
After My Husband Took Our Son to His Mistress
Chapter 3
The Grand Hotel Milano ballroom glittered with champagne flutes and designer gowns. I watched from across the room as Damon guided Shiloh through the crowd, his hand resting possessively on our son's shoulder. Marlowe floated beside them in a crimson dress that hugged her perfect figure, her laugh carrying over the chamber music.
"Shiloh, stand up straight," Damon murmured, adjusting our son's bow tie with practiced precision. "People are watching."
I wasn't supposed to be here. I'd flown to Milan on impulse, telling myself I needed to see for myself what I was leaving behind. Now, hidden behind a marble column, I watched my family—or what had never truly been mine.
Shiloh's face suddenly flushed red. He swayed slightly, tugging at his collar.
"Dad, I don't feel good," he whispered, his voice carrying to me in the momentary lull of conversation.
Damon glanced down, his expression flickering between concern and annoyance. "You'll be fine. It's just nerves."
"But my head hurts," Shiloh insisted, his small hand reaching for his father's sleeve.
Marlowe stepped closer, her perfume enveloping them both. "Oh, darling, let me help." She placed a manicured hand on Shiloh's forehead, her expression more concerned about wrinkling her dress than his rising temperature.
"Is he warm?" she asked, not quite meeting Damon's eyes.
"He's fine," Damon said firmly. "Stone men don't get sick at important events."
I watched my son's face crumple with disappointment as he swallowed back tears. "I want Mom," he whispered, so quietly I almost missed it.
Damon's jaw tightened. "Your mother is being dramatic. She'll get over it."
Marlowe's lips curved into a sympathetic smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Come, Shiloh. Let's get you some water." She led him away, more concerned about maintaining appearances than comforting him.
I slipped out before they could notice me, my heart breaking all over again.
* * *
Paris greeted me with a gentle spring rain. The tiny apartment in Montmartre was exactly as Elena had described—drafty, with sloped ceilings and a view of the cobblestone street below. But it was mine.
"Welcome home," Elena said, helping me set down my battered suitcase. "Not what you're used to, I imagine."
"It's perfect," I replied, meaning it.
The next morning, I wandered through the fabric district, my senses awakening after years of dormancy. The colors—vibrant silks, muted woolens, shimmering sequins—called to me like old friends. I ran my fingers over textures rough and smooth, listening to the merchants' voices rise and fall in French and Italian.
"Mademoiselle wants the blue, non?" an elderly shopkeeper asked, holding up a bolt of midnight-blue velvet.
I shook my head, pointing instead to a bolt of copper silk that seemed to catch fire in the light.
"Ah, better," he smiled. "That one has stories to tell."
At a small café across the street, I ordered espresso and pulled out a napkin. My hand moved almost without conscious thought, sketching lines and curves inspired by the fabrics I'd touched. A dress took shape beneath my pen—flowing lines that suggested movement, panels that resembled shedding skin.
"It's been seven years," I whispered to myself, watching the design emerge. "Seven years since I've created anything real."
The waitress glanced over my shoulder, her eyes widening. "C'est beau, mademoiselle. Are you a designer?"
I hesitated, then nodded. "I am now."
* * *
Damon's private jet touched down in New York earlier than planned. Shiloh's fever had spiked during the flight, and the boy had cried for me the entire way home.
"Where's Mom?" he'd asked between chattering teeth. "I want Mom."
Now, Damon strode through the penthouse foyer, expecting to find me waiting with an apology for my dramatic exit. Instead, he found silence.
"Angelina?" he called, his voice echoing off marble floors.
No answer.
He checked his watch—late afternoon. Perhaps she was shopping, trying to spend her way out of her mood as usual.
In the master bedroom, everything appeared normal at first glance. The walk-in closet doors stood open, revealing rows of designer clothes, shoes, and accessories he'd bought me over the years.
But something felt off.
He moved to the bathroom, noticing immediately what was missing—my toothbrush, my cheap drugstore lotion, the small leather-bound sketchbook I'd kept hidden from his mother's critical eye.
In the bedroom, he opened the drawer where I kept my personal items. Empty.
On his desk lay the divorce papers, signed and dated. Beside them, a single key—the key to our penthouse—gleamed under the overhead light.
Damon picked it up, the metal cold against his fingertips. For the first time in seven years, he felt something crack in his carefully constructed world.
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