. "Lead Creative Director. Your vision. Your collection. Your name on the line."
The room tilted slightly. I gripped the edge of his desk, my knuckles whitening. "Marcus—"
"Don't thank me yet," he interrupted. "If this bombs, we both go down. I'm giving you six weeks and the entire production budget. Don't make me regret believing in you."
I left his office with the sketchbook clutched to my chest like armor. In the elevator, alone, I let myself smile. It felt foreign on my face, sharp and unfamiliar.
***
The Garment District on a Tuesday afternoon was controlled chaos. I was hunting for hardware—oversized grommets, brass chains, industrial zippers with teeth like shark jaws. The kind of materials that didn't belong anywhere near a runway. That was the point.
I found what I needed in a cramped shop on 38th Street, the kind of place where the owner spoke three languages and kept his inventory in unmarked bins. I was digging through a box of vintage buckles when I heard it—that voice, shrill and grating, cutting through the din of sewing machines and haggling vendors.
"I need it by Friday, and I'm not paying retail. Don't you know who I am?"
Vivian.
She was at the counter, jabbing a manicured finger at a weary-looking tailor. She wore head-to-toe Gucci—or what was supposed to pass for it. The monogram was slightly off, the stitching too uniform. A good fake, but still a fake.
I should have left. Should have slipped out the back entrance. But my feet carried me forward, drawn by something darker than curiosity.
"Vivian," I said.
She spun around, her face cycling through surprise, recognition, then manufactured pity. "Oh. Isabella. I didn't know you... shopped here." Her eyes raked over my canvas work jacket, the denim stained with dye. "How quaint. Very working class."
The tailor looked between us, sensing blood in the water.
I stepped closer, my voice low and even. "That's a beautiful bag, Vivian. Hermès, right?" I tilted my head, examining the leather. "Except the stitching is machine-done, not hand-saddle-stitched. And the hardware is plated, not solid gold. Canal Street?"
Her face went white, then red. "You don't know what you're talking about."
"I know exactly what I'm talking about." I picked up my box of buckles, tucking it under my arm. "Enjoy your free dress. I'm sure Logan's credit limit can still handle it." I paused at the door, glancing back. "Oh, wait. Can it?"
I walked out into the sunlight, my heart hammering a victory march in my chest.
***
The lawsuit threat arrived three days later.
Marcus called an emergency board meeting. I sat at the end of a long glass table, surrounded by men in suits who looked at me like I was a ticking bomb. The lawyer read Logan's cease-and-desist letter aloud, his voice a monotone drone. Intellectual property theft. Sketches created during the marriage. Demands for all designs to be surrendered and the collection canceled.
It was a lie. Every line, every sketch in my book had been drawn in that Queens apartment, on my own time, with my own hands.
"This could cost us millions in legal fees," said the CFO, a man with a weak chin and expensive cufflinks. "We should settle. Cut our losses."
"No," I said.
All eyes turned to me.
I stood, my legs shaking but my voice steady. "Logan King is a fraud. He's desperate, broke, and grasping at anything to stay relevant. Those sketches are mine. I have dated photographs, timestamped files, witnesses." I looked at Marcus. "And I have something else. Proof that he's been hiding assets, committing fraud. If he wants a legal war, I'll bury him."
The room was silent.
The CFO cleared his throat. "You're certain?"
"I'm certain," I said, my hand instinctively reaching for the USB drive in my pocket—Ruthie's gift. "And if you back me, I'll make sure this brand becomes untouchable."
Marcus leaned back in his chair, a slow smile spreading across his face. "Gentlemen, I think we have our answer. Tell Logan King to go to hell."
The meeting adjourned. I walked out into the hallway, my hands finally starting to shake. I pressed them flat against the cold wall, breathing hard.
I wasn't just surviving anymore.
I was winning.
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